Sporelust!
American Beauty Skeleton Mushroom T-Shirt
Couldn't load pickup availability
A collaboration with The Telluride Mushroom Festival, reimagined as an ode to classic Grateful Dead artwork and the fungi of Southwest Colorado.
About this design: This started as a collaboration between Chris Adams and The Telluride Mushroom Festival in 2022. Features a skeleton wearing a fern crown with a levitating Porcini (Boletus rubriceps) and the San Juan Mountains in the background. Also pictured: Rainbow Chanterelle (Cantherellus roseacanus), Hawkswing (Sarcodon imbricatus), Calocera sp., and Amanita muscaria — all species Chris has found in the area since his first visit in 2018.
- Original artwork by Chris Adams
- 100% Organic Cotton
- Eco-friendly water-based inks
- Standard unisex fit — size up if you're between sizes
Materials
Materials
Hand Printed in Oregon on 100% Organic Cotton. Made in the USA. Featuring art by Sporelust! Co-Founder Chris Adams.
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Dimensions
Dimensions
Care Instructions
Care Instructions
Wash Cold-Tumble Dry Low-Do Not Use Bleach-Do Not Iron
Designed to Stand Out
Every Sporelust! design starts as a pen-and-ink drawing. No templates, no stock art, no AI. Just original artwork inspired by mycology, nature, and decades of punk-skate culture.
Shop All
From Pen to Print
Hand Drawn Artwork
Every design starts as a pen-and-ink drawing. Original artwork inspired by mycology and punk-skate culture.
Quality Materials
100% organic cotton with eco-friendly water-based inks. Good for you, better for the planet.
Screen Printed
Screen printed in small batches, not mass-produced. Subtle ink variations make each piece one of a kind.
Shipped to You
Packed and shipped straight to your door. Free US shipping on orders over $75.
Made in the Studio
Every Sporelust shirt is printed by hand in a small studio in Oregon. Here's what that actually looks like.
What Sets Us Apart
Chris Adams
Chris is a pen-and-ink illustrator and the founder of Sporelust! He's spent over a decade creating artwork that combines his love of mycology with the punk-skate aesthetic of the '80s and '90s.
What started as a side project has grown into a community of mushroom lovers, foragers, and mycology enthusiasts who share a belief that the woods really are rad.
Read the full story →