Some walls talk. This shirt won't shut up. Aerosol Alchemists compresses an entire city block of graffiti — spray cans, throwies, wheat-paste panels, marker tags — into one dense sticker-bomb collage running wrist to wrist on heavyweight cotton.
Why this beats a graffiti-font graphic tee: most street-style shirts print one fake tag on a blank chest. This is a full composition by Dyles Mavis with layers you keep discovering — a cassette here, a masked writer there — printed over every panel and both sleeves.
Q: What is a sticker bomb design?
It's a collage style where dozens of overlapping stickers, tags and panels fill every gap — born on skateboards, lamp posts and toolboxes. Here it's rendered as one continuous artwork instead of actual stickers.
🎨 Why you'll reach for it constantly
- Dense graffiti collage AOP — new details every time someone stares (they will)
- 190 g/m² heavyweight cotton — substantial drape, holds shape wash after wash
- Print continues across both sleeves — no blank arms
- Muted-ground palette with neon hits: wearable at night shows and daylight coffee runs
- Layers like a base piece under flannels, work jackets, and denim
- Colorfast print that won't crack like plastisol transfers
📋 Materials & specs
- 190 gsm heavyweight cotton jersey
- All-over dye sublimation print, seam thread matched to design
- Unisex cut · printed on demand
🖌️ Who it's for
- The writer who retired the spray can but not the eye
- A skater who wants a long sleeve that matches the deck, not the mall
- Anyone gifting the street-photography friend who documents every alley
FAQ
Does this long sleeve run true to size?
Yes — standard unisex sizing with a streetwear-friendly cut. Size up for a boxier skate fit.
Is 190gsm cotton heavy for a tee?
Yes — most fast-fashion tees run 140–160gsm. At 190gsm this wears like a premium base layer: warmer, more structured, and far more durable.
How do I care for the graffiti print?
Machine wash cold inside out, hang dry. The dye sublimation print is part of the fabric, so it won't peel or crack the way vinyl prints do.
Is this shirt appropriate for everyday wear?
Completely — the artwork is street-art homage with no explicit content, dense enough to read as texture from a distance and reward closer looks.
Who created the Aerosol Alchemists design?
Dyles Mavis, the artist behind Aesthetic Rebellion — original wearable art, drawn panel by panel, never clip art.