Most cut‑offs are just failed T‑shirts pretending to be hardcore. This one is a deliberate attack on the idea that your workout exists for the front camera.
Front graphic: the cracked Iron Gang Fitness skull on the chest so everyone knows your training has a body count, starting with your own excuses. Back graphic: “STOP FILMING. START TRAINING.” slammed over plates, chains, and dead cameras because the only thing that should be recording your session is your nervous system.
Built on a Bella + Canvas cut‑off tee that fits like a dialed‑in training shirt, not a shredded souvenir from high school. Lightweight, soft cotton with raw‑edge style that lets your shoulders move and your lats breathe while you actually do work instead of adjusting your sleeves every set.
The dropped armholes and straight hem stay out of the way during presses, rows, and heavy pulls—whether you’re in a garage gym or a commercial circus full of tripods. It breaks in fast, takes chalk, sweat, and bar-knurl punishment, and keeps going long after the average influencer has “retired” from lifting.
Warning: this cut‑off will not improve your transitions, your Reels reach, or your comment section. It will make it painfully obvious you came here to train and leave with sore muscles, not new followers.
Most cut‑offs are just failed T‑shirts pretending to be hardcore. This one is a deliberate attack on the idea that your workout exists for the front camera.
Front graphic: the cracked Iron Gang Fitness skull on the chest so everyone knows your training has a body count, starting with your own excuses. Back graphic: “STOP FILMING. START TRAINING.” slammed over plates, chains, and dead cameras because the only thing that should be recording your session is your nervous system.
Built on a Bella + Canvas cut‑off tee that fits like a dialed‑in training shirt, not a shredded souvenir from high school. Lightweight, soft cotton with raw‑edge style that lets your shoulders move and your lats breathe while you actually do work instead of adjusting your sleeves every set.
The dropped armholes and straight hem stay out of the way during presses, rows, and heavy pulls—whether you’re in a garage gym or a commercial circus full of tripods. It breaks in fast, takes chalk, sweat, and bar-knurl punishment, and keeps going long after the average influencer has “retired” from lifting.
Warning: this cut‑off will not improve your transitions, your Reels reach, or your comment section. It will make it painfully obvious you came here to train and leave with sore muscles, not new followers.