Who we work with in Burlington
Corporate headquarters & head-office programs
Corporate headquarters run on consistency. When a head office orders branded apparel it's rarely a one-off. It's onboarding kits for every new hire, executive gifting for the leadership floor, and refresh runs as the brand evolves. We treat that work as a standing program rather than a transaction: your logo is digitized once, locked to your exact brand colours, and held on file so every reorder matches the last down to the stitch. Size runs, department splits, and multi-floor distribution are handled before anything ships, so nothing lands on an office manager's desk half-finished. Whether it's 80 polos for a town hall or a quarterly executive layer in premium merino, the finish reflects the room it'll be worn in. Thirty years of corporate work has taught us the real deliverable isn't a shirt. It's a head office that never has to think twice about how its brand looks on its people.
Also serving
Tech & startup brand merch
Tech and startup teams want merch people actually keep, not swag that ends up in a drawer. The brief is usually a limited drop: a launch capsule, a conference run, an offsite layer, or culture pieces that read like a brand someone chose. We help make those feel considered: clean digitizing on premium blanks, embroidery that holds up close, and a hand that feels like product rather than giveaway. Volumes flex with the company: a 30-piece founder run one month, a few hundred for a hiring push the next, then a re-drop when the logo evolves. We keep the spec locked so every wave matches, and we move fast enough to hit a demo-day or launch date. For venture-backed teams where the brand is the recruiting tool and the press photo, the embroidery has to look like the company is going somewhere, because the people wearing it are deciding whether to stay.
How we execute
Isacord thread & structural integrity
We run Isacord polyester embroidery thread because the finished piece has to survive real-world wear, not just look good on the rack. Polyester thread holds colourfast through industrial laundering and bleach exposure, which matters for healthcare, hospitality, and workwear, and resists the abrasion that breaks down lesser thread at high stitch counts. Structural integrity matters most in dense fills and fine lettering, where thread is worked hard through repeated needle penetrations; a thread that frays mid-run leaves thin spots and breaks that show. Matching thread to fabric and end-use is part of the spec we set before a job: the right weight for the detail, the right finish for the look (matte, sheen, or metallic), and colours matched to your brand standard rather than 'close enough.' The logo on a garment is, literally, your name stitched into someone's apparel, so the material it's made of has to last as long as the garment does.
Under the needle
Tajima multi-head tension calibration
Volume embroidery runs on multi-head Tajima machines, and consistency at scale comes down to calibration. Across multiple heads stitching the same design at once, thread tension has to be matched head-to-head. If one runs tight and another loose, the same logo comes out subtly different across a run, and that inconsistency is exactly what a client notices on piece 51. We calibrate tension per thread weight and fabric, dial in needle and hooping setup for the garment, and check the first-offs on every head before a production run commits. Heavier fabrics, stretch performance wear, and structured caps each need their own setup; a calibration that's perfect for a cotton polo will pucker a softshell. This is the unglamorous engineering behind 'order one and order one hundred look identical,' and it's why we inspect stitch-by-stitch rather than trusting the machine. At volume, calibration is quality control, not a setup step you do once and forget.
Why Burlington clients choose us
Decoration that lifts the brand
For brands where perception is everything, the decoration has to lift the garment, not cheapen it. That means premium blanks, refined digitizing, considered thread and finish choices, and an embroidery hand that reads as intentional, the kind of detail a customer notices up close and a competitor can't quite replicate. Luxury labels, design-led retailers, and executive teams come to us because we treat their apparel as an extension of the brand identity, advising on blanks and decoration that match the standard of the room they'll be worn in. Restraint matters as much as capability: tone-on-tone embroidery, subtle metallic accents, clean satin edges, and placement that respects the garment. The goal is apparel people are proud to wear and that makes the brand look like what it claims to be. Thirty years decorating for Canada's most premium labels has taught us that at this level, 'good enough' is the one thing that isn't.