-
Breaking Prod shirt -
NaaS No As A Service shirt -
3+ shirts ship free
Build Your Dev Tee Stack
Pick your favorite dev jokes, choose size once, add fast.
-
i test in PROD shirt -
i was sane few merges ago shirt -
localhost vs production shirt -
catGPT shirt -
let's debug duck shirt -
Technical Debt Collector shirt -
comment it out shirt -
I am older than the internet shirt -
agile sucks shirt -
Breaking Prod on a friday shirt -
just put in a ticket shirt -
chaos builds character shirt -
Querying my black shirt -
i asked chapgpt shirt -
that wasn't very data-driven of you shirt -
i'm silently judging your code shirt -
vibe coding shirt -
Data > Opinion -
survived another meeting shirt -
Fullstack Engineer - Pancake shirt -
git blame game shirt
What are
Gifts for Techies?
Gifts for techies cover anyone who loves or works in technology, whether professionally or as a hobby. The good ones reference specific tools, languages, or cultural moments in tech, not generic circuit board patterns. Code Culture's techie gifts focus on shirts written by people in the industry, so the references match what actual techies say, type, and care about.
- Career techiesDecades in tech, opinions to match
- Home lab enthusiastsSelf hosting and Raspberry Pi projects
- Hobbyist techiesSide projects and weekend builds
- Tech adjacent professionalsMarketing tech, sales tech, ops tech
- Early career techiesFirst job, first tools, first opinions
Gifts for Techies
Techie is a casual, affectionate term for anyone deep into tech. It catches the career engineer, the hobbyist home labber, the marketing person who reads engineering blogs for fun, and the IT generalist who fixes everything. The breadth makes gift shopping tricky because techie covers so much ground. Code Culture's tech shirts collection takes the broad approach with designs that resonate across techie subgroups.
Read more Show less
If you know what part of tech they're into, narrow it down. The Linux shirts collection covers anyone who runs Linux at work or home. The DevOps shirts collection covers infrastructure and on call types. The programmer shirts collection covers anyone who writes code. The gifts for tech people collection has broader picks if you're shopping blind.
Techies tend to wear shirts that signal in group membership. A subtle reference to a real tool, a real meme, or a real cultural moment lands better than a loud generic tech design. Hobbyist techies, especially the home lab and self hosting crowd, often appreciate retro computing references and Linux humor. Career techies often prefer drier, more professional designs. Match the design energy to the audience for best results.
All shirts are 240gsm ringspun preshrunk cotton with size charts on every product page. XS through 3XL, free shipping on three or more shirts worldwide. US delivery 5 to 7 days, international 10 to 14 days.
Frequently
Asked
Questions
- What is the best gift for a techie?
- A shirt that references the techie's specific obsession is the highest signal gift. Find out what they're currently into, whether that's a Linux distro, a self hosting project, a specific language, or a piece of retro hardware. Then look for a design that references it accurately. Techies value specificity over polish. Generic circuit board patterns and abstract tech designs read as written by people outside the field.
- Are gifts for techies different from gifts for tech people?
- Mostly the same category with a slight tonal difference. Techie sounds more casual and affectionate, often implying enthusiasm and hobby crossover. Tech people sounds more professional and broader. A home labber would probably call themselves a techie. A senior engineering manager might prefer tech person. Gifts overlap heavily either way, with techie leaning slightly more enthusiast oriented.
- What is a good gift for a home lab techie?
- Home lab techies love references to self hosting, Linux, Raspberry Pi, networking, and the eternal joy of running your own infrastructure. The Linux shirts and DevOps shirts collections have designs that resonate. Skip anything that suggests cloud only. Home labbers often have strong opinions about owning hardware, running on prem, and avoiding subscription services. A shirt that respects that ethos lands harder than generic cloud merch.
- Do techies actually wear tech themed shirts?
- Yes, tech themed shirts are a wardrobe staple for most techies. Conference shirts, open source project tees, and language or distro specific designs all get worn weekly. The line between work shirt and weekend shirt blurs in tech culture because most offices are casual. A well made shirt with an accurate reference fits right into that wardrobe and signals in group membership at meetups, conferences, and the office.
- What should I avoid when buying a gift for a techie?
- Avoid generic circuit board patterns, fake binary code that spells nothing, matrix style green letters, and any design that suggests techies are unwashed basement dwellers. Skip mugs that say "caffeine and code" which are tired. Stick to specific cultural references about real tools, real distros, real languages, and the actual shared experiences of being deep in technology. Accuracy and specificity always win.