

Fleur de Brainiac — Dickinson Curious Mind T-Shirt
Dickinson's Brain is wider than the Sky, and the fleurons framing the line are a letterpress tradition — borrowed from the page, printed across the chest. She wrote the poem around 1862, the year she sent four poems to an editor, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, asking if they were worth anything. He told her to wait. She kept writing anyway.
Emily Dickinson, c. 1862
"The Brain — is wider than the Sky —"
The Design
The two gold ornaments framing the quote are fleurons — also called hedera, Latin for ivy: a heart entwined with vines, one of the oldest typographic ornaments there is. They were used to divide text in Greek and Latin manuscripts long before print, then taken up by compositors who set them by hand to mark the edges of a poem. Printed at this scale, across the chest, they stop being a quiet margin note and become the announcement they always wanted to be.
Read the full story: Why Emily Dickinson Valued Private Journals Over Public Fame. Also: the Fleur de Brainiac Phone Case, and the Wider Sky Tee — the same line in a different setting.
About This Tee
- 100% ring-spun cotton, garment-dyed
- Fabric weight: 6.1 oz/yd² (207 g/m²) — heavyweight
- Relaxed, roomy fit
- Seamless body; double-needle hems
- Pre-shrunk; slight shade variation is natural
- Machine washable, cold water
- Quoteiac logo on the left sleeve
Who It's For
The reader who suspects their mind travels further than the room lets on. Anyone who finds a single true line more moving than a lecture. The one who reads a poem and feels it name something they'd never heard said before.
Wear the wider brain.
Emily Dickinson, in Plain English
- Lived: 1830–1886, Amherst, Massachusetts — and somehow her words now travel further than she ever did
- Wrote nearly 1,800 poems. Fewer than a dozen reached print in her lifetime; the other 1,700-plus went out into the world without her — and never stopped
- Her lines turn up set to music, posted in hospital corridors, and worn across chests — the reach she never sought, arriving anyway
- Her dashes weren't errors — they were structure. She used them the way a musician uses rests: space where meaning breathes before the next word lands
Size Chart (Comfort Colors)
| Size | Width (in) | Length (in) |
|---|---|---|
| S | 19 | 28 |
| M | 20.5 | 29 |
| L | 22.5 | 30 |
| XL | 24.5 | 31 |
| 2XL | 26.5 | 32 |
| 3XL | 28.5 | 33 |
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