A deconstructed, intentionally distressed gray hoodie from French avant-garde label Enfants Riches Déprimés (ERD), featuring raw-edge hems, frayed hood lining, and subtle wear marks for an anti-luxury aesthetic. The chest displays the brand’s signature phrase 'ENFANTS RICHES DÉPRIMÉS' in bold black serif typography—translating to 'Rich Children Depressed'—a critique of privilege and existential ennui. Made from heavyweight cotton fleece with a relaxed, boxy silhouette, kangaroo pocket, and dropped shoulders, it embodies post-punk intellectual streetwear. The garment shows deliberate imperfections: small holes near the neckline, uneven stitching, and faded distressing that enhance its conceptual narrative. Ideal for layered urban styling, this piece balances irony, craftsmanship, and subversive fashion discourse. Worn by art-world insiders and high-fashion editors, it functions as both statement apparel and wearable art—perfect for gallery openings, creative studios, or introspective city walks. Not mass-produced; each piece varies slightly in distressing intensity, reinforcing ERD’s anti-consumerist ethos.