The boardroom finally found out the artist was always in the room. Headline Riot layers graffiti tags, ink-bleed signatures, marker drops, and torn headline fragments across a structured 260gsm blazer that holds tailoring like a real suit and carries the energy of a city wall.
Why this beats a plain blazer: monochrome tailoring says nothing. This is a full graffiti-newsprint composition by Dyles Mavis, printed edge to edge on structured woven fabric that still holds a real silhouette — for the freelancer who shows up overdressed, the founder who treats every meeting like an opening.
Q: Does this blazer actually hold tailored shape?
Yes — 260gsm structured woven fabric holds shape, takes pressing, and drapes like a genuine blazer, not a soft printed overshirt.
🎨 Why you'll reach for it constantly
- Full-bleed graffiti and torn-headline print — layered tags across every panel
- 260gsm structured woven fabric — holds shape, takes pressing
- Two-button front, notch lapel, padded shoulders
- Functional pockets — a real working blazer, not costume fabric
- Size-inclusive S–5XL
📋 Materials & specs
- 260gsm structured woven fabric
- All-over dye sublimation print
- Two-button, notch lapel, sizes S–5XL · printed on demand
🏙️ Who it's for
- The creative director who thinks the dress code is a starting point
- A founder or freelancer who refuses to soften their visual identity for a calendar invite
- Anyone gifting a blazer for someone who's never once dressed to blend in
FAQ
Does this blazer run true to size?
Yes — structured woven construction with true-to-size tailoring; check the size chart for exact measurements.
Can this blazer be worn in a professional setting?
Yes — it holds a real two-button silhouette with notch lapel and functional pockets, so it reads as a genuine blazer with a maximalist print, not a costume.
How do I care for this blazer?
Machine wash cold on gentle cycle or dry clean for best results; the structured fabric holds pressing well.
Is this part of a series?
Yes — Headline Riot is part of an ongoing graffiti-tag visual identity series reimagined for tailored pieces.
Who designed the Headline Riot print?
Dyles Mavis, the artist behind Aesthetic Rebellion — an original graffiti and torn-newsprint composition.