You’ve seen it on every college campus, every Instagram reel, every creator video thumbnail. That slightly baggy, drop-shoulder tee that somehow looks both incredibly casual and weirdly intentional at the same time.
That’s an oversized t-shirt. And no — it’s not just a regular tee in a bigger size. There’s a difference, and it’s worth knowing before you spend money on the wrong thing.
So What Actually Makes a T-Shirt “Oversized”?
An oversized t-shirt is a garment cut with specific, intentional dimensions. The shoulder seam drops below your natural shoulder line (called a drop shoulder), the body is wider throughout with no waist taper, and the hem falls lower than a regular tee — usually somewhere between your hip and mid-thigh.

Three things define a real oversized cut:
- Drop shoulders — seam falls 2–4 inches below the natural shoulder
- Boxy body — no narrowing at the waist, extra width front and back
- Extended length — visibly longer hem than a regular-fit tee of the same labeled size
If all three are there, you’ve got an actual oversized tee. If you’ve just bought a regular tee two sizes up, the neck opening will be too wide, the sleeves will sit awkwardly, and the proportions will look off. Not the same thing.
At MerchGarage, every creator merch drop and MerchGarage Originals piece is designed with this cut in mind — because it’s what the audience actually wears.
Why Is the Whole Country Wearing Oversized Tees Right Now?
This is a real question worth answering, not a trend statement.
India is hot. Most of the country spends 7–8 months in uncomfortable heat. A looser tee means more airflow, less fabric sticking to your back, less visible sweat. This isn’t a style decision first — it’s comfort that became style.
The slim-fit era is over. Indian men specifically moved away from body-hugging tees around 2022. Gen Z never really bought into the “fitted = smart” logic anyway. Wide-leg jeans, cargos, relaxed trousers — all of it pairs better with a boxy tee, not something that’s clinging to your chest.
Creator culture made it official. When your favourite YouTuber or Instagram creator drops merch, it almost always comes in oversized. MerchGarage creators — from Mostlysane to Zaeden to Badshah — all drop in relaxed, boxy cuts because their audience is wearing exactly that. The format and the culture are aligned.
GSM: The One Thing Most People Ignore
If you’ve ever bought an oversized tee that went completely shapeless after two washes, the answer is in the GSM.
GSM (grams per square metre) is the weight of the fabric. The higher the number, the heavier and more structured the tee.
| GSM Range | What to Expect |
|---|---|
| Below 160 GSM | Light, floppy, goes thin fast — budget range |
| 160–170 GSM | Decent for summer, won’t hold shape long-term |
| 180 GSM | Sweet spot — proper drape, holds shape after washes |
| 200 GSM+ | Heavier feel, closer to a sweatshirt, better for cooler months |
For India, 180 GSM hits right. Not too heavy for Delhi in April, structured enough to drape well and not go limp after the fifth wash.
MerchGarage uses quality cotton fabric across its creator drops — the goal is merch that actually lasts, not something that disintegrates by the third wear.
How to Pick the Right Size in an Oversized Tee
This is where a lot of people go wrong.
If a brand designs specifically for oversized/drop-shoulder cuts — like the MerchGarage Originals line or creator merch drops on the platform — order your regular size. The tee is already built to fit loose. Going two sizes up on a brand that designed for oversized just makes it too big everywhere, especially the neck opening.

If you’re buying a regular-fit tee from a brand and want an oversized effect, size up by one — not two.
For Indian body types specifically: always check the chest measurement in centimetres on the size chart, not just S/M/L labels. A “Large” from a Western-proportioned brand can fit very differently from a “Large” on an India-sized tee.
Cotton vs Blends — Which Works Better in Indian Summers?
Short answer: 100% cotton wins in Indian summers.
Cotton breathes. When you’re outside in Chennai in May or in a crowded Mumbai metro in June, you want fabric that absorbs sweat and lets heat out. Polyester blends trap heat and start smelling faster.
The one real downside of cotton — it shrinks slightly. Wash in cold water, skip the dryer. Most creator merch on MerchGarage includes care instructions on the label. Follow them.
Cotton-polyester blends (60/40 or 65/35) work better for printed pieces because the print adheres more firmly and fades slower. So for graphic-heavy creator drops — catchphrase tees, artwork prints — a cotton blend makes sense. For solid basics in brutal summer heat, pure cotton all the way.
What to Pair with an Oversized T-Shirt in India
The beauty of a proper oversized tee is that it does most of the work.

The campus default: Oversized graphic tee + straight-leg jeans + white sneakers. Works everywhere, every time. No thought required.
The streetwear build: Oversized tee + cargo pants + chunky sneakers. Add a crossbody bag and you’ve got a complete look with three items.
Korean-influenced layering: A full-sleeve tee or mock-neck underneath your oversized tee, letting the sleeve show at the wrist. This is huge in Indian metro cities right now and photographs incredibly well.
The half-tuck: Tuck just the front of your oversized tee into high-waisted wide-leg trousers. Works across genders, looks smart-casual, and is zero effort.
Why 2026 Is Peak Oversized in India
Gender-neutral fashion is not a trend discussion anymore — it’s the default on most Indian streetwear brand pages. Oversized tees are naturally unisex. One tee, shared wardrobe, no section of the store required.
Anime merch in oversized cuts is at an all-time high. Walk into any college fest in Pune, Chennai, or Kolkata and there’s a solid chance someone’s in a drop-shoulder anime graphic tee. Creator merch drops on MerchGarage lean into this — the audience that follows Indian creators also overlaps heavily with gaming, anime, and pop-culture fandom communities


