Mase Magokurō Oversized T-Shirt
Size Chart
Product Details
- Premium Oversized Graphic Tee
- Heavyweight Cotton (8.2 oz/yd² )
- Relaxed Fit with Dropped Shoulders
- Vivid Print Remastered from an Original Japanese Masterwork
Fabric & Care
Premium Heavyweight T-Shirt
- Boxy relaxed fit / Dropped shoulders / Wide neck ribbing.
- Double-needle sleeve and bottom hems.
- Heavyweight: 8.2 oz/yd² / 200 g/m².
- OEKO-TEX certified low-impact dyes.
- DTG print with water-based NeoPigment inks.
Made with 100% Carded Cotton
- "Marle" colours: 85% cotton / 15% viscose.
- 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
One of the forty-seven. Mase Magokurō was among the rōnin who waited, plotted, and struck on that snow-covered night in 1703. When their lord was forced to commit seppuku after drawing his sword in the shogun's palace, forty-seven of his retainers refused to accept it as the end. They spent two years living in carefully constructed disgrace - drinking, gambling, appearing broken - while secretly planning their revenge. Magokurō was one of them, bound by oath to restore their master's honor no matter the cost.
Yoshitoshi captures him in stark, dramatic simplicity - dressed entirely in black with patterned leggings, face wrapped and hooded for the night raid, wooden club raised and ready to strike. His two swords are thrust through his sash, but he carries that club for practicality - quiet, brutal, effective. Shattered roof tiles scatter around his feet, evidence of the assault already underway. His body is coiled with purpose, every line suggesting controlled violence about to be unleashed. This is a man who's waited two years for this moment.
This is from Yoshitoshi's 1869 series depicting each of the forty-seven rōnin individually. The Chūshingura story obsessed Japanese audiences because it asked an impossible question: what do you owe to honor when the law says let it go? Magokurō and his brothers answered with steel, knowing they'd die for it.
This is Mase Magokurō Minamoto no Masatoki (間瀬孫九郎源正辰), from the series Seichū gishi meimei gaden (誠忠義士銘々画傳, Biographies of Loyal Retainers of Chushingura) 1869.
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (月岡芳年, 1839-1892)