Zara & Dylan’s T-Shirt Club Go Off-Duty in LA

Zara’s latest edit hits a Los Angeles sidewalk with early 2000s paparazzi energy and a set of hand-drawn graphic tees.

The Fashionisto

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Published April 20, 2026

Ansley and Clement walk together on a Los Angeles sidewalk in Dylan's T-Shirt Club graphics, a pink Space Jam T-shirt layered over a grey long-sleeve and a white Gremlins long-sleeve reading Never Ever Feed Them After Midnight, both with straight-leg jeans
Zara taps Ansley Gulielmi and Clement Laguardia for a Los Angeles edit built around its tee collaboration with Dylan’s T-Shirt Club. Photo: Dan Martensen / Zara

Zara’s latest edit arrives dressed as a chance encounter on a Los Angeles sidewalk, photographed by Dan Martensen with the studied looseness of a paparazzi frame. Clement Laguardia crosses the frame with a coffee in hand, sleeves pushed, gaze caught mid-reaction, while Ansley Gulielmi keeps pace in worn denim and sun-faded graphics.

Zara x Dylan’s T-Shirt Club

Clement walks a Los Angeles sidewalk in a white long-sleeve Back to the Future graphic T-shirt with ripped straight-leg jeans, a plaid shirt tied at the waist, and a red baseball cap
Clement steps into the frame in a Back to the Future long-sleeve tee with ripped jeans, a plaid shirt tied at the waist, and a red cap. Photo: Dan Martensen / Zara

At the center are the T-shirts, designed by Dylan’s T-Shirt Club, a project led by a 12-year-old artist producing hand-drawn, one-of-a-kind graphics since 2019. The references land fast: Jaws, Space Jam, Back to the Future, and Gremlins, titles that sit deep in American cultural memory.

Clement wears a washed-grey Space Jam sleeveless T-shirt with dark trousers, a canvas tote bag on his shoulder, and black rectangular sunglasses
Clement wears a washed Space Jam sleeveless tee with dark pants and a canvas tote. Photo: Dan Martensen / Zara

The wardrobe is pure American casual, straight-leg jeans, easy tees, a cap pulled low, clothes grabbed on the way out the door. Martensen shoots close enough to feel intrusive, far enough to feel accidental, and the tension between those two distances is the subject. It recalls the early 2000s moment when celebrity off-duty style became a public script, when a walk down Melrose could set the tone for a season.

Ansley wears a pink Space Jam graphic T-shirt layered over a grey long-sleeve with ripped cropped jeans and sandals, while Clement wears a white Gremlins graphic long-sleeve reading Never Ever Feed Them After Midnight over a striped long-sleeve with worn straight-leg jeans
Ansley in a pink Space Jam tee meets Clement in a Gremlins graphic long-sleeve for a weekend walk in Los Angeles. Photo: Dan Martensen / Zara

In this setting, the graphics function as personal shorthand, chosen for what they mean to the wearer instead of how they look on a hanger. Zara brings the reach, Martensen the mood, and Dylan the handmade signature. A T-shirt sketched by a twelve-year-old ends up doing the work a logo usually claims.

Ansley wears a grey graphic sweatshirt with yellow-lens aviator sunglasses and a black headband at a cafe, while Clement wears a white Jaws graphic T-shirt over a grey long-sleeve with khaki trousers, holding a coffee
Ansley and Clement break at a cafe, with Clement holding a coffee in a Jaws graphic T-shirt. Photo: Dan Martensen / Zara

Zara replaces the graphics for patina in its SRPLS summer-2026 collection.

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