Hand-graded, photographed, described.

Hoodies

6 pieces on the floor.

Vendor Hoodie

6 pieces on the floor

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Vendor Hoodie

6 pieces on the floor

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About this collection

Hoodies

The shop currently stocks 73 vintage hoodies, spanning 80s heavyweight Russell Athletic and Champion Reverse Weave, 90s Nike center-swoosh and college bookstore pullovers, Y2K skate-brand zip-ups, and the occasional novelty piece you cannot find again once it sells. Pullovers, zip-ups, half-zips, hooded sweatshirts. Every hoodie is one of one. When it sells, it is gone.

Why vintage hoodies break the modern fit

A new hoodie off a 2026 retail rack is not the same garment as a 1992 Champion Reverse Weave. The fabric weight is lower, the loopback fleece is thinner, the shoulder cut is narrower, and the body is shorter. Retail moved away from heavyweight construction in the early 2000s for cost reasons, and vintage is the only place to get the original silhouette and fabric without paying current-retail markup for a heritage reissue that still falls short.

The collectors and wearers driving this market sort into a few overlapping camps. Streetwear buyers chasing specific brand-and-era hits (90s Nike, Y2K Etnies, late-80s Russell). College-program collectors building a school's complete bookstore run. Workwear-adjacent buyers who want heavyweight fleece for actual cold weather. Reverse-weave specialists who only buy Champion. The 73-piece floor stocks for all four.

The categories that matter on a hoodie wall

Champion Reverse Weave. The patented horizontal-knit body that resists shrinkage along the length and stretches along the width. Introduced by Champion in 1938 for college wrestling teams, productionized for athletic departments in the 60s, and culturally adopted by the 80s and 90s. Reverse Weave from the 80s carries a tri-color tag (red, white, blue stripes); the 90s shifted to a single-color script tag; the 2000s went to a printed inner label. Tag-dating is the first move on any Reverse Weave pickup.

Russell Athletic heavyweight. The other half of the 80s and 90s college pullover market. Made-in-USA Russell pieces from this era run heavy, take dye well, and develop a soft hand after wash. Russell faded out of premium heavyweight production in the late 90s, which is why pre-1998 Russell is the sweet spot.

Nike heavyweight, center-swoosh, and Y2K. Three eras: late-80s and early-90s heavyweight collegiate (Nike sponsored a small number of programs and the bookstore overstock is still around), mid-90s center-swoosh streetwear (the centered chest swoosh placement that defined the era), and Y2K heavy-fleece zip-up performance pieces. All three move quickly.

College bookstore pullovers. The largest single category by volume. Heavyweight cotton-poly fleece, school name and athletics logo on the chest, often nylon-thread embroidery rather than screen-print. Programs across the SEC, Big Ten, Pac-12, and the Ivies. Some schools (UNLV, for example, which has natural pull at a Las Vegas shop) cycle through faster than others.

Skate, surf, and Y2K streetwear. Etnies, DC, Volcom, Quiksilver, Hurley, Element. The Y2K skate-brand zip-up is having a long market moment and the shop stocks accordingly when pieces come in.

Workwear and outdoor. Carhartt, Dickies, Big Dogs, the occasional Filson. Heavier construction than streetwear, often with chest-pocket and reinforced cuff details. Built to outlast the wearer.

Novelty and crossover. Movie promo, racing teams, regional businesses, oddball graphics. Big Dogs Racing, weird corporate-event giveaways, anything graphic-heavy. Lower price floor and high charm.

Spotting a fake or reproduction

Hoodie counterfeit production is concentrated on Champion Reverse Weave (because of the resale value) and 90s Nike. The tells:

  • Tag dating. Champion tag generations are documented year-by-year. A "vintage" Reverse Weave with a 2010s printed inner label is not vintage. Cross-reference the tag with published Champion-collector tag charts before paying premium for any Reverse Weave.
  • Stitching and seam construction. Real Reverse Weave from the 80s and 90s has a side-panel gusset (the rectangular stretch panel under the arm). Modern reproductions often skip the gusset or sew a fake one that does not actually flex.
  • Embroidery thread weight. Vintage college bookstore pullovers use heavy nylon embroidery thread that stands up off the fleece. Cheap modern reproductions use thinner polyester thread that flattens.
  • Made-in tag. 80s and 90s heavyweight production was largely US-domestic. A 90s-claimed Champion or Russell with a "Made in Pakistan" tag is mis-dated or repackaged.
  • Drawstring construction. Real vintage drawstrings are flat cotton or rope cotton with metal aglets. Cheap reproductions use plastic aglets and synthetic cord.

Condition grading on hoodie-specific signals

Every hoodie on the floor is graded on the five-tier ladder. Hoodie-specific signals on top:

  • Cuff and waistband stretch. Ribbed knit on the cuffs and waistband loses elasticity with age. Stretched-out ribbing drops the grade and is called out in the listing.
  • Pilling and surface fuzz. Cotton-poly fleece pills with wear. Light pilling is normal and does not lower the grade much; heavy pilling does.
  • Hood drawstring intact. Original drawstrings, both sides present, aglets intact. Replaced drawstrings are disclosed.
  • Pocket integrity. Kangaroo-pocket detachment at the seam is the highest-stress failure point. Inspected on every piece.
  • Print or embroidery condition. Cracking on screen-print graphics, thread loss on embroidery, peel on heat-transfer. Graded per the existing 5-tier rubric with photos of any damage.
  • Reverse Weave gusset integrity. Champion-specific. The side gusset is supposed to flex; a hoodie that has been over-laundered loses the stretch and the body shape goes wonky. Disclosed on Champion listings.

What is on the floor right now

The 73-piece count rotates fast. Recent pickups include a Y2K Etnies hoodie size XL, a 90s University of Illinois bookstore pullover size XL, a vintage Nike black hoodie size large, a 90s Nike UNLV hoodie size medium, and a Big Dogs Racing pullover size XXL. Volume runs heaviest in size large and medium and lightest in XS and XXXL.

Browse hoodies by newest in to see fresh pickups, or filter by size to skip the wrong fits.

Sibling collections and category guidance

Hoodies pair with the rest of the vintage outerwear and athletic floor. Vintage jackets for the heavier outer layer. Vintage sweaters for non-fleece warmth. Cross-shop vintage jerseys if the goal is athletic-vintage layering. Specific FAQ on sizing, fit, and shipping for vintage hoodies lives at the sweatshirts FAQ page.

Sourcing notes

Hoodies come in through estate buys, college-town dead-stock pulls, walk-in trades, and regional vintage-clothing market visits. The shop does not stock current-production heritage reissues mixed in with vintage. If a Champion Reverse Weave is on the floor, it is graded for its actual production era, not advertised generically as "vintage Champion." Every condition note on a listing is what the photo confirms.

The shop is at 707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, Las Vegas NV 89101. Ground floor of Downtown Container Park, east side. Walk in, try a hoodie on, feel the fleece weight in your hand before it ships.

Every piece in this collection earned its spot through hands-on sourcing, condition grading, and a lot of late nights. We pull from estate sales, dead-stock attics, and the occasional miracle. If it is here, we trust it.

One of one.Ships from Las Vegas.One of one.Ships from Las Vegas.One of one.Ships from Las Vegas.