On Hollywood Tee Pink Floyd Dark Side Of The Moon S/S (Black)
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On Hollywood Tee Pink Floyd Dark Side Of The Moon S/S (Black) taps directly into one of the most recognizable album visuals ever created, keeping it clean, centered, and true to form. The front graphic features the iconic prism design from Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon, with a sharp white beam entering a triangular prism and splitting into a full-spectrum rainbow that shoots out the other side. The print sits perfectly centered on a deep black tee, letting the contrast do all the work—crisp whites, a soft gradient prism edge, and saturated rainbow bands that hit clean without overprinting. Beneath the prism, “PINK FLOYD” is printed in a simple serif font, grounded and understated, letting the artwork carry the weight.
The tee itself is a classic short sleeve cut with a standard crew neck, built for everyday wear whether you’re skating, digging through records, or just keeping it low-key. The black cotton base keeps it versatile, easy to pair with anything from worn denim to work pants, and the graphic placement is dialed so it doesn’t feel oversized or crowded. It’s the kind of piece that reads instantly from across the room but still holds up when you get close.
Pink Floyd, formed in London in 1965, became one of the most influential bands in rock history, known for pushing boundaries in sound, concept albums, and visual identity. Dark Side of the Moon, released in 1973, remains one of the best-selling albums of all time, and its prism artwork—designed by Hipgnosis—has become a permanent symbol of music culture far beyond its original era.
That crossover into skateboarding has always been there too. Tracks from Floyd have backed some of the most memorable parts ever filmed, adding a different kind of weight and pacing to skating. Brian Anderson’s Welcome to Hell part running “Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)” set a tone that still holds today, while Mike Maldonado’s use of “Time” in Jump Off a Building showed how well Floyd’s sound fits powerful, aggressive skating. More recently, Tom Karangelov’s WKND part leaned heavily into Floyd’s catalog, layering intros with “Is There Anybody Out There?” before dropping into heavier tracks, proving that connection hasn’t gone anywhere.
It’s that same balance of timeless and raw that makes this tee feel right at home anywhere from late pushes through Alhambra to mellow sessions around South Pas. A piece like this doesn’t need to try—it already carries decades of weight.
Stix SGV has proudly served the San Gabriel Valley skateboarding community since the late ‘90s. With three locations across Los Angeles County, we’ve been deeply rooted in the local scene. Our Monrovia shop has been a staple since 1997, followed by our Claremont location in 2014, and our South Pasadena shop opening its doors in 2022. Our mission has always been simple: to uphold skateboarding culture and stay true to our community.