Pros
If you want print and factory experience they will mildly train you.
Cons
Too many to count now. This job was a goal of mine for nearly 7 years. I interviewed here so many times that I could recite the interview questions verbatum. For the first 3 years, this was a great job. Good benefits. Solid training. It understood that you were a human, not a machine. Upon 2020 and the pandemic, this company changed. I was not an essential employee, I printed home dec fabric; and the company used loopholes to keep the factory running through quarantine. I have eczema on my hands now from how often I had to sanitize myself and the printers. I was expected to wear a full face mask for a 10 hour shift next to a 300 degree industrial dryer. So that a CEO could sell this home dec company for millions of dollars while the world was facing covid. When Spoonflower was sold to Shutterfly, it became unbearable. The attendance policy was not forgiving to people with children or other jobs. Shutterfly took every chair they could. If you had time to lean you suddenly had time to clean. As a senior employee by that point, I was expected to suddenly take on responsibilities that should not have been asked of me. Longer shifts in taxing environments, and training people when I was not fully certified to do so. Atop all of that, it became clear that Shutterfly wanted a temp staff, and not a full time one. Practically every person who was there prior to the Shutterfly purchase ended up leaving. For good reasons. Despite attempts at promotions, while being the most experienced and valued worker on my shift, I was denied. Several times. This place will hire you, and work you as if you were one of their machines. If you take this job, I do not reccommend staying long. Get the experience, and move on to better.