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Every other badge in this collection runs warm. Bolivia glows with altiplano sunset. Colombia stacks gold and red. México goes dark — stone and charcoal, the palette of ancient things, with green light coming up from the pyramid and red butterfly wings cutting through. The design knows what it's doing.
Mexican flag banner at the top, "MÉXICO" in chrome serif with tricolor treatment, the accent on the É where it belongs. El Castillo — the Pyramid of Kukulcán at Chichén Itzá — rises center in that green glow, the staircase structure that the Maya built to function as a solar calendar, where twice a year the equinox sun creates the illusion of a serpent descending the northern steps. Palacio de Bellas Artes sits left center in the dark, its dome one of the most recognizable landmarks in Mexico City's historic center.
Upper composition: monarch butterflies in red-orange — the ones that migrate 3,000 miles from the US and Canada every fall to the oyamel fir forests of Michoacán, arriving around Día de Muertos as if on schedule. A lucha libre mask upper left in green. Right: a Frida Kahlo portrait, flowers in her hair, the most reproduced female image in Mexican visual culture — at the swap meet, at the carnicería, in the kitchen. A calavera beside her — not horror, but Día de Muertos. The skull as greeting.
Lower: a mariachi figure mid-song, a xoloitzcuintli standing watch — the ancient hairless dog the Aztec believed guided souls through Mictlán, depicted in pre-Columbian ceramics for over 3,000 years. Agave plant, a beer bottle, Mexico City's red metro train. The badge's border carries Aztec calendar stone detailing — the frame itself is coded. Front chest carries the scaled version, left placement.
Printed on 4.2 oz Airlume combed and ring-spun cotton. Classic retail fit.