Work With Us
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What We Do
Doing Good Merch partners with non-profits, progressive organizations, artists, musicians, music venues and anybody working for positive change. We use our expertise and resources to source ethically made garments and decorate them in our union shop.
We will build and run your print-on-demand online store so you can concentrate on what you do best. We are a union shop offering a variety of garment decoration techniques for apparel, hats, face masks, and mugs.
We decorate and ship your merchandise using eco-friendly shipping supplies and handle any customer service inquiries that come up. We make payouts to you from sales in your store on a monthly or quarterly basis.
Who We Work With
At Doing Good Merch we partner with nonprofits, progressive organizations, artists, musicians, music venues and anybody working for positive change.. Whether you are a big organization looking for a custom-built online store or a small group selling one t-shirt design for an event, we can help.
If you are looking for personal service and real people to talk to about designs, ethically produced blank garments, and any other aspect of producing merch for your cause, please be in touch.
Who We Are
Running the Doing Good Merch team are Pam Ikegami and Rick Roth.
Pam Ikegami has an MBA from the Paul College of Business and Economics at the University of New Hampshire (UNH). She has worked in business consulting for the last several years both independently and with MCML Consulting. She was previously a senior lecturer in Japanese at the University of New Hampshire, teaching Japanese language and Japanese culture classes, giving her daily contact with young people. Her career has always spanned the non-profit/educational world and business. She is also an activist with the ACLU and with Amnesty International. She served as the Legislative Coordinator (LC) for New Hampshire, a volunteer leadership position, with Amnesty International USA from 2012 to 2020.
Rick Roth graduated from Colgate University where he first combined screenprinting and activism by printing “Save Old Bio” shirts, which after being worn around campus helped to permanently preserve an historic structure. He moved to Boston and attended Harvard Divinity School and worked at a variety of social service organizations, including one that taught young people screenprinting and another that helped disadvantaged young people to start businesses. In 1980 Roth started Mirror Image, which has become one of the world’s premier screenprinting and embroidery companies. Mirror Image has won every major award in the industry, recognized as a leader in technical expertise, creative special effects, and philanthropic work.
Roth also, at the request of Ben Cohen, served as CEO of sweatX, an experimental garment company specializing in organic shirts made in a unionized worker worker-owned factory in Los Angeles. Roth is known in the industry for promoting ethically produced garments and environmentally sound practices.
Mirror Image has worked with every major garment company and most of the major equipment and supply companies on product testing and industry education. Roth has also used his talents and connections to help run countless successful fundraisers and to sell merchandise for groups including Students for a Free Tibet, the New Orleans Musicans Clinic, Amnesty International, Farm Aid, the Music Makers Relief Fund, Death Penalty Action, and the One Caucasus festival.
Roth has been an committed human rights activist as a volunteer coordinating one of Amnesty International’s most active chapters. He and other volunteers have helped to free political prisoners and organize human rights festivals with thousands of participants. He helped start and continues to help run Amnesty International’s largest public event called Get on the Bus, a day of human rights education and activism now in its 21st year. For his dedicated activism he was awarded the “Keeper of the Flame” award from Amnesty International. In addition to his work with Amnesty International, he was the longest serving board member of Students for a Free Tibet and continues to assist that organization. He also serves as the U.S. representative of the One Caucasus Festival in the country of Georgia.
Pam Ikegami and Rick Roth also collaborate with the best and the brightest in the business to run a garment industry business called The Ink Kitchen. The website inkkitchen.com has extensive free information for garment decorators. The Ink Kitchen provides free educational programming and works with sponsors to organize fundraisers for local charities at various industry trade shows.