

Some tees make a statement. This one makes a declaration. The front opens quietly — a flowing cursive script runs diagonally across the chest yoke: "For God So Loved The World." The words are embroidered, not printed — you can feel the raised thread against the fabric. "For God So" in deep navy thread, "Loved" in red, "The World" back in navy, the colour shift drawing your eye exactly where it should land. Clean black canvas below. Nothing competing. Just the words. Then you turn it around. The entire back panel is taken over by an ornate gothic cross — intricately detailed, dark blue linework on black, rendered with the kind of depth that looks hand-drawn rather than mass-produced. The cross is flanked by angel wings that sweep outward with real movement, and at the horizontal arms of the cross, two banners of red cursive script curl through the design: "In my restless dreams / I see that town / Silent Hill." It's a reference that carries weight — dark, poetic, atmospheric — layered into a graphic that's already visually stunning on its own. Whether you clock the reference or not, the back commands the room. Front embroidery. Back graphic. Two techniques, one tee, zero com
A mood, an occasion, a feeling, matched to real, wearable pieces from independent Indian brands.







