Vintage Cowboy Henley Shirt West At Its Best Long Sleeve 90s
A 1992-copyright cowboy henley in off-white cotton with a horse and saddle chest graphic and a wanted poster design on the back — branded “West of the Pecos” and printed on a Cotton Deluxe by Anvil blank. This is western kitsch done right.
The henley neckline sets this apart immediately. Most 90s graphic tees are crew necks — the button-up henley collar gives this one a different feel entirely, something closer to frontier underwear than a standard tee. Paired with the long sleeves and the off-white cotton, it reads more like a piece of Old West costuming than a souvenir shirt, which is probably exactly what the designers intended.
Anvil’s Cotton Deluxe line was a step above their basic blanks — heavier weight, tighter knit, better hand feel. Screen printers in the early 90s who cared about the finished product reached for Cotton Deluxe or Hanes Beefy-T over the cheaper options. The fact that this has held up in great condition after 30-plus years says something about the blank quality.
“West of the Pecos” references the old Texas frontier region made famous by Judge Roy Bean, the self-appointed “Law West of the Pecos.” The graphic leans into that mythology — saddles, wanted posters, the whole romantic outlaw aesthetic that never really goes out of style.
Cowboy heritage on a quality 90s blank. A rare silhouette in the vintage graphic tee world.
ITEMS POSTED IN THE
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