











1996 Sepultura Full Of Shit Tee
This is a mid-1990s tee tied to one of the most politically charged and sonically aggressive bands of the era—Sepultura. Known for pushing beyond thrash into the realms of hardcore, death metal, and even tribal rhythms, Sepultura stood as a voice for the marginalized and the enraged. This shirt is as raw and unapologetic as the band itself.
The back delivers a bold visual punch: distressed stencil-style lettering reading “FULL OF SHIT”—an unmistakable jab at political and social hypocrisy. The back ties the statement directly to Sepultura’s ethos. It's not album-specific merch—it’s attitude-specific. Shirts like this weren’t meant for Hot Topic racks; they were made for basements, squat shows, and DIY punk spaces.
The cotton is heavy with a dry hand, and the fade is all-natural—no artificial distressing here. A true bootleg by spirit and possibly origin, this piece channels the same energy that made Chaos A.D. and Roots cultural weapons. Whether it was anti-establishment rage or anti-corporate venom, this shirt wore its stance on its chest, literally.
Tagged XL. Measures 24.5x31.
Flaws - None
For collectors of anti-authoritarian music culture, Brazilian metal history, or rare 1990s bootlegs, this shirt is a low-run relic that reflects a moment when metal meant more than just sound—it meant resistance. These kinds of politically loaded bootlegs don’t show up often, especially with bold text-driven graphics and preserved wear.
This is a mid-1990s tee tied to one of the most politically charged and sonically aggressive bands of the era—Sepultura. Known for pushing beyond thrash into the realms of hardcore, death metal, and even tribal rhythms, Sepultura stood as a voice for the marginalized and the enraged. This shirt is as raw and unapologetic as the band itself.
The back delivers a bold visual punch: distressed stencil-style lettering reading “FULL OF SHIT”—an unmistakable jab at political and social hypocrisy. The back ties the statement directly to Sepultura’s ethos. It's not album-specific merch—it’s attitude-specific. Shirts like this weren’t meant for Hot Topic racks; they were made for basements, squat shows, and DIY punk spaces.
The cotton is heavy with a dry hand, and the fade is all-natural—no artificial distressing here. A true bootleg by spirit and possibly origin, this piece channels the same energy that made Chaos A.D. and Roots cultural weapons. Whether it was anti-establishment rage or anti-corporate venom, this shirt wore its stance on its chest, literally.
Tagged XL. Measures 24.5x31.
Flaws - None
For collectors of anti-authoritarian music culture, Brazilian metal history, or rare 1990s bootlegs, this shirt is a low-run relic that reflects a moment when metal meant more than just sound—it meant resistance. These kinds of politically loaded bootlegs don’t show up often, especially with bold text-driven graphics and preserved wear.
This is a mid-1990s tee tied to one of the most politically charged and sonically aggressive bands of the era—Sepultura. Known for pushing beyond thrash into the realms of hardcore, death metal, and even tribal rhythms, Sepultura stood as a voice for the marginalized and the enraged. This shirt is as raw and unapologetic as the band itself.
The back delivers a bold visual punch: distressed stencil-style lettering reading “FULL OF SHIT”—an unmistakable jab at political and social hypocrisy. The back ties the statement directly to Sepultura’s ethos. It's not album-specific merch—it’s attitude-specific. Shirts like this weren’t meant for Hot Topic racks; they were made for basements, squat shows, and DIY punk spaces.
The cotton is heavy with a dry hand, and the fade is all-natural—no artificial distressing here. A true bootleg by spirit and possibly origin, this piece channels the same energy that made Chaos A.D. and Roots cultural weapons. Whether it was anti-establishment rage or anti-corporate venom, this shirt wore its stance on its chest, literally.
Tagged XL. Measures 24.5x31.
Flaws - None
For collectors of anti-authoritarian music culture, Brazilian metal history, or rare 1990s bootlegs, this shirt is a low-run relic that reflects a moment when metal meant more than just sound—it meant resistance. These kinds of politically loaded bootlegs don’t show up often, especially with bold text-driven graphics and preserved wear.