$20 for $40 Worth of Personalized Clothing, Accessories, and Gifts at Y-Knot Embroidery in Muskegon
Similar deals
- Items can be personalized
- Comfortable, casual clothing
- Stylish business attire
- Durable accessories
Henry David Thoreau distrusted any enterprise that required new clothes, which is why he abandoned his career as a French maid. Embrace bold new outfits with today's Groupon: for $20, you get $40 worth of clothing, accessories, and gifts online or at Y-Knot Embroidery’s store in Muskegon.
Y-Knot Embroidery festoons patrons of all ages in an extensive variety of personalized digs including casual clothes, business wear, and accessories such as blankets and tote bags. Lake Michigan Unsalted shirts cosset body branches in Midwestern pride and come in an exploded rainbow of colors including goldenrod and periwinkle ($10–$25). On-the-move athletes can safely store equipment and smaller teammates inside the zippered caverns of a Holloway duffle bag ($30) as fans cheer on from the water-resistant padded cushions of a Holloway stadium seat ($30). The sharp threads of a men's jersey polo are built for good first impressions ($25+), and an infant’s reversible knit cap sets an adorable tone for baby’s first board meeting ($9.50). Specializing in custom embroidery, screen prints, and school-spirit gear, Y-Knot is equipped to answer all customer questions about item personalization.
Need To Know Info
About Y-Knot Embroidery, LLC
The friendly folks behind Y-Knot Embroidery stitch and screenprint names, logos, or favorite phrases onto a range of accessories and clothes for individuals, businesses, teams, and volunteer groups. The staff can personalize any accessory or article of attire—which can include brightly colored tees, hats, coats, and work-worthy button-ups—in their entire inventory. They can spiff up a polo shirt with an embroidered monogram, or distract potential thieves hoping to steal your beach bag with a screen-printed math problem.
To give back to their community, the staffers promote cancer awareness, stocking items such as Kid’s Cancer Storys, which benefits Grand Rapids’ Van Andel Institute.