Original: $25.00
-65%$25.00
$8.75The Story
Leopard Print Designer Bucket Hat — Tan and Black Cotton
The Leopard designer bucket hat runs in a classic tan-and-black animal print across the entire cotton crown. The print stays close to the natural pattern — irregular spotting, soft-edged rosettes, sandy beige base — rather than the high-contrast neon leopards that have dominated cheap fast-fashion bucket hats over the last few years. The result reads as designer rather than costume, the kind of leopard you'd see on a Gucci silk scarf or a Saint Laurent shirt before it landed on a Tokyo streetwear cotton bucket hat.
The crown is the same low-profile six-panel build we apply to every designer bucket hat in the Japan Clothing catalog. Cotton has been pre-washed before printing, so the bucket hat softens immediately and the print holds its color depth through fifty washes without bleeding the black spots into the tan base. Stitching density runs at twelve to fourteen per inch, the brim curves slightly inward in the Tokyo manner, and the construction is built to hold its shape over five years of daily wear, the same standard we apply across the wider designer bucket hats edit.
Leopard has been one of the most reproduced patterns in twentieth-century fashion, from Christian Dior's 1947 Jungle Jane print to the punk reinventions of Vivienne Westwood and the contemporary streetwear takes by tokyo brands like Wacko Maria. Each iteration of the pattern reads slightly differently depending on the era and the medium — softer on silk, harder on denim, somewhere in between on cotton. We chose the cotton bucket hat as the base because it lets the leopard print breathe across the entire crown rather than competing with structural details on a stiffer fabric.
Pair it with selvedge denim and a black tee for a clean evening silhouette, with a vintage band shirt and cargo pants for a softer Harajuku reference, or with a leather jacket and chunky boots if you want to push the leopard toward its punk lineage. The Leopard sits alongside the rest of our designer bucket hats, patterned cotton hats and animal-print streetwear pieces in the wider Japan Clothing edit.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.
Description
Leopard Print Designer Bucket Hat — Tan and Black Cotton
The Leopard designer bucket hat runs in a classic tan-and-black animal print across the entire cotton crown. The print stays close to the natural pattern — irregular spotting, soft-edged rosettes, sandy beige base — rather than the high-contrast neon leopards that have dominated cheap fast-fashion bucket hats over the last few years. The result reads as designer rather than costume, the kind of leopard you'd see on a Gucci silk scarf or a Saint Laurent shirt before it landed on a Tokyo streetwear cotton bucket hat.
The crown is the same low-profile six-panel build we apply to every designer bucket hat in the Japan Clothing catalog. Cotton has been pre-washed before printing, so the bucket hat softens immediately and the print holds its color depth through fifty washes without bleeding the black spots into the tan base. Stitching density runs at twelve to fourteen per inch, the brim curves slightly inward in the Tokyo manner, and the construction is built to hold its shape over five years of daily wear, the same standard we apply across the wider designer bucket hats edit.
Leopard has been one of the most reproduced patterns in twentieth-century fashion, from Christian Dior's 1947 Jungle Jane print to the punk reinventions of Vivienne Westwood and the contemporary streetwear takes by tokyo brands like Wacko Maria. Each iteration of the pattern reads slightly differently depending on the era and the medium — softer on silk, harder on denim, somewhere in between on cotton. We chose the cotton bucket hat as the base because it lets the leopard print breathe across the entire crown rather than competing with structural details on a stiffer fabric.
Pair it with selvedge denim and a black tee for a clean evening silhouette, with a vintage band shirt and cargo pants for a softer Harajuku reference, or with a leather jacket and chunky boots if you want to push the leopard toward its punk lineage. The Leopard sits alongside the rest of our designer bucket hats, patterned cotton hats and animal-print streetwear pieces in the wider Japan Clothing edit.
























