Product mockup

<br /> Developer T-Shirt

Black Heather / XS
£25.00
Sale price  £25.00 Regular price 
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Product mockup
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<br /> Developer T-Shirt

<br /> is the line break, written self-closed in the XHTML style. It forces a new line without starting a new paragraph.

Correct inside an address or a line of poetry; a code smell when it's standing in for the spacing that margins should provide.

£25.00
Sale price  £25.00 Regular price 
Mode: Dark Mode (Black Heather)
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100% cotton
Made to order
Dark + Light
Technical details
  • 100% combed and ring-spun cotton (Heather colours contain polyester)
  • Fabric weight: 4.2 oz./yd.² (142 g/m²)
  • Pre-shrunk fabric
  • Side-seamed construction
  • Shoulder-to-shoulder taping
  • Blank product sourced from Nicaragua, Mexico, Honduras, or the US

The fabric is slightly sheer and may appear see-through, particularly in lighter colours or bright lighting.

Printed on demand — each piece is made to order.

Care
  • Machine wash cold, inside out, with like colours
  • Tumble dry low, or hang to dry
  • Do not iron directly on the print
  • Do not bleach or dry clean
Shipping and returns

Shipping costs vary by region, so it's worth giving the delivery total at checkout a quick look before confirming your order. Some variants may show limited availability in certain locations—if fulfilment isn't available in your region, our suppliers will try to ship globally from the nearest facility that can produce that specific item. When this happens, delivery costs may be higher than expected due to the increased distance.

We're constantly reviewing suppliers and expanding fulfilment options, and new routes may open over time.

EU Product Safety (GPSR) Compliance

Part of the HTML collection, within Web & Frontend.

Available in Dark Mode and Light Mode.

The &lt;br&gt; Tag in HTML: Line Breaks and When to Use Them

The <br> Tag in HTML: Line Breaks and When to Use Them

The <br> tag creates line breaks within text. It's simple, often misused, and has legitimate use cases that CSS can't replace. Knowing when to use it—and when not to—improves HTML semantics.

Read the article

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