Collection: VINTAGE GRAPHIC TEES

The popularity of vintage graphic tees has solidified them as the ultimate "wearable art" and a primary currency in the global secondary fashion market, whether in music, film, or niche interests and hobbies. The market for graphic tees appreciates "single-stitch" construction, faded washes, and unique "cracked" screen prints are treated with the same reverence as designer labels, pushing prices for rare pop-culture tees, movie promos, and brand-specific grails into the thousands of dollars.

Vintage promotional tees for Budweiser and Marlboro have transitioned from common gas station merchandise to high-value "Americana" artifacts. Budweiser tees from the 1980s and 90s are prized for their classic "King of Beers" branding and the nostalgic "Bud Frogs" or "Spuds MacKenzie" graphics. Marlboro tees, particularly pieces from the "Marlboro Adventure Team" and "Marlboro Country" catalogues, remains at the top of collector wish lists. Despite modern restrictions on tobacco marketing, these tees are highly coveted for their bold red-and-white colour blocking and the iconic lizard or coyote graphics that defined the brand's 90s visual identity.

Vintage movie and film tees have become one of the most expensive categories in the vintage market. Early promotional tees for cult classics like Pulp Fiction, The Matrix, and Star Wars are treated as museum-grade relics, with "wrap-around" graphics and large-scale prints commanding the highest prices. The graphic tee trend has shifted toward "indie" and horror film promo tees from the late 90s and early 2000s, where tees for movies like The Blair Witch Project or Fight Club serve as rare collectibles. 

Celebrity and portrait tees capture moments and personalities that transcend typical fandom, often featuring iconic actors, politicians, or even controversial public figures. Sought-after tees include those featuring legendary politicians, actors from cult classic films, cultural icons like Princess Diana, and infamous names such as Charles Manson.

Destination graphics further define popular vintage graphic tees. These tees range from classic souvenir tees found at national parks like Yosemite or the Grand Canyon to niche "hometown" shirts from defunct bars, local diners, or school programs. Collectors particularly hunt for tees from global destinations like Tokyo, Paris, or New York that feature "destination" graphics or artistic depictions of city skylines, as well as the ever-popular Hard Rock Cafe and Planet Hollywood shirts that served as the quintessential travel trophies of the 1990s.