Couch armor for visual maximalists. Tag Stack Riot piles layered street stickers and graffiti tags — blue, pink, yellow, black — into a dense collage that wraps heavyweight 310gsm cotton lounge pants built to pull double duty everywhere.
Why this beats plain sweatpants: most lounge pants are a flat solid color. This pair carries a full sticker-collage composition by Dyles Mavis, printed edge to edge, so the same pants work as gym warm-ups, festival uniform, and gallery-day comfortwear without ever reading as basic.
Q: Are these lounge pants actually comfortable for all-day wear?
Yes — 310gsm heavyweight cotton with a relaxed jogger fit is built for real lounging, not just photos, with a drawstring waist and tapered cuffs.
🎨 Why you'll reach for them constantly
- Full-bleed sticker-collage print — layered tags wrap every panel
- 310 gsm heavyweight cotton — substantial, warm, holds shape
- Drawstring waist, tapered cuffs for a secure jogger fit
- Doubles as gym wear, festival uniform, or grocery-run comfortwear
- Thread color auto-matched to the print
📋 Materials & specs
- 100% pure cotton, 310 g/m² heavyweight
- All-over dye sublimation print
- Jogger fit, sizes S–5XL · printed on demand
🛋️ Who it's for
- The visual maximalist who wants couch comfort with zero visual compromise
- Anyone who needs one pair of pants to cover gym, festival, and errands
- A gift for the friend who's never met a plain sweatpant they didn't customize
FAQ
Do these lounge pants run true to size?
Yes — check the size chart; the drawstring waist allows some flexibility across S–5XL.
What fabric are these pants made from?
100% pure cotton at 310 g/m² — a genuine heavyweight feel, warmer and more durable than standard sweatpants.
How do I wash an all-over print sweatpant?
Machine wash cold inside out, hang dry. The dye sublimation print resists cracking and fading.
Are these good for the gym or just lounging?
Both — they're built to function as warm-ups, festival wear, or pure couch comfort without changing character.
Who designed the Tag Stack Riot print?
Dyles Mavis, the artist behind Aesthetic Rebellion — an original street-sticker collage composition.