FREE CUSTOMISATION
Screen printing (Hybrid or Standard)
front / back / sleeves
✓ Add your corporate logo(s)
✓ Add individual names
✓ Change artwork size or location
Fabric
✓ Change colour
Minimum order quantity (if customised): 25 units
MATERIAL
Lightweight
Heavyweight
Rough
Super soft
Waterproof
Breathable
FEATURES
100% Australian-grown combed cotton, decorated locally on the Gold Coast.
- True to size unisex cut
- Pull-over style
- Front kangaroo pockets
- Hood with tonal drawcord
- Comfy set-in sleeves with cuff ribbing
- Stretchy rib trims
- 80% cotton + 20% anti-pill polyfleece combo
- Preshrunk fabric to minimise shrinkage
- Medium-weight, 320 GSM construction
- Soft-touch, high-quality artwork
WHY WE
MADE THIS
Officially Australian Made® certified and crafted in 100% Australian-grown cotton. Super soft & comfortable hoodie in unisex style. Remember and pay your respects to the brave men and women who have served with distinction since World War I.
Eco-Friendly. Australian-Grown.
Australian cotton is a true white cotton, that has an excellent reputation for quality and sustainability world-wide. Australian cotton is the most water efficient cotton industry in the world and has seen an 85% reduction in the use of herbicides and pesticides. This t-shirt is decorated with eco-friendly water-based pigment inks that are OKEO-TEXT certified. Free from dangerous substances & chemicals, heavy metals 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's t-shirts are decorated locally in Queensland; only limited quantities are produced of each model to ensure exclusivity and avoid overproduction, like large fashion brands. Learn more →
Washing Instructions
Cold machine wash
Do not bleach
Do not tumble dry
Do not iron on print and artwork
Do not dry clean
Further Care Information
- Do not use fabric softener
- Wash 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
During the Anzac Day Dawn Service, the Last Post is sounded, followed by a minute of silence to signify the end of the day. It is also sounded at military funerals to indicate that the soldier has gone to his final rest and at commemorative services such as Anzac Day and Remembrance Day.
The bugle call 'Last Post' is inseparably part of the end-of-day traditions, which include Beating the Retreat and Tattoo. Retreat is the older custom dating back to the 16th Century and consisting of prolonged drum beating at sunset to warn the night guard to mount and also to give notice that the gates of the town walls were about to close. Today this latter activity is replaced by the lowering of the National Flag. This bugle call has been passed down through the centuries in many countries of the world as an accompaniment to the impressive rites of a soldier's farewell - the closing bars wail out their sad valediction to the departing warrior.
The custom of waking soldiers to a bugle call dates back to the Roman Legions. When bugle calls were officially introduced into the British System by George III, a special call was written for the waking of troops. This was known as 'Reveille', meaning 'to wake again', from the old French. Joseph Hayden is generally regarded as the composer of the calls which exist substantially unchanged today.
At Anzac Day dawn services, Reveille breaks the silence that follows the playing of the Last Post, symbolising the awakening of the dead in the next and better world.
This design also includes a quote from the Ode, the fourth stanza of the poem For The Fallen by Laurence Binyon. 1919 marked an important date for Binyon’s respectful poem. It was then that this poem was chosen to accompany the unveiling of the London Cenotaph. In 1929, the poem was read at the laying of the Inauguration Stone at the Australian War Memorial. Today, over a century later, it remains a memorial tradition of remembrance for many Commonwealth nations, including Australia.
“They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them."
Laurence Binyon
The bugle call 'Last Post' is inseparably part of the end-of-day traditions, which include Beating the Retreat and Tattoo. Retreat is the older custom dating back to the 16th Century and consisting of prolonged drum beating at sunset to warn the night guard to mount and also to give notice that the gates of the town walls were about to close. Today this latter activity is replaced by the lowering of the National Flag. This bugle call has been passed down through the centuries in many countries of the world as an accompaniment to the impressive rites of a soldier's farewell - the closing bars wail out their sad valediction to the departing warrior.
The custom of waking soldiers to a bugle call dates back to the Roman Legions. When bugle calls were officially introduced into the British System by George III, a special call was written for the waking of troops. This was known as 'Reveille', meaning 'to wake again', from the old French. Joseph Hayden is generally regarded as the composer of the calls which exist substantially unchanged today.
At Anzac Day dawn services, Reveille breaks the silence that follows the playing of the Last Post, symbolising the awakening of the dead in the next and better world.
This design also includes a quote from the Ode, the fourth stanza of the poem For The Fallen by Laurence Binyon. 1919 marked an important date for Binyon’s respectful poem. It was then that this poem was chosen to accompany the unveiling of the London Cenotaph. In 1929, the poem was read at the laying of the Inauguration Stone at the Australian War Memorial. Today, over a century later, it remains a memorial tradition of remembrance for many Commonwealth nations, including Australia.
“They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them."
Laurence Binyon