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Jim Corbett Noir - Unisex Oversized Classic T-Shirt

Black / XS
Sale price  Rs. 699.00 Regular price  Rs. 799.00
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Jim Corbett Noir - Unisex Oversized Classic T-Shirt

Sale price  Rs. 699.00 Regular price  Rs. 799.00

Why settle for plain when you can wear your personality? This clever design tells a story everyone recognizes but few dare to display. Honest, relatable, and unapologetically real.

Perfect for those who appreciate humor that hits close to home and aren't afraid to wear their truth on their sleeve (literally).
And guess WHAT!!- FREE SHIPPING!

colorBlack
size

* This is an oversized item - Please check the size chart in the images for your appropriate size.

Fabric: 100% cotton, 240 GSM heavyweight yet breathable with that perfect oversized drape — because stalking tigers through a sal forest is warm work and you deserve comfort.

Fit: Unisex oversized fit — relaxed shoulders, dropped sleeves, roomy enough to accommodate both your massive personality and your emergency granola bars.

Design: A Bengal tiger mid-stride through India's oldest national park, rendered in bold woodcut illustration with earthy forest greens and burnt sienna. Worn-in vintage badge style — because Jim Corbett NP has been doing conservation since 1936 and your fashion choices should have that kind of legacy energy. The distressed texture suggests you've been on exactly one safari and now consider yourself an expert. Wear it proudly.

Care: Wash inside-out in cold water, dry on low heat, iron inside-out. Handle with more care than the tiger would handle you.

Perfect for: wildlife photographers who got blurry shots but great stories, people who say "I prefer animals to humans" and mean it, anyone whose idea of cardio is a jeep safari, documentary watchers who consider themselves conservationists, and everyone whose spirit animal is a large apex predator with boundary issues.

Warning: Wearing this shirt may cause you to start every conversation with "so I was reading about Project Tiger..." Side effects include an uncontrollable urge to visit Uttarakhand, strong opinions about habitat conservation, and the inexplicable feeling that you could survive in the jungle (you could not).

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