Keep It Classic

1995 Tweety Bird Jerry Leigh Tee

SKU KIC-TSHT-0693
$20.00
The piece

1995 Tweety Bird Jerry Leigh Tee. A one-of-one piece from the Keep It Classic vault. This piece is anchored to Tweety Bird, the Looney Tunes canary character introduced in the 1942 Bob Clampett short A Tale of Two Kitties, and Jerry Leigh, the Los Angeles-based licensed-apparel manufacturer that held Warner Bros. Looney Tunes licenses through the early and mid-nineties merchandise peak.

The era and the subject

Tweety Bird, the Looney Tunes canary character introduced in the 1942 Bob Clampett short A Tale of Two Kitties, and Jerry Leigh, the Los Angeles-based licensed-apparel manufacturer that held Warner Bros. Looney Tunes licenses through the early and mid-nineties merchandise peak. Jerry Leigh produced a defined catalog of Looney Tunes screen-print tees, hooded sweatshirts, and character-graphic pieces through the 1993 to 1996 window, and Jerry Leigh-tagged Tweety apparel sits in a documented sub-category of nineties WB licensed merch alongside the more common Acme Clothing Co. and Warner Bros. Studio Store pieces. Tweety became one of the breakout female-skewing licensing characters of this era, with strong representation in junior-cut and women's-fit garment programs.

Why this category matters

Vintage one-of-one t-shirts are the most documented sub-category of vintage apparel collecting and the one with the deepest reference material. Tag eras, blank manufacturers (Hanes Beefy-T, Fruit of the Loom, Oneita, Screen Stars, Anvil), single-stitch versus double-stitch hem cutoffs, screen-print ink composition, and licensing-mark generations are all mapped in detail by the vintage-tee community. What that means in practice: a vintage tee photographed properly is highly verifiable. The back tag, the print, the seam construction, and the wear pattern together pin a piece to a specific manufacturing window. The reason this category sits at the top of the vintage market is that the verification surface is broad and the documentation is deep. For more pieces in this lane, see our vintage t-shirts vault.

What to look for in the photos

With a one-of-one vintage tee, the photos do the heavy lifting. We shoot the front graphic, the back (if there is one), the inside-back tag, the inside-side seam where the construction is most readable, and any wear point (collar stretch, print cracking, hem fraying, hole or stain). Look at the print first: thirty-plus-year-old screen prints often carry hairline cracking through the heaviest ink areas, and that cracking is itself a period-correct authenticity signal rather than a defect. Look at the tag next: the print era of the brand tag, the country-of-origin line, and the care symbols all anchor the piece to a specific manufacturing window. Look at the construction last: single-stitch hem versus double-stitch hem is the late-nineties cutoff most vintage-tee collectors reference, and the seam style on the side and shoulder tells you the era of the blank.

Care and wear

Wash inside-out, cold water, gentle cycle. Hang dry. The dryer is what kills vintage screen prints (the high heat lifts the ink and accelerates cracking) and the dryer is also what shrinks and distorts old cotton blanks. Don't iron the print directly; iron from the inside if you need to press. Store folded rather than hung if the shoulders are stretched or fragile. If the piece has any existing damage we noted in the photos, treat the damage as a feature rather than something to repair: vintage tee collectors generally prefer original wear over invisible mending.

How the market reads this piece

The vintage one-of-one t-shirt market has matured into one of the most-followed corners of vintage apparel collecting over the last fifteen years. Three forces are pushing it: the supply is fixed and shrinking (every wash, every wear, and every accidental loss reduces the surviving population of any given print), the documentation has deepened (collector communities, archive accounts, and reference databases have mapped tag eras and blank manufacturers in detail), and the buyer base has broadened beyond pure collectors into stylists, set dressers, musicians, and people who want one specific shirt that says one specific thing. What that means for any single one-of-one tee in our vault: the piece you are looking at exists in a small, mapped, and contracting global population. We treat that population as a real constraint when we price and present pieces. If a piece carries a documented tag era, a known licensee mark, and a recognizable era-correct print technique, those factors compound. If a piece carries a one-off cultural moment that hasn't been heavily reproduced (a specific tour stop, a specific local-market event, a specific licensing window), that scarcity compounds further. If this category resonates, our vintage tee collecting FAQ is the next stop.

One of one, and what that means here

This is the only one of these we have, and once it's gone we won't have another. That's the structural reality of one-of-one vintage retail: every piece in our vault has its own surviving population of one in this shop. We don't restock vintage. We don't reorder. We don't carry parallel sizes or colorways of the same piece. When a one-of-one piece sells, the slot it occupied in the vault is permanently empty, and the next piece that sits in that category lane will be a different piece with its own history. If this piece is the right piece for you, the photos and the cohort signal say what we know about it. The rest is your call, and we're available to talk through it before you commit.

This piece is also documented on our Instagram archive: https://www.instagram.com/p/DDuySaeSTYg/.

Browse more from this category at /collections/t-shirts, or visit us in person at 707 East Fremont Street, Suite 1170 in Las Vegas (ground floor, east side of Container Park, just inside the Fremont Street entrance). Our shop is open seven days a week with extended Friday and Saturday hours. Reach out at info@keepitclassiclv.com or call (702) 605-3332 with any specific question about this piece, the cohort it belongs to, or anything in our vault you would like us to pull aside.

APPAREL ARCHIVE

The Apparel Rack

The 90s rack is where most of the shop's apparel lives. Team tees, tour shirts, promotional jackets, wrestling pullovers, movie tie-in prints that nobody saved on purpose. vintage production runs were large and the survivors are the ones that dodged the rag bin. Each garment is measured flat, photographed on a neutral ground, and listed against the tag size.

INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS

PROVENANCE
VINTAGE
20TH CENTURY
LAS VEGAS INSPECTED
ONE OF ONE

Inspected in Las Vegas on June 2026. Each piece is a single unit, sold as inspected.

KEEP IT CLASSIC

CERT KIC-TSHT-0693 / ONE OF ONE

LOT NO. 7578332889197

This 1995 tweety bird jerry leigh tee originates from archival inventory, represents Keep It Classic[02]'s output, and is catalogued in extra large (xl). Each piece in the shop is a single unit, inspected by hand in Las Vegas before listing. The data manifest to the right records the fields on file for this lot; where a field is empty it has been omitted rather than guessed.

1995 Tweety Bird Jerry Leigh Tee. A one-of-one piece from the Keep It Classic vault. This piece is anchored to Tweety Bird, the Looney Tunes canary character introduced in the 1942 Bob Clampett short A Tale of Two Kitties, and Jerry Leigh, the Los Angeles-based licensed-apparel manufacturer that held Warner Bros. Looney Tunes licenses through the early and mid-nineties merchandise peak.

The era and the subject

Tweety Bird, the Looney Tunes canary character introduced in the 1942 Bob Clampett short A Tale of Two Kitties, and Jerry Leigh, the Los Angeles-based licensed-apparel manufacturer that held Warner Bros. Looney Tunes licenses through the early and mid-nineties merchandise peak. Jerry Leigh produced a defined catalog of Looney Tunes screen-print tees, hooded sweatshirts, and character-graphic pieces through the 1993 to 1996 window, and Jerry Leigh-tagged Tweety apparel sits in a documented sub-category of nineties WB licensed merch alongside the more common Acme Clothing Co. and Warner Bros. Studio Store pieces. Tweety became one of the breakout female-skewing licensing characters of this era, with strong representation in junior-cut and women's-fit garment programs.

Why this category matters

Vintage one-of-one t-shirts are the most documented sub-category of vintage apparel collecting and the one with the deepest reference material. Tag eras, blank manufacturers (Hanes Beefy-T, Fruit of the Loom, Oneita, Screen Stars, Anvil), single-stitch versus double-stitch hem cutoffs, screen-print ink composition, and licensing-mark generations are all mapped in detail by the vintage-tee community. What that means in practice: a vintage tee photographed properly is highly verifiable. The back tag, the print, the seam construction, and the wear pattern together pin a piece to a specific manufacturing window. The reason this category sits at the top of the vintage market is that the verification surface is broad and the documentation is deep. For more pieces in this lane, see our vintage t-shirts vault.

What to look for in the photos

With a one-of-one vintage tee, the photos do the heavy lifting. We shoot the front graphic, the back (if there is one), the inside-back tag, the inside-side seam where the construction is most readable, and any wear point (collar stretch, print cracking, hem fraying, hole or stain). Look at the print first: thirty-plus-year-old screen prints often carry hairline cracking through the heaviest ink areas, and that cracking is itself a period-correct authenticity signal rather than a defect. Look at the tag next: the print era of the brand tag, the country-of-origin line, and the care symbols all anchor the piece to a specific manufacturing window. Look at the construction last: single-stitch hem versus double-stitch hem is the late-nineties cutoff most vintage-tee collectors reference, and the seam style on the side and shoulder tells you the era of the blank.

Care and wear

Wash inside-out, cold water, gentle cycle. Hang dry. The dryer is what kills vintage screen prints (the high heat lifts the ink and accelerates cracking) and the dryer is also what shrinks and distorts old cotton blanks. Don't iron the print directly; iron from the inside if you need to press. Store folded rather than hung if the shoulders are stretched or fragile. If the piece has any existing damage we noted in the photos, treat the damage as a feature rather than something to repair: vintage tee collectors generally prefer original wear over invisible mending.

How the market reads this piece

The vintage one-of-one t-shirt market has matured into one of the most-followed corners of vintage apparel collecting over the last fifteen years. Three forces are pushing it: the supply is fixed and shrinking (every wash, every wear, and every accidental loss reduces the surviving population of any given print), the documentation has deepened (collector communities, archive accounts, and reference databases have mapped tag eras and blank manufacturers in detail), and the buyer base has broadened beyond pure collectors into stylists, set dressers, musicians, and people who want one specific shirt that says one specific thing. What that means for any single one-of-one tee in our vault: the piece you are looking at exists in a small, mapped, and contracting global population. We treat that population as a real constraint when we price and present pieces. If a piece carries a documented tag era, a known licensee mark, and a recognizable era-correct print technique, those factors compound. If a piece carries a one-off cultural moment that hasn't been heavily reproduced (a specific tour stop, a specific local-market event, a specific licensing window), that scarcity compounds further. If this category resonates, our vintage tee collecting FAQ is the next stop.

One of one, and what that means here

This is the only one of these we have, and once it's gone we won't have another. That's the structural reality of one-of-one vintage retail: every piece in our vault has its own surviving population of one in this shop. We don't restock vintage. We don't reorder. We don't carry parallel sizes or colorways of the same piece. When a one-of-one piece sells, the slot it occupied in the vault is permanently empty, and the next piece that sits in that category lane will be a different piece with its own history. If this piece is the right piece for you, the photos and the cohort signal say what we know about it. The rest is your call, and we're available to talk through it before you commit.

This piece is also documented on our Instagram archive: https://www.instagram.com/p/DDuySaeSTYg/.

Browse more from this category at /collections/t-shirts, or visit us in person at 707 East Fremont Street, Suite 1170 in Las Vegas (ground floor, east side of Container Park, just inside the Fremont Street entrance). Our shop is open seven days a week with extended Friday and Saturday hours. Reach out at info@keepitclassiclv.com or call (702) 605-3332 with any specific question about this piece, the cohort it belongs to, or anything in our vault you would like us to pull aside.

INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS

VENDOR
Keep It Classic
SIZE
Extra large (XL)
COLOR
Navy
IN THEIR WORDS
Thank you guys for an amazing experience. Couldn't have asked for a better way to end my trip in Vegas for WM weekend than to visit your guys' shop.
@dj.pancakes / ig_comment
QUESTIONS

14 days from delivery. Buyer pays return shipping. In-store purchases are exchange or credit only.

Every piece in the shop is a single unit. Once it is gone, it is gone.

707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, ground floor, east side of Downtown Container Park.

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