One Piece.One Track. Yours Forever.
Each garment includes exclusive ownership of a linked track. Buy the shirt, own the sound. Never reproduced.
Each garment is listed as a unique item. When it's gone, it's gone. No restocks. No reproductions.
The track linked to this piece becomes yours when you buy it. Permanent ownership, tied to your garment.
Streetwear meets music culture. Wear the mark, own the sound, know that nobody else has this piece.
Singular stock, collectible framing, and optional sound layer.
Designed like garments. Presented like artifacts.
Red Point Hoodie
Mark Echo Tee
Not merch. Not just music. A marked piece with a linked presence.
Inkdie is built around a simple idea: the garment stays primary, but each piece can carry an optional sonic layer that deepens identity without making the experience noisy.
A track code displayed like a certificate, tied to the product page and framed as part of the piece.
A minimal visual signature that anchors the system and echoes the logo language.
Every product can feel singular, giving the catalog a collectible tension.
The store behaves like premium ecommerce but speaks like a cultural object.
Video, sound and atmosphere inside the Inkdie universe.
A two-column block with the Inkdie YouTube channel embedded on the left and the most listened tracks on the right, all inside the same visual language.
Inkdie on YouTube
Top listened tracks
The audio is there when the user chooses it.
No autoplay. No clutter. The track works as an optional ritual attached to the garment, reinforcing its identity without breaking the shopping experience.
See the piece
The product image and mark lead first. The garment remains the protagonist.
Notice the Sound ID
The code and red point turn the track into a branded object, not a random embed.
Play with intent
The user can hear the linked track as part of the product story, only when desired.
Wear the mark.Hear the piece.
A premium streetwear store where every selected garment can carry a deliberate sound identity.