Lot #1873

$50.00

Gender: Unisex.

Model: Loose.

Fabric: 100% cotton.

Fabric Weight: 9.4 oz/yd² (320 g/m²).

Fabric Thickness: Moderate.

Care Instructions: Machine wash at 30°C (gentle cycle); Do not bleach; Tumble dry low; Iron at low temperature, avoid ironing on print; Do not dry clean.

Features: Basics, Casual, Preppy, Sporty, Street, Daily Casual, Sport, School, Gym, Outdoor, Running, Office, Pure Cotton, Washed, Half Sleeve, Drop Shoulder, Round Neck / O-Neck, Regular, Loose, Spring, Summer, Autumn.

Easter Egg: Lot #1873 references when an armed group of white supremacists attacked a courthouse guarded by a mostly-Black militia in the town of Colfax, Louisiana on April 13, 1873. A bloodbath ensues, as the militia surrenders and the white supremacists carry out a day-long campaign of terror that came to be known as the Colfax Massacre. They then spread out into town, indiscriminately murdering Black residents of Colfax. By the time Louisiana state militia arrived on April 14, an estimated 150 people had been killed—an exact count was made difficult by the hiding of many of the bodies.

Gender: Unisex.

Model: Loose.

Fabric: 100% cotton.

Fabric Weight: 9.4 oz/yd² (320 g/m²).

Fabric Thickness: Moderate.

Care Instructions: Machine wash at 30°C (gentle cycle); Do not bleach; Tumble dry low; Iron at low temperature, avoid ironing on print; Do not dry clean.

Features: Basics, Casual, Preppy, Sporty, Street, Daily Casual, Sport, School, Gym, Outdoor, Running, Office, Pure Cotton, Washed, Half Sleeve, Drop Shoulder, Round Neck / O-Neck, Regular, Loose, Spring, Summer, Autumn.

Easter Egg: Lot #1873 references when an armed group of white supremacists attacked a courthouse guarded by a mostly-Black militia in the town of Colfax, Louisiana on April 13, 1873. A bloodbath ensues, as the militia surrenders and the white supremacists carry out a day-long campaign of terror that came to be known as the Colfax Massacre. They then spread out into town, indiscriminately murdering Black residents of Colfax. By the time Louisiana state militia arrived on April 14, an estimated 150 people had been killed—an exact count was made difficult by the hiding of many of the bodies.

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