Kulture Shop: Celebrating the Indian Graphic Artist Through Clothing

4543 Interested |
25K  Views

Kulture Shop

icon-placeAvailable Online

What Makes It Awesome

Kulture Shop is dedicated to Indian graphic designers and their sketchbooks full of doodles. Arjun Charanjiva, Jas Charanjiva and Kunal Anand are aiming to create a sustainable, creative eco-system for graphic artists; a place where they can display their works, have them appreciated, and ultimately monetised. How it works is simple: Each month KS rolls out products (having provided a theme), picks these art works, and then prints them on their products. Goes without saying, but we’ll say it anyway, each artist is compensated per piece sold.

You can follow their online store, though they’ve set up shop in Mumbai. For now products are limited to art tees, sketchbooks and art prints, but they’re currently expanding their repertoire. They offer prints in four standard international paper sizes – A5, A4, A3 and A2, along with a framing option. You can also have your pick delivered as is, sans frame, and it’ll come to you in a strong (we’ve tried and tested it), eco-friendly and re-usable carrying case.

Curating the best of global but Indian artists, they have 33 featured artists (and growing!), besides collaborative works. We love their Nightmare art print by Jasjyot Singh Hans, Bombaywale art print series by Shruthi Venkatraman, and the Dope tee by Sajid Wajid Shaikh. Don’t forget to check out their store for discounts on holidays and flash sales. And we love that they deliver free of cost across India.

Drawing from the best

COVID-19 Update: Prices range from INR 300 to INR 8,000 and you can shop off their official website that also has worldwide shipping. They are presently taking orders.

 (With inputs from Rashi Wadhera)

img-user-kasturi
599 Followers

A full time enthusiast of the 'gram', Kasturi paints and writes on her eponymous blog. She's looking to establish herself in a stable job despite her impending and current existential quarter life crisis. Not having stayed in one place for too long, she muses about the Arts and has an astronomical appetite for, well, food.