FREE CUSTOMISATION
Sublimation / digital printing
front
✓ Add your corporate logo(s)
✓ Artwork placement changes
✓ Accent colour changes
Minimum order quantity (if customised): 100 units
MATERIAL
Lightweight
Heavyweight
Rough
Super soft
Waterproof
Breathable
FEATURES
Features fully printed design on midweight vegan silk microfibre material.
- tie blade width: 80 mm
- pocket square size: 220 x 200 mm
- plated brass pin included
- comes in a recycled cardboard gift box
- digitally printed design
WHY WE
MADE THIS
Look sharp and update your ensemble in a pinch with this hand-crafted necktie. Comes with a matching pocket square and a brass tie clip in a gift box.
Eco-Friendly
The environmental impact of real silk ranks higher than almost all other fibres, mainly due to its global warming potential and use of fossil fuels chiefly in the reeling and processing stages. This tie is made of 'vegan silk', using fabricated microfibre yarns to create a silk-like, more environmental-friendly alternative. Furthermore, it is printed with high-quality carcinogen-free Italian pigment inks. No cancer-causing chemicals and undesirable surfactants.
Zero plastic
We pack your threads in recyclable acid-free tissue paper and use only plant-based home compostable mailers, at no extra cost. By sending your parcel with our delivery partner Australia Post, you’re supporting their carbon-offset projects that have positive environmental and social impacts. Since 2019, their carbon neutral parcel delivery initiative is equivalent of taking 75,000 cars off the road – or roughly 200,000 tonnes of emissions.
Controlled production
Sustainability involves finding a balance between supply and demand. Life Apparel works with local and international factories where only limited quantities are produced of each model to ensure exclusivity and avoid overproduction, like large fashion brands. Learn more →
Washing Instructions
Gentle machine wash
Do not bleach
Do not tumble dry
Touch up with cool iron
Do not dry clean
Further Care Information
- Do not use fabric softener
- Wash and iron inside out
- Wash separately with like colours
- Avoid rough surfaces
- Line dry out of direct sunlight
Shipping Info
Your order will be sent out within one business day from our warehouse on the Gold Coast, Queensland, in most cases. Shipping times begin when your parcel has left our warehouse.
Delivery times vary depending on your location and whether your items are in stock.
Parcel post within Australia starts from $6.45 and takes 6-12 business days (depending on your location).
Express post within Australia starts from $9.10 and takes 2-5 business days.
For more details on delivery information, please visit this page.
Return Policy
Items may be returned free of charge within 14 days of receipt. The original tags and labels must be attached, and the products must be unworn, unused, unwashed and undamaged (tried on is okay).
Browse extra information on this page which outlines how to return an item, get information about exceptions, exclusions and possible extra charges.
ABOUT
THE DESIGN
In Australia and other countries of the Commonwealth, the red poppy (the Flanders’ poppy) is recognised as the commemorative flower of remembrance. The flower is a reminder of those who lost or sacrificed their lives in wars, conflicts and peacekeeping operations. It's a tradition that began in the early 1900s, after World War I.
"During the First World War, red poppies were among the first plants to spring up in the devastated battlefields of northern France and Belgium. In soldiers' folklore, the vivid red of the poppy came from the blood of their comrades soaking the ground.
The sight of poppies on the battlefield at Ypres in 1915 moved Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae to write the poem In Flanders fields. In English literature of the nineteenth century, poppies had symbolised sleep or a state of oblivion; in the literature of the First World War a new, more powerful symbolism was attached to the poppy – the sacrifice of shed blood."
"During the First World War, red poppies were among the first plants to spring up in the devastated battlefields of northern France and Belgium. In soldiers' folklore, the vivid red of the poppy came from the blood of their comrades soaking the ground.
The sight of poppies on the battlefield at Ypres in 1915 moved Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae to write the poem In Flanders fields. In English literature of the nineteenth century, poppies had symbolised sleep or a state of oblivion; in the literature of the First World War a new, more powerful symbolism was attached to the poppy – the sacrifice of shed blood."