Old-Bush Da Hong Pao (Big Red Robe)
167 prints to choose from — each on a tee or hoodie, made to order.
Browse stylesFavorites
Camouflage & Harajuku
7 stylesAcid camos made of tea leaves, cartoon ciphers, and moonface masks. Graphics born at the intersection of Tokyo street culture and video games — playful, bold, with glossy nuggets of 老茶头 at the center. For those who wear tea as pop art.
Gothic & punk
6 stylesBlackletter, barbed wire, Renaissance horror, and crucifixes of tea stems. Heavy vintage distortion, faded black, and a single drop of crimson. Prints for those who feel closer to the night, noise, and the honest grit of the underground.
Minimal & avant-garde
26 stylesDeconstruction, blank labels, four white stitches, and numbered tags. Industrial typography, concrete greys, and hi-vis, nothing extra. Tea as an object, served with cold conceptual precision.
Japanese craft
7 stylesNatural dyeing, butterflies, daruma and koi, paisley jacquards, and hand texture. The legacy of Japanese workshops, where an item lives for decades. Warm indigo, faded earth tones, and respect for the material.
Military & techwear
7 stylesCompass on a sleeve, gravity pockets, stealth black, and specs in monospace font. Utilitarian engineering, garment dye, and modularity. For those who read tea like a technical passport.
Skate & DIY
10 stylesWobbly hand lettering, naive illustrations, zine aesthetic, and honest lo-fi. Graphics drawn with a marker on a knee, like a sticker on a deck. Artless humor and the energy of backyard spots.
House & hype
23 stylesHuge lockups, quote marks, diagonal stripes, and runway irony over corporate. Prints that shout from the chest and know their worth. Tea as a luxury object of desire.
Post-Soviet wave
10 stylesConstructivist Cyrillic, pioneer badges, satellites, and faded propaganda. Melancholic nostalgia and backyard irony of post-Soviet streets. Tea as a warm memory with film grain.
Moto & Americana
4 stylesBar shields, eagles, Gothic fonts, varsity monograms, and Y2K chrome. Heavy biker Americana and sports heritage. Prints that smell of gasoline, leather, and the open road.
Editorial & rave
9 stylesMagazine grids, blood-red sans, rave occultism, and youthful severity. Graphics at the crossroads of Berlin editorial and acid dancefloor. Intellectual provocation with tea in the frame.
Archive & resale
11 stylesLookbook grids, museum tags, price-tag overlays, and curatorial watermarks. The aesthetic of archival hunting and resale culture, where an item is a find. Tea served like a rare grail from a catalog.
Eco & botanical
3 stylesBotanical lettering, cotton wreaths, Eastern folk, and hand-drawn eco slogans. Graphics grown from earth and leaf — warm, tactile, alive. Tea as part of the natural cycle.
Swiss school
1 stylesMathematical grid, flag setting, and the silence of white space. Objective typography, where order is visible to the eye and Helvetica sounds like silence. Tea served with the cold clarity of a modernist poster.
Corporate modernism
9 stylesThe mark as an idea, a brandbook on a grid, and a unified system from logo to letterhead. The golden age of identity — a concise symbol, precise color, engineering discipline. Tea as an object of corporate culture.
Luxury & maison
1 stylesA monogram, the house's box color, and a silhouette recognized from behind. The heritage of fashion houses — cut, material, and the quiet luxury of detail. Tea as a rare object of desire from the window.
Editorial & postmodern
9 stylesTorn grids, typography-as-image, and magazine provocation. Blown kerning, slanted layers, and wordplay against Swiss purity. Intellectual noise with tea in the frame.
Poster & illustration
4 stylesCut-out silhouette, Art Deco airbrush, and one-line drawing. Kinetic title, psychedelic humanism, and graphics that tell a story frame by frame. Tea as the hero of a poster.
Product minimalism
1 styles«Less, but better» — snow-white function, one warm accent, and a form that disappears into usefulness. Industrial humanism of an object that lives for decades. Tea as an honest everyday item.
Tech & platforms
1 stylesAluminum, clean web standard, and the play button. Digital giants — a calm interface, a system font, and a signature glitch. Tea in the rhythm of a screen and a big product.
Digital 3D & motion
10 stylesLiquid chrome, generative data painting, and glossy renders. The post-internet era, where matter flows and the pixel hallucinates. Tea as a scene in the infinite digital sublime.
Cyrillic & constructivism
2 stylesConstructivist typesetting, living Cyrillic, and faded propaganda. Soviet school and post-Soviet typography — diagonal, agit-plakat, and film grain. Tea as a warm memory.
Eastern modernism
5 stylesA geisha on a Helvetica grid, the aesthetic of emptiness, and deconstructed Hangul. Japan, Korea, and China, where calligraphy meets the modernist grid. Tea at home — slowly and precisely.
Pop & mass brand
1 stylesA scarlet swirl, golden arches, and checkered asphalt. Mass-market graphics of the 20th century — a color that became a reflex, and a logo known by children. Tea as a pop icon.