
ITEM TYPE: Brand: Byztee – Trendy Shirt: When you shop at Byztee, you can find high-quality T-shirts that will keep you cool and comfortable whether it’s hot outside or freezing outside. We also work to give our clients the best customer service by upholding customer satisfaction guidelines and adopting an open-door policy.
MATERIAL: Product Description: For both men and women, we only utilize premium 100% cotton t-shirts that have a long-lasting finish. Because our shirts are always available in large sizes, you can be confident that they will fit you perfectly and enhance your appearance. Its fabric, including the hoodie, sweater, tank top, long sleeves, and v-neck T-shirt is made of. CLASSIC UNISEX T-SHIRT: 100% cotton is used for solid colors, 50% cotton and 50% polyester is used for Heather colors (Sport Grey is 90% cotton and 10% polyester), and 60% cotton and 40% polyester is used for Antique colors. UNISEX HOODIE AND SWEATSHIRT: 50% polyester and 50% cotton. cloth that is incredibly strong and smooth and is made from specifically spun fibers, making it ideal for printing. The majority of pollutants can’t harm polyester fibers, and they also withstand stretching and shrinking. UNISEX LONG SLEEVES: Combed and ringspun cotton of 100% Airlume (fiber content may vary for different colors). Heather hues are 52% cotton, 48% polyester, while solid colors are 100% cotton (Athletic Heather is 90% cotton, 10% polyester). UNISEX TANK TOP: Tri-blend colors are 50% polyester, 25% cotton, and 25% rayon, while solid colors are 100% cotton, heather colors are 52% cotton, 48% polyester, and athletic heather is 90% cotton, 10% polyester. KID CLASSIC TEE: Our most popular tee for kids. The Youth Tee fits both men and women equally. This midweight shirt is often composed of 100% cotton and is comfortable to the touch. Only Light Heather Grey (90/10 cotton/polyester) and Dark Heather Grey (50/50 cotton/polyester) are exceptions. Shipping And Return Policy at Byztee: We at Byztee are committed to providing our clients with high-quality apparel in original designs that uphold our corporate values of accessibility and affordability. We are dedicated to offering high-quality goods at competitive prices. All of the nations where we offer shipping and delivery services will receive it, Hoodie, Sweater, Tank Top, Long Sleeve, and V-neck T-shirt. Delivery of the item will take 5-8 business days in the US and 10-15 business days for clients in the EU. We sincerely appreciate that you took the time to read our item description, and we sincerely hope that it provided you with enough information to make an informed decision. Please get in touch with us at: [email protected] if anything is still unclear or if you have any questions. Enjoy your day!
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Related Articles: They were visions of languid elegance, dressed to the nines with myriad jeweled accessories, the maquillage as immaculate as the hauteur they were so gifted at projecting. Vaccarello riffed on all the draping and hoods for a slew of beautifully rendered dresses cut from jersey in two different weights: one heavier and opaque, giving a more constructed look; the other lighter and gauzier, gently—and barely—veiling the body underneath. Some of these dresses were slipped under sweeping great coats and trenches—which fell in narrow columnar proportions from big shoulders in leather, tweed, or wool—or paired with more leather in the form of capacious blouson jackets that nipped inwards as their cut moved toward the waist. (Vaccarello deftly mimicked the silhouette and made it more day with a draped sweater with a hood over tapering track pants—and in contrast, loosened everything up with a series of terrific pajama suits, the standout in ivory polka dots on black.) Vaccarello’s color palette was gloriously muted but definitive, taken from the clothes shot on Polaroid from YSL fittings back in the day: soft browns, purples, camels, olives, and taupes, their tones heightened by the substantial jeweled or Claude Lalanne–esque gold cuffs. There were barely-there sandals and satiny pumps with high-cut vamps and gleaming metallic shades. Everything came together to create a look that was finished, polished, considered, and—time to bring back this word, clearly—done: a riposte to the idea that everything is heading us toward some inexorable slide into bland, dull, uniform, social-media-hyped coolness. Yet ’30s or ’80s, it didn’t really matter. What drives Vaccarello is where we are right now. Despite the historical referencing, his push is to always exist in the present. You can trace that from this collection back through his last few women’s runway shows. It’s a thread that takes you from the bold-shoulder blazers and latex of winter 2020 to the Belgian-y swaggering coats and floor-trailing skirts he did for fall to tonight’s offering. Let’s call what Vaccarello is doing empower dressing. It doesn’t rest on the outward gestures—the width of the shoulders, the height of the heels, or the length of the skirts. Instead, it reflects what’s within, unspoken, but undeniably powerful and potent.
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- A while back, whilst in Paris, Thom Browne caught a version of the Cinderella story at the magnificent gilded folly that is the Opéra Garnier. I suspect it was Cendrillon by Jules Massenet. This afternoon Browne returned to Napoleon III’s most magnificently OTT architectural memento to present a production of his own: what he called “An American prom mixed with Cinderella mixed with the Paris Opera.” Just in case we didn’t know what to expect, Gwendoline Christie provided disambiguation. She emerged in a full-length single-breasted white-piped braided blazer—double vented—and some marvelous golden sandals with little effigies of Hector (who got lots of walkies this season) at the front of each foot. After a slow mosey around the golden halls she returned to ours and began spritzing herself in cologne and brushing her locks. And then she told us of what was to come: “Thom loves his little stories—and this is going to be a very long story.” We settled into our golden chairs. And the story went a little bit like this. Four rouge-lipped hot boys came and removed Christie’s dressing table, wearing quintessential Browne gray tailoring and kilt: salarymen at a Scottish reel. Then came 21 opera coats—the first in a tri-clolor arrangement—with collegiate numbers on each back: I noted every number. The came five frock coats, and three swing skirts with petticoats, plus one white witch extra. And then all 21 coat-wearers returned with their unders revealed: all polka dot tailoring and pastels and peek-a-boo underwear. As a Brit, it was impossible not to see the tradition of pantomime—but was this a projection? The best section by far ran 52 to 56, when the punks invaded the assembly. Westwood was an unavoidable comparison, but it was convincingly great (as was Joan Jett on the PA) unto itself.
- On some looks you could see the fossilized traces of “normal” pieces—a biker here, a gown there—but all were distended and distorted and blown up or reduced via twists and aggregations of imagination. This was not regular sizing either, Salomon-collab sneakers apart. The pieces were dark embraces. Some of the models wore headpieces in folded card flowers or apparently hodgepodge steampunk-ish assemblages, half-helmet, half-crown. Created under a briefing by Gary Card and Valériane Venance, these looked to resemble virgin crants, the maiden’s garlands in which young, prematurely deceased women were buried in pre-Reformation England. They were chilling. In look 12 that sinister aspect washed against the buoying impression of the cloth-clad shapes below that appeared to urge the wearer up again. On a possibly boring personal note, watching and then reviewing this collection today has made me flash back to my earliest seasons, eons ago, when I used to feel like a nervous fraud at every show I attended. In the absence of Sarah Mower for a season (she’s at a happy family event), I was handed a shot at Comme, and it revived that gnawing question that nagged me back then: What gives me the right to have an opinion about this? I was gripped by the same impostor syndrome that Edward Enninful (of all nonimpostors) describes so surprisingly and finely in his autobiography. And I guess the answer is, if you don’t feel like an impostor sometimes, then you probably shouldn’t be here at all.
- After four weeks of late nights and early starts, the fashion pack could be forgiven for power napping as they waited for a show to start on a Sunday afternoon. The temptation was even greater at Ottolinger, where seating comprised a giant tessellated pile of mattresses. That is, until the techno started pumping. Backstage, designers Christa Bösch and Cosima Gadient explained they wanted guests to feel as if they were waking up and heading out into the world full of GIF-y, girl-bossy ebullience. “It’s like in the morning when there’s really warm light, and you have a good feeling about the day. You start the day upbeat, you go off and you sign a deal—it’s not an average day; it’s a really good day,” said Gadient with a laugh. If it took a little creative license for this writer to imagine inking a business deal in the show’s opening look—a deconstructed belt–meets–bra top whose straps covered the nipples and little else, paired with low-slung leather-look trousers made from recycled polyester—the audience didn’t share such prudishness. Gen Z’s love of near nudity knows no bounds, and the fan base that lounged on the mattresses wearing skin-baring looks from the Berlin-based label would think nothing of wearing a crop top to talk shop. The designers recently launched a pre-collection that they said had allowed them to tackle more conceptual ideas in their runway shows. No longer beholden to showing denim and mesh dresses, which are their big commercial hits, this freed them up to present deconstructed biker jackets and skintight bodysuits. Ironically, though, the strongest pieces were arguably the most commercial, especially the dresses that draped and hugged the body with some rubbery-looking embellishments. Dipping items in rubber is a trait that reads recognizably Ottolinger: The punked-up court shoes, which saw a classic pump wrapped in a futuristic rubber-like casing, were as covetable as the diamanté jewelry dipped in brightly colored rubber that currently sells well on the label’s website. They’d do well to continue hammering home those codes as the Y2K trend keeps rolling and numerous other labels look to replicate their success with the sexy and the skintight.
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The centerpiece of the Hermès show was a large dune. We were camping—or better make that glamping, given the environs. “The Hermès girls are taking a bivouac, a big hike in the desert, and setting up a camp at sunset to have a party, a big rave,” Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski said backstage. After a couple of years of lockdowns, the vacation industry came roaring back this summer. Instagram feeds were awash with content from picturesque spots, a sort of one-upmanship of far-off destinations—Patagonia, Kenya, Alaska. All that long-distance travel, that living outdoors, requires a different kind of gear than our urban existence does, and we’ve made kitting ourselves out part of the fun. Vanhee-Cybulski—a day hiker more than a camper, she confessed—had clearly studied the utilitarian details of outdoor equipment. The back of a tech-fabric raincoat rolled up to reveal an underlayer of breathable mesh, and slim-line dresses were built with user-friendly zips that allow their wearer to customize the look. Elastic cording, though less adaptable, evoked the tension and release of tent construction. She didn’t push the metaphor too far. A hooded rain poncho in the supplest leather wouldn’t be worth much out in the elements, for example, and the platform sandals couldn’t get far in the wild, but they do hew to the experienced trekker’s cardinal rule: They’re remarkably light. What the season’s theme gave Vanhee-Cybulski a chance to do was play with gorgeous desert colors: a whole palette of earthy tans, browns, and terra-cottas, as well as luscious sunset hues. A terrific dress in color-blocked shades of pink was designed to evoke flags rustling in the wind. The scarf-print numbers looked even better with a pair of 3D glasses. As ever, what the Hermès ateliers can get up to with leather is impressive. A dress with circular leather appliqués that got subtly bigger from neck to hem was a breezy knockout.
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