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ONNO bamboo t-shirts | Made to Move Reviews

4.8 Rating 69 Reviews
Read ONNO T-Shirt Company Reviews

About ONNO T-Shirt Company:

ONNO makes eco-friendly t-shirts from bamboo, hemp and organic cotton.

Visit Product Page

Email:

hello@onno.com

Location:

2965 18th Street,
BOULDER
Colorado
80304

Very comfortable and soft! It fits perfectly true to size. The only downside it’s very wrinkled coming out of the dryer, but I can live with that.
Helpful Report
Posted 5 days ago
I love my new bamboo t-shirt! It's light and comfortable and the rust color is perfect.
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Posted 2 weeks ago
I love my ONNO T-Shirts. They are super comfortable, fit me really well, I'm looking forward to traveling with them and I feel great about the fact that they are made with renewable resources and made by a company that invests and cares for the people who make them. Thank you ONNO!!
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Posted 1 month ago
Great quality clothes and this company has awesome customer service
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Posted 2 months ago
Excellent fit and style - my wife loves her gifts of this shirt. She is very active and fits her lifestyle! The customer service is second to none!!
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Posted 2 months ago
Great quality and very comfy!
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Posted 3 months ago
I bought this tee shirt in both medium and small. I ended up liking both of them a lot. The small is not too tight and the medium is not frumpy. This is a very comfortable and flattering tee shirt, which seems hard to find these days.
Helpful Report
Posted 3 months ago
It’s the late 1960s in upstate New York. Eva Breiten, a European immigrant who speaks five languages, wants to be more than a wife and mother. The more her husband travels for his job, the greater his success, the longer winter lasts, the unhappier she is. She sleeps around, has a love affair that ends in betrayal, and becomes the subject of damning small-town gossip. After she loses control and hits her child, she leaves her husband and daughter to start over under the limitless skies of the American Desert. Plagued by self-doubt, which manifests as deceit, selfishness, and arrogance, Eva is tough to sympathize with until, small act by small act, she becomes more genuine and generous. She begins to question her idea of happiness and where it’s found, and the breadcrumbs in my novel lead her to answers. But she doesn’t find them in the sexual revolution, on acid trips, or at a Buddhist monastery. At Tip’s Lounge in Tucson, Arizona, the wisdom of the bartender and caring camaraderie of the regulars set Eva on a path to redemption—readers who can’t initially forgive her ultimately root for her. A frank portrait of a woman in a time of cultural change, The Happiness of Others is also a collage of sixties outliers—including Tip, a Whitmanesque barkeep with a unicorn tattoo, a naively romantic transsexual, a black doctor who practices Reiki, a retired PI who uncovers more about Eva’s life than she knows herself, and the husband she left behind, a Holocaust survivor, now an IBM salesman, who never stops loving her.
Helpful Report
Posted 3 months ago