Vaquera Bra Baby Tshirt

$235.00
$235.00
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
Size

Delivery and Returns

Click & Collect
Free from our Sydney CBD store. Ready for next business day pickup.

Standard Delivery - $9.95
Delivered within 2–7 days via Australia Post.

Express Delivery - $15.95
Delivered within 1–4 days via Australia Post.

International Delivery - $35
Delivered within 6–15 business days via Australia Post or FedEx.
International orders may be subject to duties and taxes.

International Express  $50
Delivered within 2–7 days via FedEx.
International orders may be subject to duties and taxes.

See more information about delivery here.

Returns
Return or exchange items within 14 days of purchase. See our full terms and conditions here.

Description

Specifications

100% Cotton

Short sleeves

Crew neck

Fits true to size, for more detailed sizing information check our Size Guide

Made in Turkey

Product code: VAQ11T010

Model wears size S

Vaquera

Vaquera started in 2013 as what they called “fashion fan fiction” — which already tells you they were never interested in behaving properly.

Founded by Patric DiCaprio and later joined by Bryn Taubensee, the brand grew from downtown chaos into one of fashion’s most influential anti-fashion success stories, backed by Dover Street Market.

Named after the Spanish word for “cowgirl” (a nickname Patric got while washing dishes), Vaquera built its world on twisting American fashion clichés into something stranger, sharper, and much more fun.

Before Paris Fashion Week came boxing gyms, subway platforms, and the kind of shows that felt half fashion, half public disturbance.

Somewhere along the way, the clothes ended up in the Met, MoMA PS1, and on basically everyone interesting: Charli xcx, Julia Fox, Rihanna, Jennie, Rosalía, NewJeans, Madonna — the list reads like a very stressful group chat.

Now stocked in 80+ stores worldwide, Vaquera continues to prove that surrealism, bad decisions, and excellent clothes are not mutually exclusive.

SS26

Vaquera SS26 is what happens when “bad taste” has excellent timing.

A collection built on joy, chaos, theatre, and the increasingly radical idea that clothes should actually make you feel something. Equal parts fantasy and wearable disaster.

Big silhouettes, wrong proportions, commercial pieces with commitment issues.

Because maybe taste isn’t real. Maybe the real power is wearing the wrong thing at exactly the right moment.