The work
Thread Domain makes three things, on different rhythms. Shirts and jackets are the steady work. Boots are the rare side project. Each section below describes what the workshop actually makes, what the rough price range is, and how long the queue tends to be.
Shirts
Button-front shirts, camp-collar shirts, and heavier work shirts. Cut from heavyweight cotton or midweight twill, printed-to-order in patterns drawn at the workshop, then sewn to your measurements. Front placket, mother-of-pearl or corozo buttons, flat-felled seams on the side, single-needle finishing where the cloth allows it. Sizes are pattern-drafted from measurements rather than picked off a size chart.
Price range: roughly $220 to $360 per shirt, depending on the cloth and the print complexity. Lead time is usually three to five weeks after the design conversation is done.
Jackets
Chore coats, overshirts, and light unlined jackets. Patch pockets, bone or horn buttons, often with a printed lining where the fabric exterior is plainer. The chore coat is the most common request and the workshop has a steady pattern for it across three sizes that gets adjusted to your measurements.
Price range: roughly $420 to $640 depending on cloth and lining. Lead time four to six weeks after the conversation.
Boots
Hand-lasted, hand-welted boots in vegetable-tanned leather from a small tannery in northern Spain. Two pairs per season, by foot tracing and detailed measurements. The work is closer to traditional boot-making than to factory boots; expect leather lining, a single-piece insole, and stitched welts.
Price: $1,800 to $2,400 per pair, depending on leather choice and any custom features. Lead time is three months from confirmed slot. There are usually two slots per season and the wait list is long; the only way to know is to email.
Smaller pieces
Occasionally the workshop makes smaller things using leftover printed cloth: tote bags, simple aprons, work caps, neck scarves. These get listed when there's enough cloth to make a small batch, and they go quickly. Email if you want to be told when a batch goes up.
How to commission
Email [email protected]. A useful first message: which piece you're after (shirt, jacket, boots), roughly your usual size or off-the-rack fit, where you are (for shipping), and any timeline. Peter replies with a few questions and a rough price, and goes from there.