Collection: Dept. of Unrest/ Riotwear

Dept. of Unrest riot authority seal with anarchist eagle, molotov, torch, and burning protest crowd punk streetwear graphic

Dept. of Unrest/ Riotwear

You weren’t hired.
You weren’t recruited.
You were activated.

The Dept. of Unrest is a growing riot-universe where punk streetwear, rebel clothing, and underground streetwear collide into a loud, hostile, and beautifully ungovernable system of visual sabotage.

This expanded collection doesn’t just add shirts—
it builds an entire fictional collapse-state.

Rogue agencies.
Blacksite divisions.
Suppression bureaus.
Behavioral control units.
Panic-era departments designed to expose how power actually operates when it breaks.

Every design feels like a leaked insignia from a failed authority structure.

Riotwear.
Control seals.
Emergency protocols.
Blacklisted behavior markers.
Field units.
Supply divisions.
Collapse agencies.

Nothing here represents order.
Everything here documents failure.


Inside this lineup:

Skull graphics.
Protest-driven artwork.
Anarchic symbols.
Anti-corporate statements.
High-contrast punk art.
Underground streetwear that looks like it was torn off a wall mid-uprising.

Not polished.
Not safe.
Not trend-chasing.

Engineered for impact.


Every piece carries the core DNA of KLF Streetwear:

Raw DIY energy.
Distressed textures.
Aggressive linework.
Unstable, volatile, alive.

The kind of designs that make people stare.
The kind of messages that make authority uncomfortable.


Expect visuals that look like they belong on:

Protestors.
Punx.
Outlaws.
Misfits.
The permanently uncooperative.

Molotov imagery.
Skull insignias.
Riot unit seals.
Surveillance satire.
Glitch corruption.
Failure-state branding.


This collection doesn’t ask questions.

It accuses.


The Dept. of Unrest isn’t a fashion drop.

It’s a growing archive of collapse.

A uniform for people who don’t wait for permission.
A badge for those who don’t belong.
A warning label for a system that’s already cracking.


And it’s not staying on a website.

Pieces from this line are already out in the wild—
on jobsites, in bars, across states—moving through the same environments that built this brand in the first place.

Because this wasn’t designed in a quiet room.

It came from the same pressure it represents.


This is more than a collection.

It’s a uniform for the unrest.

If you get it—you’re already part of it.
If you don’t—this wasn’t made for you.


🔥 Punk Streetwear | Riotwear Clothing | Bold Graphic Tees | Anti-Corporate Fashion | Rebel Clothing | Underground Streetwear | Counterculture Apparel 🔥