HomeStore

Hartford | Tatropic Ecru Sweatshirt - Raglan Graphic

Product image 1
Product image 2
Product image 3
Product image 4
Product image 5

Hartford | Tatropic Ecru Sweatshirt - Raglan Graphic

Hartford | Tatropic Ecru Sweatshirt - Raglan Graphic

A sweatshirt that reads like a postcard. Hartford’s Tatropic silhouette lands with an ease that belies its considered construction: a round neckline, raglan armholes, and ribbed finishes at the collar, waist, and cuffs. The cut is relaxed without being slouchy, a generous width through the body that skims rather than swallows. It is the kind of proportion that works as easily with tailoring as it does with denim—a soft, deliberate volume that moves with you, not against you. The ecru ground is barely there, a warm, unbleached white that lets the graphic do the talking. The fabric is where the story begins to settle. A dense, substantial cotton jersey with a brushed hand, weighty enough to hold its shape through a day of wear, yet pliant against the skin. There is no stiffness here—only a quiet drape that falls from the shoulder and gathers softly at the ribbed hem. The interior feels lightly napped, the kind of texture you notice when you pull it on after a cold morning. It is not a technical fleece; it is something more refined: a sweatshirt that has been considered as a piece of clothing, not just a layer. Fit is the anchor. The raglan sleeve construction opens the shoulder, creating a clean line from collar to cuff without the bulk of a set-in seam. The ribbing at the waist is firm but not restrictive, holding the silhouette in place without cinching. The sleeves are cut long, ending in a snug rib that stacks slightly at the wrist—a detail that reads as intentional, not accidental. This is a sweatshirt that understands proportion: the body is generous, the finishes are precise, and the overall effect is one of studied nonchalance. Movement is built into every seam. There is no pull across the back, no ride-up at the hem when you reach or bend. The raglan cut allows full range of motion, making this as suited to a long train ride as it is to a slow Sunday. The graphic—a bold “Welcome to the tropics” printed across the chest and echoed on the back—introduces a note of irreverence. It is not loud, but it is present: a wink, a souvenir, a line from a place you’d rather be. Pair it with a wide-leg trouser and a leather loafer for a look that balances ease with edge, or let it anchor a full denim moment. It is a piece that asks to be worn, not saved.

Select Color
Select Size
From $49.70

Original: $142.00

-65%
Hartford | Tatropic Ecru Sweatshirt - Raglan Graphic

$142.00

$49.70

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

A sweatshirt that reads like a postcard. Hartford’s Tatropic silhouette lands with an ease that belies its considered construction: a round neckline, raglan armholes, and ribbed finishes at the collar, waist, and cuffs. The cut is relaxed without being slouchy, a generous width through the body that skims rather than swallows. It is the kind of proportion that works as easily with tailoring as it does with denim—a soft, deliberate volume that moves with you, not against you. The ecru ground is barely there, a warm, unbleached white that lets the graphic do the talking. The fabric is where the story begins to settle. A dense, substantial cotton jersey with a brushed hand, weighty enough to hold its shape through a day of wear, yet pliant against the skin. There is no stiffness here—only a quiet drape that falls from the shoulder and gathers softly at the ribbed hem. The interior feels lightly napped, the kind of texture you notice when you pull it on after a cold morning. It is not a technical fleece; it is something more refined: a sweatshirt that has been considered as a piece of clothing, not just a layer. Fit is the anchor. The raglan sleeve construction opens the shoulder, creating a clean line from collar to cuff without the bulk of a set-in seam. The ribbing at the waist is firm but not restrictive, holding the silhouette in place without cinching. The sleeves are cut long, ending in a snug rib that stacks slightly at the wrist—a detail that reads as intentional, not accidental. This is a sweatshirt that understands proportion: the body is generous, the finishes are precise, and the overall effect is one of studied nonchalance. Movement is built into every seam. There is no pull across the back, no ride-up at the hem when you reach or bend. The raglan cut allows full range of motion, making this as suited to a long train ride as it is to a slow Sunday. The graphic—a bold “Welcome to the tropics” printed across the chest and echoed on the back—introduces a note of irreverence. It is not loud, but it is present: a wink, a souvenir, a line from a place you’d rather be. Pair it with a wide-leg trouser and a leather loafer for a look that balances ease with edge, or let it anchor a full denim moment. It is a piece that asks to be worn, not saved.