AURORA®
"GODZILLA"
- Professionally screenprinted or DTG processing...NOT an "iron on" transfer
- GILDAN ULTRA COTTON brand used for MEN'S tees, 100% pre-shrunk cotton, sport gray 90/10...click here to check reviews.
- GILDAN G200L brand used for LADIES tees, 100% pre-shrunk cotton, heather gray 90/10...click here to check reviews.
- GILDAN G200B brand used for KID'S tees, 100% pre-shrunk cotton, heather gray 90/10...click here to check reviews.
- Combine shipping for only $1.00 for second t shirt...3 tee's of ANY design, size or color and you get FREE SHIPPING...U.S only
MENS SIZES |
S |
M |
L |
XL |
2XL |
3XL |
WIDTH INCHES |
18 |
20 |
22 |
24 |
26 |
28 |
LENGTH INCHES |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
32 |
33 |
LADIES SIZES |
S |
M |
L |
XL |
2XL |
|
WIDTH INCHES |
18 |
20 |
22 |
24 |
26 |
|
LENGTH INCHES |
25.5 |
26.5 |
27.5 |
28.5 |
30 |
|
KIDS SIZES |
S |
M |
L |
XL |
|
|
WIDTH INCHES |
15 |
17 |
18 |
20 |
|
|
LENGTH INCHES |
20 |
22 |
24 |
26 |
|
|


FREE SHIPPING when you order 3 tee's of ANY design, size or color...U.S. only.
AURORA® MONSTER MODELS
In 1960, a 15 year-old-boy came up with an concept that took the Aurora Plastics business to heights they never could have imagined. The Aurora model company sponsored a contest asking for suggestions for a new line of model kits. Out of 3,000 entries, one, from a young boy caught the eye of the corporation. He suggested a line of monster models and the rest is plastic model history. Throughout the 1960's Aurora turned out a line of classic monster models the likes of which have never been duplicated. Aurora Models used the backing of Universal Studios, the publication channels of
Famous Monsters magazine and they coupled it with an attention to detail and an eye for art. Frankenstein, Dracula, the Wolfman dominated for ten years, Aurora was booming. Aurora added the Mummy, the Creature and The Phantom of the Opera. Then they added glow-in-the-dark parts and they couldn't turn them out of the molds quickly enough. But, like the monsters they made, Aurora was on a collision course with an raging mob of villagers. In 1971, Nabisco bought Aurora and they had no idea what they had gotten themselves into. The ‘family oriented’ cookie company soon found itself at the sympathy of protesters, striking out against the maniacal monster images that made
Aurora so successful. Not wanting to seek the wrath of the cookie buying public, Nabisco changed the companies line to ‘adorable’ models and sales began to decrease. Without its monsters, Aurora faded faster than the Invisible Man and by 1977, they gave up production.
Aurora® is a registered trademark of CineModels, Inc.