Travis Scott Bracelet Style: How to Get the Stacked Look

Look at the wrist of nearly any major streetwear artist and you will not find one careful bracelet, you will find a stack: beads piled on cord, a leather band, a metal chain, all layered together like the wrist version of a thrifted-and-designer outfit. Travis Scott is one of the artists most associated with that piled-on, texture-mixing aesthetic, and it has become one of the most searched-for looks in men's accessories.

Here is the good news: the stacked streetwear wrist is one of the most affordable celebrity looks to recreate, because it is built on mixing inexpensive textures, not on any single pricey piece. This guide breaks down the anatomy of the look and shows you exactly how to build it, layer by layer, using mix-and-match Caligio bracelets from $29 to $69. No designer prices, all the texture.

A quick, honest note: this is a style guide inspired by the layered streetwear aesthetic Travis Scott is publicly known for. Caligio is an independent brand and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or worn by the artist. The goal here is to help you build a similar stacked look with our own bracelets, not to claim any connection.

The Quick Answer

The Travis Scott bracelet look is a layered streetwear stack that mixes textures, beads, cord, leather, and metal chain, on one wrist, leaning casual and piled-on rather than matched. To get it, combine three to five pieces with contrasting widths and a loose black-and-earth-tone color story with one metal accent. Build it affordably with Caligio: a Fortune rope or Gio cord ($29-39), an Egoist or Prime leather band ($39-49), and a Miami Cuban or Anchor Chain ($49-69). All hypoallergenic 316L steel, designed in LA. Apply the secret BLOG code at checkout for the reader bonus.

The Travis Scott bracelet look is a layered streetwear stack that mixes beaded, cord, leather, and metal chain bracelets on one wrist for a casual, piled-on effect rather than a matched set. To recreate it, layer three to five bracelets with contrasting textures and widths, anchored in a black and earth-tone color story with one metal accent. Caligio offers the building blocks affordably: Fortune rope and Gio cord from $29 to $39, Egoist and Prime leather from $39 to $49, and Miami Cuban and Anchor Chain from $49 to $69, all in hypoallergenic 316L surgical steel and designed in Los Angeles. This recreates the stacked streetwear aesthetic associated with artists like Travis Scott at an accessible price.

- TL;DR The Stacked Streetwear Look -

How to Build the Travis Scott Wrist

  • The look: a layered stack of mixed textures - beads, cord, leather, chain
  • The count: 3-5 pieces on one wrist, contrasting widths
  • The colors: black anchor + earth tones + one metal accent
  • Layer 1 - chain: Miami Cuban ($49) or Anchor Chain ($69)
  • Layer 2 - leather: Egoist or Prime ($39-49)
  • Layer 3 - cord/rope: Fortune or Gio ($29-39)
  • Layer 4 - accent: Omega ($39) or a color pop like Fortune Turquoise
  • The price: a full stack for under what one designer piece costs

The Anatomy of the Stacked Streetwear Wrist

The stacked streetwear look that Travis Scott helped popularize is not random, it follows a loose formula. The wrist mixes three things: a metal element (a chain), a soft element (cord, rope, or beads), and a structural element (leather). Stacking those different textures together is what gives the look its piled-on, lived-in feel, the opposite of a single polished bracelet. The color story stays restrained, usually black as the base, earth tones for warmth, and one metal accent so the stack does not turn into noise. Widths are varied on purpose: a chunky chain next to a thin cord next to a flat leather band reads as intentional layering. Get those three texture families and the restrained palette right, and you have the look, regardless of brand.

The formula: metal + soft + structure. One chain, one cord-or-beaded piece, one leather band, in a black-and-earth palette with a single metal accent. Three to five pieces total. That is the entire streetwear stack, and none of it has to be expensive.

How to Build the Look, Layer by Layer

Here is the step-by-step for assembling the stack from scratch.

1Start with the chain. The metal anchor of the stack. A Miami Cuban ($49) for bold shine, or an Anchor Chain ($69) for a modern steel-and-cord edge.
2Add the leather. The structural layer. An Egoist double-strap ($39) or a Prime braided ($49) brings flat, dark contrast against the chain.
3Layer the cord or rope. The soft texture. A Fortune rope ($39) or Gio cord ($29) adds the woven, casual element.
4Finish with an accent. One more piece for depth, an Omega ($39) for a clean steel detail, or a single color pop like Fortune Turquoise if you want one bright note.

Layer 1: The Chain - Miami Cuban

The chain is the centerpiece of any streetwear stack, and the Cuban link is the defining hip-hop chain. The Miami Cuban comes in gold and silver at $49, in gold-finish or steel 316L, bold enough to anchor the whole stack.

Miami Cuban - The Chain Anchor

$49 - Gold & Silver

Caligio Miami Cuban Bracelet Gold bold hip-hop streetwear cuban link chain stack anchor 316L steel studio view $49Caligio Miami Cuban Bracelet Silver streetwear stack cuban link chain steel worn detail $49

The bold Cuban link that anchors a streetwear stack, in gold or silver 316L, $49. Substantial and shiny, it is the metal centerpiece the rest of the stack layers around. The Miami Cuban brings the hip-hop chain energy at an accessible price.

Shop Miami Cuban

Layer 2: The Leather - Egoist & Prime

Leather brings the flat, dark, structural contrast that stops a stack from looking like all chain and cord. The Egoist double-strap and Prime braided are both $39-49.

Egoist & Prime - The Leather Layer

$39-49 - Black & Brown

Caligio Egoist Black double-strap leather bracelet streetwear stack structural layer D-shackle 316L studio view $39Caligio Prime Black braided leather bracelet streetwear stack magnetic clasp worn detail $49

The structural layer: Egoist double-strap leather at $39 and Prime braided at $49, both in black and brown. Flat, dark leather contrasts the chain and cord, giving the stack its layered structure. The backbone of a streetwear wrist.

Shop Egoist & Prime

Layer 3: The Cord & Rope - Fortune & Gio

Cord and rope add the soft, woven texture that makes the stack feel casual and lived-in rather than stiff. The Fortune rope ($39) and Gio cord ($29) are the affordable workhorses here.

Fortune & Gio - The Soft Texture

$29-39 - Many Colors

Caligio Fortune Black rope bracelet streetwear stack soft woven texture nautical 316L studio view $39Caligio Gio Black cotton cord bracelet streetwear stack adjustable casual worn detail $29

The soft, woven layer: Fortune rope at $39 and Gio cord at $29, both in a wide color range. These bring the casual, textured element that makes a stack feel relaxed and streetwear rather than formal. The most affordable layer to build with.

Shop Fortune & Gio

Layer 4: The Accent - Omega & Color Pops

The final layer is about depth and a single point of interest. The Omega ($39) adds a clean steel-shackle detail, or you can drop in one bright color, like a turquoise rope, as the stack's single pop.

Omega - The Finishing Accent

$39 - Grey, Black, Navy

Caligio Omega Grey cotton rope bracelet steel shackle streetwear stack accent layer 316L studio view $39Caligio Omega Black cotton rope bracelet steel shackle streetwear stack finishing accent worn detail $39

The finishing accent: Omega in grey, black, or navy at $39, with a clean steel shackle that adds a subtle metal detail without competing with the main chain. The piece that rounds out a three-to-five-bracelet stack.

Shop Omega
The cost reality: a full four-layer streetwear stack, chain, leather, cord, and accent, runs roughly $150-200 in total at Caligio, and you can wear the pieces separately too. That is less than the cost of a single entry designer bracelet, for an entire layered look you can rearrange endlessly.

Styling the Stack: Keep It Intentional

The line between a great stack and a cluttered one is restraint. Keep the color story tight, black and earth tones with one metal, and resist adding a sixth or seventh piece. Vary the widths so no two adjacent bracelets are the same thickness. Wear the stack with relaxed streetwear: a hoodie and chain, a tee and cargos, the casual fits the look was built for. And remember the stack is modular, the same pieces split across two wrists, or worn solo, for different days. Build once, wear a dozen ways. For more on layering technique, the full stacking guide goes deeper.

"The stacked wrist was never about one expensive bracelet - it was about mixing textures until the stack looks like it grew there. That is a look you build, not buy in one piece."
For the Stack Builder

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The Bottom Line

The Travis Scott bracelet look is a layered streetwear stack, beads, cord, leather, and chain mixed on one wrist in a black-and-earth palette with a metal accent, and it is one of the most affordable celebrity styles to recreate because it is built on texture, not on any single pricey piece. Build it with Caligio: a Miami Cuban ($49) or Anchor Chain ($69) for the chain, Egoist or Prime leather ($39-49), and Fortune or Gio cord ($29-39), finished with an Omega accent. Three to five pieces, all hypoallergenic 316L steel, designed in Los Angeles. Apply the secret BLOG code at checkout, or 1FREE, Buy 2 Get 1 Free.


The Caligio Q&A: Travis Scott Bracelet Style (FAQ)


1. What bracelets does Travis Scott wear?
He is known for a layered streetwear stack mixing beads, cord, leather, and chain. The everyday look is recreatable affordably with mix-and-match pieces.


2. How do you get the look?
Stack 3-5 bracelets mixing textures - chain, leather, cord - in a black-and-earth palette with one metal accent.


3. How many bracelets should I stack?
Three to five on one wrist, with contrasting widths and materials. Enough to read intentional, not cluttered.


4. What works for a hip-hop style?
A Cuban link chain as the centerpiece, layered with cord, beaded, and leather pieces. Black and gold dominate.


5. Best colors for a streetwear stack?
Black anchor, earth tones, one metal accent, optional single color pop. Restraint keeps it intentional.


6. Where do I buy affordable streetwear bracelets?
Caligio - stackable cord, leather, and chain from $29-69, hypoallergenic 316L steel, designed in LA.


7. What is the chain layer?
Miami Cuban ($49) for bold shine or Anchor Chain ($69) for a modern steel-and-cord edge.


8. What is the cheapest way to start a stack?
A Gio cord ($29) plus a Fortune rope ($39) - two textures for under $70, add chain and leather over time.


9. Can I wear the pieces separately?
Yes - the stack is modular. Wear all five together, split across wrists, or solo for different days.


10. Where do I buy?
caligio.com - stackable bracelets $29-69, LA-designed, 2-4 day US shipping.

Written by the Caligio team. Designed in Los Angeles since 2020. Read our story.