
Jun Penelope snapped with these cutoff sublimation gloves, these one of ones are on their IG, for more artifacts and things of interest, seek us, at, the GALLLERY.






Jun Penelope snapped with these cutoff sublimation gloves, these one of ones are on their IG, for more artifacts and things of interest, seek us, at, the GALLLERY.








HENRY JOHNSON has been cranking out some amazing screen printed garms for a minute in his NYC Studio, the craftsmanship of this one is just amazing featuring his take on Aphex Twin’s I Care because you do. This tee along with another Burial tee is launching in Henry’s shop Friday. For more artifacts seek us at the GALLLERY.

At this point, it should be no secret, im unc….at this point you should know, I mean, you’re on a blog (archive) in 2025….i’m unc. One thing I will say, is when it comes to streetwear/streetstyle, no one, I mean, no one, was on this Aphex Twin in 2015 and even 2014. Dudes were wearing Pablo merch and Sadboy2001 gear. Ian’s influence is pretty crazy dude has been a staple in the scene and honestly he created a lot of the stuff you see today. Not saying literally no one was wearing this stuff but in the street style realm, nah. Then HBA flipped the logo and the rest was history. Either way, dude had an influence on the culture. Like it or not. For more artifacts……seek us, seek us at the GALLLERY.




Los Angeles D.J. Baseck from Boize Noize Records just dropped 2 absolute bangers. These are custom caps for him and my favorite is the Aphex Twin emobroidered on the vintage souvenir cap. For more artifacts and things of interest. Seek us at the GALLLERY


Aphex Twin merch has always lived in a weird little intersection of rave culture, streetwear kids, and music nerds. Even before electronic music had a real place inside fashion, people were already flipping that Aphex logo onto whatever they could find. Blank crewnecks from the thrift, camo hats from the swap meet, floral caps from somebody’s uncle who used to surf, and random tees that already had a whole life before the print even hit it.
That is why vintage Aphex pieces feel different. It is not clean corporate merch. It is culture. It is community. It is the early internet, record store runs, late night raves, and whole worlds built off one sound.
The logo itself is basically a secret handshake. Paul Nicholson designed it in the early 90s, but the streets gave it a new meaning. It became the silent symbol for anybody who loved experimental electronic music, IDM, ambient, jungle, glitch, and everything that spun out of that era. And because Aphex Twin barely released official merch back then, a lot of the pieces you see today were made by fans, crews, and small shops who just wanted to represent what the music meant to them.
The pieces in this archive carry that same DNA. A heather grey vintage crewneck with a bold black print. An orange 90s blank with that iconic circle sitting right on the chest. A folded black tee that looks like something you would find in the back of a crate at a DJ’s house. And then you get into the hats. Bright floral patterns with big black lettering. Camo caps with white puff style prints. Even a vintage football jersey that feels like a bootleg from a whole different continent. This is what makes Aphex Twin merch special. No two pieces ever tell the same story.
Aphex Twin is one of the most influential artists in electronic music history. Albums like Selected Ambient Works 85 to 92 helped shape the sound of the 90s. His presence sent shockwaves through rave culture, club culture, streetwear, and even modern design. That is why search terms like Aphex Twin merch, vintage Aphex Twin, electronic music clothing, IDM fashion history, rave inspired streetwear, and archive electronic apparel keep trending. People love this world because it is real, not manufactured.
What I love about these garments is how they travel. They look like things handed down through eras of music heads. They look like clothing that lived through basements, record stores, college radio stations, parking lot meetups, and late night drives. Every print on every blank feels like it came out of someone’s personal connection to the music.
Aphex Twin did not just influence sound. He influenced visuals. He influenced how people express themselves through clothes. He influenced a whole generation of artists who learned that you do not need a big machine behind you to create your own world. Sometimes all you need is a blank garment, a print, and a feeling. For more artifacts, seek the GALLLERY












This Aphex Twin x Metroid merch by Beacon,NY duo Favorite Vegetable is an amazing flip on two icons.Amazing half-tone work!!! Get this screen-printed, in house merchandise here. And for more facts and interesting artifacts, seek us here.


Ian Connor was recently spotted in this very rare Aphex Twin boot cap by Gleb Kostin. This all over print cap is in full color and black and white and is in their new collection featuring this cap and some amazing AFX original drawing merch. For more artifacts, seek the GALLLERY.






Rare glimpse into Aphex Twin’s modular synth lair circa early 2000s walls of Doepfer A-100, tangled cables, and a cat as the only witness. For more artifacts, go to the GALLLERY