You've Been Sold Short
For a long time, streetwear meant hype or basics. Neither was built for you. Here's what better looks like.
For a long time, streetwear meant one of two things.
Hype. Or basics.
Either you were chasing a drop, refreshing a page at 8am for something you'd resell before you wore it, or you were buying a logo on a blank and calling it culture. Neither of those is fashion. Neither of those is art. And neither of them was built for you.
You were sold the idea that luxury lives behind a velvet rope. That it speaks a language you weren't born into. That it belongs to someone else, someone with the right postcode, the right accent, the right everything.
That was always a lie.
Mongrel Logic organic cotton
Luxury is construction
Fabric. Longevity. The feeling of putting something on and knowing immediately, this was made to last. Not made to trend. Not made to be binned in a season. Made to become part of how you move through the world. Streetwear at its best was always that.
The street has always been the catwalk
The difference is who's been building for it.
Mongrel Logic started from a simple dissatisfaction
With what exists, with what's accepted, with the gap between what people deserve and what they're being offered.
Artwork mapped onto garment
Fabric that reads like graffiti, like tattoos, like something with a past and a future. Not a clever play on words. Not a trend cycle mood board. Something that rewires how you think about what you put on your body.
Expect better. Wear better. Build better.
That's not a slogan. It's the only direction this was ever going.

