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OVER 30+ DESIGNS WILL BE MADE AVAILABLE ALL CUSTOMIZABLE. PICK SHIRT SIZE, COLOR, AND STYLE.
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Poker Shirt Factory
200 Meres Blvd. Unit 22
Tarpon Springs, Fl 34689
admin@pokershirtfactory.com
Poker Shirt Factory:
An online store offering
new & original poker
graphic tees. Since
poker seems to have a
language of its' own, we
combine some of that
lingo with original
graphics. These shirts
truly represent the
game everyone has
come to love. So, go
ahead and "Wear 'Em
With Your Poker Face."
The t-shirts are great for
No-Limit Texas Hold' em home
games or a night out at the
casino. They take a humorous
and satirical approach to the
poker language. Throw in the
poker terminology with a
corresponding graphic and
you have yourself a true
expression of the game.
Sometimes it's better to let
your shirt do the talking at the
table, so you can focus on the
hand at play.
Here are some of our poker lingo descriptions we incorporate onto our shirts.
ace high
(n phrase) In high poker, a no pair hand whose highest card is an ace. "I have ace high; can
you beat that?" Also, "I have an ace high; can you beat that?" "Yeah, I got a pair of deuces."
bluff
1. (v) Bet a weak hand with the hope of driving the other players out. Sometimes done with the
intention of losing (and thus being forced to show the hand), which makes it a form of
advertising. See advertise. 2. (n) The act of bluffing. "That was a good bluff." For both
meanings, also called snow.
burn
1. (v) Take the top card out of play, usually by placing it face down among the discards, or
else protect it by a capper. In versions of draw poker, a card is usually burned before the draw
cards are distributed; in stud and hold 'em, a card is usually burned before each round of
cards is dealt. (This differs from blackjack, in which the card is placed face up on the bottom of
the deck.) 2. (n) The card that is burned. Also called burn card.
cadillac
No Limit Texas Hold'em is known as the "Cadillac of Poker." The Premeire Poker Game. It is
played to determine the champion of the poker world at the "Big Dance": the final event of the
World Series of Poker®
card shark
(n phrase) 1. cardsharp. Sometimes spelled cardshark. 2. An expert card player, usually a
professional gambler. The term is not necessarily synonymous with cheater.
river
1. (n) river card. 2. (vt) Catch a card on the river (in, usually, hold 'em, although sometimes the
term is used in seven-card stud) that beats a hand that up till that point was leading, probably
by a large margin. "He rivered me."
dead man's hand
(n phrase) 1. Aces and 8s. Supposedly "Wild Bill" Hickok was holding aces and 8s when he
was shot in the back in the Mann-Lewis Saloon in Deadwood, South Dakota, on August 2,
1876. The term dead man's hand usually just refers to two pair, aces and 8s, in any
combination.
diamonds
(n) 1. One of the four suits in a deck of cards, shaped like a rhombus (four-sided figure that
resembles a diamond: ). Originally, diamonds may have represented the merchant class. In the
traditional deck, diamonds are red. In the four-color deck, they are blue. 2. A diamond flush,
that is, five cards of the same suit, all diamonds. "I've got a straight; whadda you got?"
"Diamonds."
draw dead
(v phrase) Draw to a hand that cannot win even if made. If you're in this situation, you may be
said to be dead in the pot.
(fortune) gambler
(n) One who takes chances in a poker game, or one who exhibits gamble (definition 1).
According to Doyle Brunson, in his Super System, this term "... is often used to describe the
class (that is, the quality) of a poker player. When the word is used this way it describes the
highest class of player--which actually means that the player is not really a gambler at all, but a
highly skilled player."
poker
1. (n) A card game based on the language of deception, a language expressed in words
represented by bets; a card game among two or (usually) more players, in which each player
makes one or more wagers that his five-card (sometimes fewer) hand ranks higher than those
of all the others, or that he can convince the others to retire from contention because they
believe his hand ranks the highest.
heart
(n) 1. Guts; courage; the ability to flow with the tides of fortune in a poker game. "He doesn't
play well, but he's sure got a lot of heart." 2. Any card in the hearts suit.
deal
1. (v) Distribute the cards to the players. 2. (n) The act of dealing. "He got a full house on the
deal." "Whose deal is it?" 3. The dealing position. (This is a subtle distinction from definition 2.)
"Where is the deal?" means "Where is the dealing position?", and it implies "Whose deal is it?"
4. split (definition 2).
limp
(v phrase) 1. limp. 2. In a no-limit game, just barely call, that is, not raise when one could, and
even seem to call reluctantly; sometimes done with a good hand for the purpose of deception.
However, when a player says, "I'll limp in," he usually does have a weak hand.
luck
(n) An illusory factor that losers think is the only reason for winning, and that winners know is
the main determinant for winning only in the short run.
muck
1. (n) The discards. The term is borrowed from pan. "Throw that piece of cheese in the muck."
Also called the garbage pile, trash. 2. (v) Fold; usually followed by the hand. "As soon as he
bet, I mucked the hand." 3. Palm a card for later use in a game.
guts
(n) 1. Heart; courage, gamble; the ability to flow with the tides of fortune in a poker game. "He
doesn't play well, but he's sure got a lot of guts."
addict
1 : to devote or surrender (oneself) to something habitually or obsessively <addicted to
gambling>
2 : to cause addiction to a substance
poker born (circa)
Around the early 1830's Poker became a common game in New Orleans,
from there it spread to the rest of the country by Mississippi riverboats, on which gambling was
a common pastime. As it spread up the Mississippi and West during the gold rush it is thought
to have become a part of the frontier, pioneering ethos. The game and jargonof poker have
become important parts of American culture and English culture.
Jonathan H. Green's book, An Exposure of the Arts and Miseries of Gambling (G. B. Zieber,
Philadelphia, 1834), described the spread of the game from New Orleans to the rest of the
country by Mississippi riverboats, on which gambling was a common pastime. As it spread up
the Mississippi and West during the gold rush it is thought to have become a part of the
frontier, pioneering ethos.
poker forever
A Play on the saying "Diamonds Are Forever"- Hardest substance found in nature. They cut
glass, suggest marriages, and replaced the dog as the girls best friend, until she found poker.
poker life
Miller Lite parody, One who plays poker for a living or obsessively.
stereogram
A stereogram is an optical illusion of depth usually observed by allowing the eyes to focus
behind an image (diverge), but also sometimes in front of the image (converge, or
cross-eyed). The slight differences in vertical repetitions of figures or random dots create the
illusion of depth in the 2D image.
poker good call
Miller Lite Good Call slogan parody. To call is to make the total amount of one's bet equal to
the amount of the immediately preceding bet (which will be the largest bet made in that round).
All players must eventually call an equal amount for the betting round to end, or else one
player must bet an amount that no one calls, thus ending the entire deal and awarding him the
pot.
poker ramones
Ramones, The Band, parody of popular band t-shirt design
pot's good
pot
1. (n) The chips in play on a particular hand. 2. The portion of the table in which the pots in
play on a particular hand go. Pot's Good- an expression said when all bets are completed
and the table is ready to continue with the next card to be dealt in that hand.
Pot- Also refers to Marijuana, incorporated in design.
river
The river is the final card dealt in a poker hand, to be followed by a final round of betting and,
if necessary, a showdown. The river can change the fortune of a game by delivering one
player a card which they need to beat another player's already completed hand. A player
losing the pot due only to the river card is said to have been 'rivered' or 'drowned at the river'.
stack
1. (n) All of your chips. "I'll bet my stack." 2. One pile of chips, usually 20 high. "Houseman,
bring me another stack," means that the speaker wants another 20 chips. 3. Arrange chips in
neat piles. Stack or Stacked is also urban slang, referring to large breasted women.
statistical risk taker (gambler)
Statistics and mathematics play several important roles in poker. They give us the probability
of getting each hand, tell us which starting cards have the best chances of winning, and they
give us guidelines to follow in betting and calling our opponents' bets. A gambler- One who
takes chances in a poker game, or one who exhibits gamble. Poker is a game of risks -- but
they don't have to be blind risks. Play aggressive but smart, and you may find yourself a
wealthier man for it.
nuts
(n) 1. Very good hand; usually preceded by the. "Every time I get a good hand, they show me
the nuts." 2. The best possible hand at a given point in a pot.
wanted (professional poker players)
Mike Caro: A professional player is anyone with sufficient skills to beat chosen opponents, and
who uses those skills consistently to earn enough money for most people to live on. Under this
definition, you can be a professional player even if you make more money from other
endeavors. A professional player need not be as skillful as some losing players, but must
choose to match up regularly against players who will be at a disadvantage.
three wise monkeys
The three wise monkeys are a pictorial maxim. Together they embody the proverbial principle
"to see no evil, hear no evil, and to speak no evil". The idea behind the proverb was part of the
teaching of god Vadjra, that if we do not hear, see or talk evil, we ourselves shall be spared all
evil.
loose
(adj, adv) Playing liberally; not tight. Usually implies drawing to all the little pairs, all the
four-straights and four-flushes, and many of the two-card draws to other than trips, and often
calling many bets and raises to do so. You often hear the rhyming phrase loose as a goose or
loosey-goosey.
NEW styles will be created
often. Please check back
for more options to come!
Men:
Poker T-Shirts
Poker Long sleeve shirts
Poker Poloshirts
Poker Hoodies
Poker Zippered Jackets
Poker Underwear
Poker Athletic Wear
Poker Eco-Friendly Tees
Poker Shirts 3XL & 4XL
Women:
Poker Women's T-shirts
Poker Junior's Tees
Poker Women's Tanks
Poker Women's Long sleeve shirts
Poker Women;s Polo Tees
Poker Hooded Sweatshirts
Poker Zip Hoodies/Jackets
Poker Women's Underwear
Poker Women's Plus Size Shirts
Poker Women's Eco-Friendly Tees
Poker Women's Bottoms
Accessories:
Small Buttons
Large Buttons
Mousepads
Dog T-shirts
We will be offering all of the following items:
Copyright © 2009 Poker Shirt Factory, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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