Alex Grey's 1995 piece "Collective Vision" was an early departure from the dominantly Cam de Leon era of Tool artwork. The print served primarily as a backdrop during the 2002 Lateralus tours before resurfacing in a black and white composite on the 10,000 Days disc face. Since Tool's contract with Giant Merchandising expired the year prior, this shirt bares a generic Anvil tag, and it's held up well with only mild discoloration. While there are at least three white shirts of the Lateralus era, this is likely the only one to use the band's original Opiate-era logo.
Mr. toolmaster ( your research is commendable on band merchandise). Anyway this shirt is definitely in my top five tool shirts and I reckon will be as much sought after in the same vain as all Indians shirt or old undertow shirts in few years time, so keep it safe,
pigwalk42 on
Interesting research
meetyourmaster on
Thank you for the fire!
Nodnoc74 on
Mr. toolmaster ( your research is commendable on band merchandise). Anyway this shirt is definitely in my top five tool shirts and I reckon will be as much sought after in the same vain as all Indians shirt or old undertow shirts in few years time, so keep it safe,
meetyourmaster on
Absolutely, and thank you for the kind words. It's a gem for sure, I love that they used the older logo over the new (for the time) artwork.
Kvltdad on
This is super sick!!
meetyourmaster on
Ahh, my man, always nice to hear from you! Thank you for the flameage!