We love fast food as much as the next person, but we don’t want our clothes to smell of it unless we have left an establishment, and even then we’d rather not.

While many people might not like to admit it, fast food is a guilty pleasure enjoyed by millions around the world. Most fast food doesn’t offer up much in the way of nutritional value and is downright unhealthy but damn, it is all kinds of delicious. Some of it comes with more cons than just clogging up our arteries, though.

Fast food might smell good when we walk in the door, but most people wouldn’t want that smell to follow them around once they’ve left the restaurant. Sometimes that is unavoidable, depending on how much we’ve eaten and how much of a mess we made consuming it.

Turns out that there are more people who enjoy smelling like fast food every minute of the day than we thought. The sales of designer Coleman Larkin’s latest t-shirt have proved that. The apparel is permanently stained with KFC gravy, as you can see below. Not just that, but the t-shirt also has a “slight aroma” from the restaurant. The shirts cost $50 and are currently sold out in most sizes according to the Daily Mail.

Larkin creates the t-shirts in the same way as one might tye-dye a piece of clothing. They’re soaked in KFC gravy for 24 hours and then undergo a chemical treatment so that the stains become permanent. The product is an ode to the state of Kentucky and is being sold by Kentucky for Kentucky. If you’d like to look and smell like a Kentucky fired gravy spill then check the site, they might have the shirt in your size.

Chances are the majority of people who get wind of this shirt will label it ridiculous. Larkin is well aware of that and doesn’t care one bit. “I’m too busy counting my gravy shirt money to care what those nerds think,” Larkin said of anyone turning their nose up at his products or the price of them. This isn’t the first time he has paid tribute to Kentucky in a weird and wonderful way. Earlier this year, Larkin sold horse manure from a former winner of the Kentucky Derby for $200 a pop.

Source: Read Full Article