Every torn poster, ripped flyer, and layered sticker on a downtown wall — worn open. Torn Wall Kimono packs a dense newsprint-and-sticker collage in black, white and hits of color across a drop-shoulder open-front cardigan, built to layer over anything.
Why this beats a plain open cardigan: most kimono cardigans are a solid color or soft pattern. This one carries a full urban collage composition by Dyles Mavis, printed edge to edge on sublimated polyester-spandex, so it functions as both layering piece and standalone statement.
Q: How do you wear a kimono cardigan?
Open over a plain tank or tee, belted for shape, or loose as a beach cover-up — the drop-shoulder cut and open front make it genuinely versatile across seasons and occasions.
🎨 Why you'll reach for it constantly
- Full-bleed torn-newsprint collage print — black, white, and color tags layered dense
- Drop-shoulder silhouette with an open, unstructured front
- 95% polyester, 5% spandex — soft with a bit of stretch
- Doubles as beach cover-up, festival layer, or cosplay base
- Works across S–2XL for a relaxed, oversized drape
📋 Materials & specs
- 95% polyester, 5% spandex
- All-over dye sublimation print
- Drop-shoulder open front, sizes S–2XL · printed on demand
🧥 Who it's for
- The friend who layers everything and needs one piece that works over anything
- A festival-goer or cosplayer who wants a bold open layer with real street-art energy
- Anyone gifting a summer piece that reads as art first, cardigan second
FAQ
Does this kimono cardigan run true to size?
Yes — check the size chart; the drop-shoulder cut is designed with a relaxed, open drape.
What is the fabric made of?
95% polyester, 5% spandex — soft against the skin with enough stretch for easy movement.
Is this good as a beach cover-up?
Yes — the open front and lightweight sublimated fabric make it a natural fit for beach days and summer layering.
How do I wash it?
Machine wash cold, hang dry. The dye sublimation print resists fading and cracking.
Who designed the Torn Wall print?
Dyles Mavis, the artist behind Aesthetic Rebellion — an original torn-newsprint and sticker collage composition.