Le Corbusier T-Shirt | Dom-ino Theory Architecture Art
In 1914, Le Corbusier sketched a frame of six concrete pilotis holding up three flat slabs connected by a staircase. He called it Maison Dom-ino — a play on domus and the assembly logic of dominoes, mass-produced houses stacking like pieces in a game. The radical move was what he left out. No load-bearing walls. The structure held the building up; the walls became free to land wherever the inhabitant needed them. A hundred years later, most of what we consider modern architecture still runs on Corbusier's logic.
This shirt puts the Dom-ino frame on heavyweight cotton, washed soft, cut oversized with dropped shoulders. A Mondrian-era color system sits alongside the black-and-white diagram — a small argument that modernist architecture and De Stijl painting were asking the same question at the same moment.
100% carded cotton, 6.5 oz/yd². Designed by Ramble, printed to order.