Product Details
- Premium Short Sleeve Graphic Tee
- Lightweight Cotton (4.5 oz/yd²)
- Modern Classic Fit & Seamless Body
- Vivid Print Remastered from an Original Japanese Masterwork
Fabric & Care
Premium Lightweight T-Shirt
- Modern classic fit / Crew neck / Rib collar.
- Double-needle sleeve and bottom hems.
- Lightweight: 4.5 oz/yd² / 153 g/m².
- OEKO-TEX certified low-impact dyes.
- DTG print with water-based NeoPigment inks.
Made with 100% Ring-spun Cotton
- "Sport Grey": 90% cotton / 10% polyester.
- "Antique" colours: 90% cotton / 10% polyester.
- "Graphite Heather": 50% cotton / 50% polyester.
- "Heather" colours: 35% cotton / 65% polyester.
- All other styles: 100% cotton.
Take Care of your Purchase
- Machine wash cold with like colours (max 30C / 90F).
- Do not bleach.
- Do not tumble dry.
- Do not dry clean.
- Do not iron.
- Line dry in shade.
- To minimize fading of the image, wash it inside out, in cold water, and avoid excessive washing.
Shipping & Returns
In an effort to maximise our design range, avoid over-production and waste, and offer you a competitive price, all of our products are made to order.
We ship worldwide with the best courier for your location.
Delivery time estimates shown below include production (2–4 business days) and standard shipping. Most packages arrive sooner than estimated.
- United States: 6-10 business days
- Rest of the World: 12-30 business days
Due to the custom nature of our items, we cannot accept returns or exchanges for wrong size, colour, or change of mind, however if your item arrives damaged or contains an error we will gladly replace it.
More details can be found in our full refund policy.
Artwork Details
The standoff that became legend. In 1584, Japan's future hung in balance at Komaki. Honda Tadakatsu served Tokugawa Ieyasu while Kato Kiyomasa rode for Toyotomi Hideyoshi - two of the greatest warriors of the age facing each other across a battlefield that would help decide who ruled Japan. Tadakatsu was vastly outnumbered, but his mission wasn't to win - it was to delay, to harass, to buy time for Ieyasu's army to escape. So he held the line against impossible odds.
Chikanobu captures the confrontation - Tadakatsu on his pale horse to the left, his distinctive antler-horned helmet marking him instantly, spear at the ready. Kiyomasa faces him on a dark mount to the right, his own elaborate armor and war fan held high. Both are poised, neither advancing, locked in a moment of mutual recognition. These weren't random soldiers - they were elite warriors who understood exactly what the other was capable of. The respect is visible even in combat stance. Behind them, the smoke and chaos of battle, but here, for this instant, it's just two legends measuring each other.
This is from Chikanobu's 1899 triptych, created during the Meiji era when artists looked back at the samurai age with nostalgia. The Battle of Komaki didn't decide the war, but moments like this - warrior facing warrior - became the stories that survived.
Honda Tadakatsu (本多忠勝) confronting Kato Kiyomasa (加藤清正) at the Battle of Komaki (小牧ノ役) 1899.
Hashimoto Chikanobu (橋本周延, 1838-1912)