Southern Coastal Mallard Tee

$54.00

Some shirts you buy. Some shirts you find. The Southern Coastal Mallard Tee is built to feel like the second kind — a heritage mallard graphic on a 7.1 oz heavyweight faded boxy tee that arrives already looking like the most loved shirt in the rotation. The Victorian blackletter "Hunt & Harbor" frames a landing Mallard Drake in full wing spread, cattails at his feet, "Fine Goods Est. 2025" anchoring the bottom in a script that means exactly what it says. It's the kind of graphic that reads as a brand you've always known — even if you just discovered it five minutes ago. Every shirt comes out with its own subtle hue gradient and naturally faded edges. No two are exactly alike. That's not a quality issue — that's the whole point. The slight variation in the dye finish is what makes a $200 vintage tee feel different from everything else in your drawer. This one gets there from day one. The boxy oversized fit sits exactly where menswear is right now — relaxed without being sloppy, substantial without being stiff. Throw it on over a swimsuit heading to the dock or wear it tucked into chinos for a night out at the marina. It works both ways without trying. This is vintage outdoor style for the guy who actually hunts, actually fishes, and actually knows the difference between a heavyweight faded tee and everything else on the rack.

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Some shirts you buy. Some shirts you find. The Southern Coastal Mallard Tee is built to feel like the second kind — a heritage mallard graphic on a 7.1 oz heavyweight faded boxy tee that arrives already looking like the most loved shirt in the rotation. The Victorian blackletter "Hunt & Harbor" frames a landing Mallard Drake in full wing spread, cattails at his feet, "Fine Goods Est. 2025" anchoring the bottom in a script that means exactly what it says. It's the kind of graphic that reads as a brand you've always known — even if you just discovered it five minutes ago. Every shirt comes out with its own subtle hue gradient and naturally faded edges. No two are exactly alike. That's not a quality issue — that's the whole point. The slight variation in the dye finish is what makes a $200 vintage tee feel different from everything else in your drawer. This one gets there from day one. The boxy oversized fit sits exactly where menswear is right now — relaxed without being sloppy, substantial without being stiff. Throw it on over a swimsuit heading to the dock or wear it tucked into chinos for a night out at the marina. It works both ways without trying. This is vintage outdoor style for the guy who actually hunts, actually fishes, and actually knows the difference between a heavyweight faded tee and everything else on the rack.