Cabinet Camp Shirt
Details
4.5 oz plain weave cottonÂ
4-hole mother of pearl buttons
Traditional Camp collar with button loop
Twill tape at neck and side openings
Double needle seam construction
Custom patch applique
This garment has undergone a wash and tint to remove all shrinkage
Color: Oxford Pink
Embroidery color: Multi
Size & Fit
- True to size
Â
Care & Origin
- 100% cotton
- Machine wash cold with like colors
- tumble dry low
- Designed in Los Angeles
- Imported
Description
A cabinet of curiosities (also known as a Wunderkammer) was an early way of collecting and displaying the strange, rare, and marvelous; often blurring the line between science, art, and the fantastical. These collections were meant to reflect the worldview of the collector; a personal archive of wonder. Instead of filling ours with taxidermied animals and rare minerals, we imagined what we’d want in our own cabinet: medieval fragments, bits of armor, incense thuribles, and mythical creatures like mermaids. We were drawn to the idea of a collection not rooted in fact, but in an imagined past. This group pulls from that private, dreamlike archive; an invented world of relics. Each embroidery appears on a rectangular fabric applique, echoing the look of a curio box, with small treasures laid out side by side, waiting to be discovered.
Original: $335.00
-70%$335.00
$100.50

Description
Details
4.5 oz plain weave cottonÂ
4-hole mother of pearl buttons
Traditional Camp collar with button loop
Twill tape at neck and side openings
Double needle seam construction
Custom patch applique
This garment has undergone a wash and tint to remove all shrinkage
Color: Oxford Pink
Embroidery color: Multi
Size & Fit
- True to size
Â
Care & Origin
- 100% cotton
- Machine wash cold with like colors
- tumble dry low
- Designed in Los Angeles
- Imported
Description
A cabinet of curiosities (also known as a Wunderkammer) was an early way of collecting and displaying the strange, rare, and marvelous; often blurring the line between science, art, and the fantastical. These collections were meant to reflect the worldview of the collector; a personal archive of wonder. Instead of filling ours with taxidermied animals and rare minerals, we imagined what we’d want in our own cabinet: medieval fragments, bits of armor, incense thuribles, and mythical creatures like mermaids. We were drawn to the idea of a collection not rooted in fact, but in an imagined past. This group pulls from that private, dreamlike archive; an invented world of relics. Each embroidery appears on a rectangular fabric applique, echoing the look of a curio box, with small treasures laid out side by side, waiting to be discovered.























