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Corporate Clothing With Your Logo: Placement, Techniques and Brand Consistency

Corporate clothing with your logo that employees actually want to wear. Where to place the logo, which technique suits which brand (embroidery for classic, print for young, patches for retro), when to go subtle versus bold, and how to keep your brand consistent across a whole wardrobe.

Daniel WójcikowskiDaniel Wójcikowski
8 min read
Corporate Clothing With Your Logo: Placement, Techniques and Brand Consistency

Corporate clothing with your logo is a company's voluntary branded wardrobe. Unlike workwear, it isn't mandatory, so it has to appeal to people. The decoration technique follows brand identity: embroidery for classic brands, print for young brands, patches for retro. Placement can be subtle (chest, sleeve, label) or bold (large front, back).

The difference with workwear comes down to one word: obligation. Workwear has to be worn. Corporate clothing may be worn. That changes everything. If an employee has a choice and doesn't put your hoodie on, you don't have a branded wardrobe. You have a closet full of unworn items.

This article is part of our complete guide to corporate clothing with your logo.

What corporate clothing with a logo is

Corporate clothing is a company's branded wardrobe. Not workwear, and not always a strict uniform. It sits closer to corporate fashion: a curated collection of branded garments employees can wear if they want to.

A strong programme feels like a corporate fashion collection, not a pile of random branded items. That distinction isn't cosmetic. It determines whether people wear your brand with pride or out of obligation.

WorkwearUniformCorporate clothing
Mandatory?UsuallyUsuallyVoluntary
Tied toRole or taskRole, instant recognitionBrand identity
PurposeFunction and safetyRecognisabilityBrand experience and belonging
Succeeds whenIt survives the jobEveryone wears itPeople want to wear it

Looking for the functional, often mandatory kind instead, read our guide to workwear. That's a different product with different logic.

Technique follows brand identity

There's no single right decoration method. There is a right method per brand. The choice depends on your product, your style, your audience and your design direction. Choose the technique that fits your identity, not the cheapest one.

Embroidery for classic brands

Understated, premium, professional. The logo is stitched into the fabric with thread, so it has texture and it doesn't wash out. This is the standard for traditional brands: business shirts, polos, knitwear, understated jackets. Embroidery says "we've been around".

Embroidered corporate logo on a sweater, the understated and premium choice for classic brands

Embroidery adds texture and doesn't fade away. It's the default choice for brands that want to come across as understated and professional.

Print for young brands

Startups, creative agencies, tech companies. Here an oversized print, a graphic statement, a pattern that takes over the garment works. Think hoodies, oversized tees, special cuts, eye-catching outerwear. Print says "we dare".

Branded hoodie with print, the expressive choice for younger and creative brands

Young and expressive brands go beyond a chest logo. An oversized print turns the garment itself into the brand statement.

Patches for retro

Embroidered or woven patches work strongly for brands with a visual heritage or an '80s feel. They add texture, craft and a certain nostalgia. Strong on jackets, overshirts and varsity-style pieces.

The rest of the palette

  • Woven labels. Subtle brand details on the sleeve, hem or collar.
  • Leather labels. Premium feel, strong on jackets and bags.
  • Contrast stitching. Branding without a logo. Your house colour in the stitching.
  • Custom trims and neck tape. The detail people only notice once they have the garment on. That's exactly why it works.
  • Screen printing. For larger logos and higher quantities.

Want to see the techniques and costs side by side, read our guide to printing corporate clothing.

Where you place the logo

Placement determines how loudly your brand speaks. These are the options, from quiet to loud.

PlacementToneWorks well for
Neck tape or inside labelWhisperingBrands that put quality above visibility
Sleeve or hemSubtleKnitwear, jackets, premium basics
Left chestClassicAlmost everything. The safe default
Centre chestPresentHoodies and sweaters from younger brands
Large front or backLoudEvents, launches, team collections with a story
Full patternMaximumBrands with a strong visual language

Subtle or bold

The question every brand manager asks. The answer depends on where the garment gets worn.

Choose subtle if the item needs to be worn outside the office too. This is the core of voluntary corporate clothing: people put it on at weekends, while travelling, around town. A discreet embroidered logo on the chest or a woven label on the sleeve allows that. A huge company logo on the back doesn't.

Choose bold if the garment marks a moment. A product launch, a team event, an anniversary, a conference. Then the branding is the point and it's allowed to be loud.

The test. Would you wear this garment if you weren't being paid to? If the answer is no, your branding is too loud or your garment is too weak. In corporate clothing, that's a mistake, not a detail.

Brand consistency across the wardrobe

One nice item is easy. A wardrobe that still holds up after two years is hard. The problem is almost never design. It's process.

What happens without structure: every department requests its own design, every garment comes from a different supplier, every request goes through its own approval round, and nobody remembers which shade of your house colour is the correct one. You end up with a hodgepodge instead of a collection.

The solution is a brand store: an internal shop with roughly 15 to 20 pre-approved items that together form the default wardrobe. Teams order from that selection whenever they need clothing or merch. New approved products get added, and the store grows into a complete branded wardrobe.

15-20
Pre-approved items in a good brand store
1
Central place all orders run through
30 sec
Until you see your own corporate clothing with live pricing

That puts an end to one-off design requests, inconsistent garments, approval delays, off-brand choices and fragmented ordering. For larger companies, this isn't a luxury but a necessity: departments can move fast and stay on-brand. Read about the brand store to see how you set one up.

And the sizing

Sizing is the biggest operational risk, but it's manageable. Start with clear, accurate size charts. Sunday's clothing sits close to fashion sizing: if you wear a medium in your favourite shirt, you'll likely wear a medium with us too. That avoids the trap of unexpectedly small or large sizes and, in practice, results in very few returns. Predictable sizing makes the whole programme easier.

How brands approach it

Three examples from our own practice, each with a different logic.

  • Zalando went for fully custom corporate clothing: its own patterns, heavyweight hoodies, special fits. This isn't a decorated blank garment, but a collection with its own cut and its own identity.
  • Bugatti Rimac built a full corporate clothing collection around the launch of a new hypercar model: racing-inspired hoodies, caps and branded pieces tied to the launch. It worked because there was a clear story and a clear product inspiration behind it.
  • IJsboerke, the well-known Belgian ice cream brand, chose a branded collection with a retro touch that tied into the brand's visual heritage, instead of generic corporate clothing.

The common thread: none of these collections started with a garment. They started with the brand. More detailed examples are in our corporate clothing design examples.

Branded knitwear with an understated logo, part of a cohesive corporate fashion collection

Knitwear and jackets form the foundation of almost every corporate wardrobe. They're practical, visible and work in many situations.

Corporate clothing with your logo via Sunday

Sunday is merch infrastructure, not a classic supplier. You open a product page and the platform uses your brand data to instantly show design directions with live pricing. You see straight away how an embroidered chest logo, an oversized print or a woven label looks in your house style, and what each choice does to the price.

The full corporate clothing range is on the product page, from hoodies and knitwear to jackets and accessories. Want to see your logo in your own brand colours before you commit? Use the free hoodie mockup generator.

Sunday manages it end to end: setting up the store, product selection, branding, stock, points or coin logic, fulfilment and reporting. The store becomes the central home of your corporate wardrobe.

One more tip from practice: don't make employees pay for corporate clothing themselves. That rarely works. A points or coin system works. People earn points through onboarding, anniversaries, achievements or campaigns and spend them in the employee store. They feel rewarded instead of sold to.

About this article

Category: Branding · Read time: 11 min · Published July 11, 2026 · Main topic: corporate clothing with your logo · Reviewed by the Sunday merch team

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