Seattle: Bandit Clothing Company

Bandit Clothing Company [Auburn]

Medium Textiles Factory • 20 42nd Street NE, Auburn • Perfecto Textiles, owner and operator • Bias against Animal Rights Activists • LTG NA/UCAS-SEA-854-253-3204

Bandit Clothing Company offers designer knockoffs at low prices, but stands out from other knockoff companies in a few ways. They pay a bounty on animals normally considered “pests” by sanitary codes. They process the animals into their textile products using only minimal plastic feedstock creating a ninety percent natural fiber. Workers and drones weave the fiber into the final products, and that finished clothing is sold straight from the factory doors to local consumers. The factory has become a sore spot to animal rights activists, but the local government defends the business as an “upstanding community service.” Having seen the size of rats in Auburn, I tend to agree.

> And unlike the Sanitary Office, you don’t need a SIN to collect the bounty. The pay ain’t so great, about ten cents per coon. And they pay SINless in store credit, but plenty of folk will swap the credit for cred - or something else, if you know what I mean. It’s not so uncommon these days to see an old beater driving around dragging a line of Devil Rats and Bandits all bludgeoned to death. You can get a bit more for the nasties like Gabriel Hounds and Incubi, but, of course, those ain’t as easy to catch.
> Harvey Grave

> I’ve heard they had trouble with Demon Rats attacking customers and generally making a nuisance around the factory. One friend even swears that a pair of them broke in and sabotaged some equipment before getting tasered by the night watchman.
> Twenty-Five to Life
“All the same to an Ork”

> Perfecto Textiles is a subsidiary of Perfecto Polymers, which in turn is a subsidiary of Aztechnology. However, there’s absolutely no evidence of blood magic anywhere. Sorry, kids.
> Beancounter

> They do use the animal remains to make telesma, however, and then sell it out the back door with the cloths. Most of their stuff is junk, but a good eye can point out a worthwhile piece here and there.
> Star Folly

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