- This 290 g/m² slub jersey knit T-shirt is made in a family-run knitwear factory north of Porto, Portugal.
- Short sleeves, 1x1 rib knit crew neck
- Flat seams and invisible stitching on the hem and sleeves
- Heavy drape, slub and dense knit
- 100% Cotton
- Made in Portugal
He didn’t want to admire the artistry. He wanted to lock you in a cage.
Lombroso was an Italian criminologist who looked at the burgeoning subculture of heavily tattooed men and arrived at a beautifully unhinged conclusion: if you had a tattoo, you were a genetic throwback to a primitive, savage human. To him, an anchor on your forearm or a snake around your wrist wasn’t just body art—it was a physical manifestation of a criminal brain. He spent decades meticulously sketching the tattoos of convicts, treating their skin like a map of human deviance.
It is one of the grand, comedic ironies of history that the very drawings Lombroso used to condemn the marginalized have become some of the most striking, evocative archives of early tattoo culture. He tried to turn human skin into a clinical textbook, but instead, he accidentally preserved the raw, beautiful iconography of the nineteenth-century rebel.
The Fabric of the Underworld
When the French brand Fleurs de Bagne decided to put Lombroso’s archival sketches onto a T-shirt, they weren’t just picking a cool graphic. They were pulling a thread that connects modern heritage menswear straight back to the Apaches, the notorious belle époque street gangs of Paris who wore their ink like a middle finger to polite society.
Fleurs de Bagne doesn't make clothing for the faint of heart. They build gear that feels like it was dragged out of a French military barracks or an old port-town penal colony.
The Print: Up front and center are the actual, historical sketches curated by Lombroso. It is a dense, chaotic collage of full-body criminal tattoos—primitive crucifixes, warning signs, regional crests, and slogans of defiance.
The Knit: This isn’t one of those flimsy, tissue-paper tees you buy in a three-pack at the supermarket that loses its shape after a single encounter with a washing machine. It’s a heavy, slubby, textured cotton that feels like it has some dirt under its fingernails.
The Fit: Cut with a distinct vintage silhouette—slightly shorter in the body, boxy fit, with a robust collar that won't sag into a sad puddle after a few wears. It sits on the shoulders like a piece of genuine mid-century knitwear.
"Menswear enthusiasts have a remarkable ability to turn a 3-millimeter design change into a constitutional crisis, but let's be honest: wearing a criminologist's hit-list on your chest is the ultimate historical plot twist."
Why It Matters
There is a beautiful contradiction in wearing this shirt today. A piece of art originally drawn by a man trying to prove that certain people were biologically unfit for society has been reclaimed, Knitted into a heavy cotton tee by a cult French heritage brand, and will likely spend its life being worn to high-end coffee shops, independent record stores, and local breweries.
We don’t wear things just to stay warm anymore. We wear them because we inherit the stories stitched into the seams. When you pull this on, you aren't just wearing a T-shirt. You’re wearing the preserved defiance of a century of outcasts who decided that their bodies belonged to them, not the state.
Just try not to get arrested while wearing it. Lombroso would love the validation.
Washing Instructions
Machine wash at 30°C maximum
Do not tumble dry.