Half the fit is what you show. This one is about what you don't. Night Circuit maps a charcoal ground with thin, glowing constellation lines and fractured triangle shards — a face mask that looks less like protective gear and more like a circuit board mapping the night sky.
Why this beats a plain black balaclava: most face masks are afterthoughts. This is an original linework pattern by Dyles Mavis, printed edge to edge so it reads as deliberate styling under a hood, helmet, or on its own.
Q: Can you wear a balaclava under a helmet?
Yes — the snug microfiber fit is thin enough to layer under motorcycle, ski, or bike helmets without adding bulk, and works solo for cold-weather streetwear too.
🎨 Why you'll reach for it constantly
- Full-coverage constellation line print — snug fit, zero blank panels
- Fits snugly across sizes, worn alone or under any helmet
- Stitch color auto-matched to the print
- Reads as techwear-grade styling, not just cold-weather gear
- Compact enough to stash in a jacket pocket between wears
📋 Materials & specs
- Microfiber — 95% polyester, 5% spandex
- Fabric weight: 130 g/m² · one size, snug fit
- Printed on demand
🌃 Who it's for
- The rider who wants helmet-liner function with actual style underneath
- A night-shift skater or cyclist who needs warmth without looking like safety gear
- Anyone building a techwear fit that needs one unmissable finishing piece
FAQ
Does the Night Circuit balaclava fit all head sizes?
Yes — the stretch microfiber fabric is designed to fit snugly across sizes, worn alone or layered under a helmet.
Can I wear this under a motorcycle or ski helmet?
Yes — it's thin and close-fitting by design specifically so it works as a helmet liner, not just standalone streetwear.
How do I wash it?
Hand wash cold or gentle cycle, then air dry to preserve the constellation print and stretch.
Is this mask good for cold weather?
Yes — full face and neck coverage with a breathable eye opening makes it genuinely functional in low temps, not just decorative.
Who designed the Night Circuit print?
Dyles Mavis, the artist behind Aesthetic Rebellion — a constellation-and-circuit linework pattern built specifically for this piece.