
Custom Fishing Accessories, Branded from 100 pcs.
Custom fishing accessories from a fishing-only factory — patches, koozies, towels, lanyards, stickers, decals and bags, each carrying your one logo. They're the lowest-cost, highest-reach pieces on the whole kit: the add-ons and giveaways that put your brand in a customer's hand, decorated from 100 pcs and mixed to your minimum across items.
The fishing accessories we make.
One logo, spread across a whole shelf of small pieces — what changes from item to item is the material and the way your mark goes on, not the brand. Each is a low-cost, high-volume add-on that rounds out a kit; a set can also ship as the small-goods pieces of a full custom gear program. (Wearable pieces have their own homes: fishing neck gaiters and custom fishing hats.)


Tote & Gear Bags

Roll-Top Dry Bags

Can Koozies

Lanyards & Sunglass Retainers

Decals & Stickers

Woven & PVC Patches

Enamel Pins & Keychains
One logo, spread across the kit: how each accessory carries your mark.
The whole point of accessories is one approved logo landing cleanly on a shelf of very different small things — and that's a material problem. A towel takes a mark one way, a metal pin another, a vinyl sticker a third. Here's the rule the factory works to: the material decides the method. (Factory-stated; figures are representative. How each method is actually made — durability, wash, color tolerance — lives under custom decoration.)
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Fabric
Towels & bags → woven, embroidered or printed.
A microfiber towel prints full-color because it's polyester; a canvas tote takes screen or embroidery. The mark sits on a bound or panel zone so it survives the wash and the load. The spread draws from here.
print · sublimation · embroidery -
Patch
Patches → woven, embroidered or PVC, then backed.
The most portable mark you own — it moves from a cap to a jacket to a bag. Woven reads finest for small detail, embroidered adds dimension, PVC takes a knock; a merrow or heat-cut border stops fraying, and the backing decides where it lives.
woven · PVC · merrow border -
Neoprene & vinyl
Koozies & decals → screen, wrap or die-cut.
A neoprene koozie takes a spot-color screen print or a full-color sublimation wrap; a vinyl sticker is die-cut or printed-and-laminated in a UV-stable, marine-grade film so it doesn't peel or fade in a season of sun and salt.
screen · wrap · die-cut vinyl -
Metal
Pins & keychains → die-struck or enamel.
Die-struck in soft or hard enamel — the color sits in recessed metal wells, so the mark is dimensional and won't rub off; a printed-acrylic option covers photo-real art on a budget.
die-struck · soft/hard enamel -
Minimum
The minimum runs with the material.
Flat printed pieces — stickers, decals, woven patches — run cheapest by the hundred or thousand; molded and stitched pieces — koozies, bags, pins — carry a higher per-piece cost but a lower count. You mix items and colors to reach one order minimum.



Why accessories: the lowest-cost, highest-reach piece on the kit.
A shirt reaches one person for one season. A dollar sticker reaches everyone who sees the truck it's on. Accessories are the pieces you spread — cheap enough to give away, small enough to travel, and everywhere your customer goes. Here's the role each one plays in a program. (Representative unit economics; B2B, so we quote per run, not per list.)
The giveaway that spreads your brand.
Stickers, koozies and lanyards cost a fraction of a garment, so they're the pieces you hand out by the hundred — to every buyer at a booth, every guest on a boat, every walk-in at a dealer counter. A logo in a customer's hand is the cheapest reach a brand can buy.
The add-on that lifts an order.
A patch, a towel or a keychain drops into a cart next to the shirt — the low-ticket impulse piece that raises average order value and gives a listing something to bundle, without a new mold or a new pattern.
The corner-piece that completes a kit.
A program isn't just apparel — a crew set feels finished when the hat, the shirt and the koozie all match. Accessories are the small edge pieces that turn a few garments into a whole outfitted look under one design language.
The resale impulse buy.
On a pro-shop or dealer counter, patches, pins, stickers and drinkware are the low-price, high-margin pieces a customer adds on the way out — steady resale that keeps a brand in front of buyers between big fishing hats and apparel orders.
The sponsor's cheapest exposure.
For an event or a team backer, a run of branded stickers and koozies handed out on the day is the lowest-cost sponsor placement there is — the mark travels home with every attendee.
What a fishing accessory is made from.
Each piece runs a material picked for its job — soft, tough, waterproof or rigid. Here's what each is built from and why, by name, not by spec sheet; the gsm and weave of the apparel fabrics live on the fabric technology page.
Microfiber & absorbent knits
The fast-drying, print-friendly face on towels; polyester microfiber sublimates full-color and wrings out dry between casts.
Tough poly & tarpaulin
Ripstop, 600D poly and welded tarpaulin for tote, gear and roll-top dry bags; built to carry a load, take a scuff and keep water out.
Neoprene
The collapsible, insulating foam behind koozies and floating sunglass retainers; grips a can, floats a pair of shades, packs flat.
Vinyl, woven fabric & metal
UV-stable outdoor vinyl for decals and stickers, woven fabric and PVC for patches, and die-struck metal for pins and keychains — each chosen so the mark stays put in sun, salt and water.
Apparel fabric weights, blends and test data: fabric technology.
Ordering accessories: mix to your minimum, kit them to ship.
Accessories order differently from garments — the whole idea is a low bar per piece and a mix across items. Here's how a first order and a repeat run; the full quote build and the brief-to-delivery timeline live on the get a quote and process pages.
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1
From 100 pcs per style, mixed to reach it.
Each item starts at 100 pcs per style; mix colors and mix items across a program to hit a working order — a first run doesn't have to be a thousand of one thing.
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2
Flat pieces run cheapest by volume.
Stickers, decals and woven patches drop in price by the hundred and thousand, so they're where a giveaway budget stretches furthest; molded and stitched pieces carry a higher unit cost at a lower count.
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3
Kit-ready packing.
Accessories can be poly-bagged and kitted to ship — a whole giveaway set in one bag, split by dealer, or packed per crew — and sent alongside your apparel order under one look.
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4
Repeats start lower.
Once art and materials are locked, a repeat runs from about half the first-order minimum, and the sample fee credits back against the bulk.
Built to survive sun, salt and water.
A cheap accessory is only worth giving if it survives the first trip. The throwaway ones fail at the detail — a peeling sticker, a fraying towel, a split koozie seam. Here's how each is built to hold up, so a low-cost piece still looks like your brand a season later.
Stickers & decals — UV-stable, marine-grade film.
Outdoor vinyl and a laminate top-coat resist sun and salt, so a decal on a console or a cooler doesn't yellow, curl or peel through a season the way a cheap sticker does.
Towels — a bound, merrow-stitched edge.
The edge is where a towel dies; a bound or merrow-finished hem keeps it from fraying and shedding through repeated wash and wring.
Koozies — a stitched or bonded seam.
The seam holds the wrap together; a stitched or bonded neoprene join keeps a koozie from splitting after a few cold cans.
Dry bags — a welded, waterproof roll-top.
The roll-top and welded seams are what keep water out; they're heat-sealed, not just sewn, so the bag actually stays dry.
Lanyards & retainers — riveted, tested hardware.
The clip and join are set to take a pull, so a lanyard doesn't drop a badge or a pair of shades on the first snag.
Patches — a sealed, backed edge.
A merrow or heat-cut border stops the edge unravelling, and the backing (iron-on, sew-on or hook-and-loop) is matched to where the patch will live.
Custom fishing accessory questions, answered.
The questions buyers ask before a first accessories order.
Get a custom fishing accessories quote.
Send your pieces, quantities, logo and target date. You'll hear back within 24 hours, in plain English.
- Response within 24 hours (GMT+8)
- Sample fee credited back against your bulk order
- From 100 pcs per style, mixed to your minimum
- One logo held to your Pantone across every piece