Two new designs are now available from the Glastonbury Festival Online Shop, with the Peace and Sleeping Saint collections landing across t-shirts, hoodies, and sweatshirts.
The Sleeping Saint is the work of London-based illustrator Cameron West, a long-standing Glastonbury creative collaborator. The Peace design features the festival’s iconic peace logo in a bold, detailed rendering that wraps the full front of the garment.
Both collections are available in sizes XS to 3XL and come in Black, Military, Navy, and Grey. T-shirts are priced at £25, with hoodies and sweatshirts coming in at £50 each. All garments can be purchased directly from the official store via the Sleeping Saint and Peace product pages.
Every piece is made from 100% Fairtrade and organic cotton, produced using 100% green energy. As with previous Glastonbury releases, including last year’s Stanley Donwood range, all cotton is Fairtrade certified, traded, audited, and sourced from Fairtrade producers. Items are fulfilled via on-demand digital print production and ship within five working days.
The new drops arrive during Glastonbury’s 2026 fallow year, a scheduled break from the festival that gives the Worthy Farm site and its organisers a chance to recharge. The shop remains active in the interim, continuing to stock new designs and carry forward the festival’s creative identity.
Cameron West is a graduate of Arts University Bournemouth now based in East London, who works regularly with Glastonbury alongside a client list that includes Arctic Monkeys, Kneecap, The Clash, The Vaccines, The Wombats, Black Honey, The Charlatans, and Sports Team. His illustration style blends retro-infused psychedelia with the textures of hand-printed posters, drawing influence from artists Peter Blake, Tadanori Yokoo, and Milton Glaser.
Earlier this year, West shared another chapter of his Glastonbury work, revealing that his official Park Stage 2025 poster had been reworked as a limited-edition, signed and numbered 5-colour A2 silkscreen print, released via Prints of Thieves. The piece took inspiration from stained-glass artist Edgar Phillips and his distinctive sculptures found across the Worthy Farm site, and was longlisted for the 2025 Boooooom Illustration Awards. Fifty per cent of profits from the print were donated to charities supported by Glastonbury Festival.
West has held two solo exhibitions in London, at The Sebright Arms in October 2022 and at The Social on Oxford Street in April 2024, and continues to take on new projects across design, fashion, music, and charity. More of his work can be found at cjlw.co.uk.

Image credits:
In this article: Glastonbury Festival, Arts University Bournemouth, Arctic Monkeys, Kneecap, The Clash, The Vaccines, The Wombats, Black Honey, The Charlatans, Sports Team, Peter Blake, Tadanori Yokoo, Milton Glaser, Stanley Donwood, East London. Generated by Wikidata Schema Link Builder.
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