






American Vintage | Jacksonville Scoop Neck T-Shirt - Anthracite Anthracite-C
The Jacksonville short-sleeved T-shirt, a cornerstone of the American Vintage lexicon, arrives in a nuanced anthracite grey that reads as both a neutral and a statement. Its defining feature is a studied restraint—a silhouette that refuses to shout, relying instead on the quiet authority of proportion and a deliberately soft, fluid hand. This is not a stiff, boxy basic; it is a garment that understands the value of ease, draping with a slight, almost liquid transparency that suggests a lived-in, effortless sophistication. The fabric, a considered blend of 52% cotton and 48% viscose, is the true protagonist here—supple against the skin, with a gentle weight that allows it to fall rather than cling, creating a subtle interplay of light and shadow across the torso. The cut is fitted but never restrictive, hugging the body’s natural lines without compression. The scoop neck is a masterstroke, offering a generous, elongated opening that flatters the collarbone and lengthens the neck, while the short sleeves sit cleanly at the shoulder. The construction is deceptively simple: clean seams and a raw, slightly open weave lend a tactile, almost gauzy quality that breathes with the body. This transparency is intentional, a deliberate nod to the French art of déshabillé—a suggestion of skin rather than a full reveal. The hem falls at the hip, a length that tucks neatly into high-waisted trousers or floats freely over denim. In motion, the T-shirt shifts with an organic grace, its lightweight composition catching the air as you walk. It is a transitional piece par excellence, bridging the gap between the last days of summer and the first crisp mornings of autumn. Layer it under a sharply tailored blazer for a look that balances structure with softness, or wear it solo with raw-hem jeans and leather sandals for a Sunday in the Marais. It also works unexpectedly well beneath a slip dress, adding a cool, unstudied layer of texture. A concrete styling note: For a distinctly Parisian silhouette, tuck this T-shirt into a high-waisted, wide-leg trouser in a contrasting dark wash, finish with a woven belt and a single silver cuff—the transparency of the fabric will subtly break the line of the waist, creating an elegant, airy proportion.
Original: $8.42
-65%$8.42
$2.95Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The Jacksonville short-sleeved T-shirt, a cornerstone of the American Vintage lexicon, arrives in a nuanced anthracite grey that reads as both a neutral and a statement. Its defining feature is a studied restraint—a silhouette that refuses to shout, relying instead on the quiet authority of proportion and a deliberately soft, fluid hand. This is not a stiff, boxy basic; it is a garment that understands the value of ease, draping with a slight, almost liquid transparency that suggests a lived-in, effortless sophistication. The fabric, a considered blend of 52% cotton and 48% viscose, is the true protagonist here—supple against the skin, with a gentle weight that allows it to fall rather than cling, creating a subtle interplay of light and shadow across the torso. The cut is fitted but never restrictive, hugging the body’s natural lines without compression. The scoop neck is a masterstroke, offering a generous, elongated opening that flatters the collarbone and lengthens the neck, while the short sleeves sit cleanly at the shoulder. The construction is deceptively simple: clean seams and a raw, slightly open weave lend a tactile, almost gauzy quality that breathes with the body. This transparency is intentional, a deliberate nod to the French art of déshabillé—a suggestion of skin rather than a full reveal. The hem falls at the hip, a length that tucks neatly into high-waisted trousers or floats freely over denim. In motion, the T-shirt shifts with an organic grace, its lightweight composition catching the air as you walk. It is a transitional piece par excellence, bridging the gap between the last days of summer and the first crisp mornings of autumn. Layer it under a sharply tailored blazer for a look that balances structure with softness, or wear it solo with raw-hem jeans and leather sandals for a Sunday in the Marais. It also works unexpectedly well beneath a slip dress, adding a cool, unstudied layer of texture. A concrete styling note: For a distinctly Parisian silhouette, tuck this T-shirt into a high-waisted, wide-leg trouser in a contrasting dark wash, finish with a woven belt and a single silver cuff—the transparency of the fabric will subtly break the line of the waist, creating an elegant, airy proportion.






















