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A round, off-white patch with red stitching. It features a cartoon red devil smoking, leaning on a black chess rook. Text reads "DEVIL ROOKS" at the top and "Roxwood" at the bottom.

A round, off-white patch with red stitching. It features a cartoon red devil smoking, leaning on a black chess rook. Text reads "DEVIL ROOKS" at the top and "Roxwood" at the bottom.

Patch Description – Devil Rooks (1950s Greaser Gang) The Devil Rooks’ patch is a bold, hand-stitched emblem, about the size of a man’s open palm, meant to be worn on the back of a leather jacket or the sleeve of a denim cut-off. The central image is a black rook chess piece, tall and blocky, its base chipped and weathered like a crumbling tenement wall. Perched on the top is a small, sharp-horned red devil, grinning with a cigarette hanging from its lips, one eye narrowed as if sizing up trouble. The devil’s tail curls down and wraps around the rook’s base, ending in a spade tip. The background is an off-white canvas circle, deliberately dirtied and frayed from wear, with a thick crimson border stitched in uneven thread — the kind done by a girlfriend or mother at the kitchen table. Arched across the top, in faded block letters, is “DEVIL ROOKS” in black, each letter slightly imperfect as if hand-painted with a stencil and brush — but always kept clean and solid, with no streaks or runs in the lettering so the name reads clear even from a distance. Along the bottom curve in smaller script that reads the words “ROXWOOD”. It’s a design that looks homemade but carries weight — a mix of chess strategy and street menace, with the devil symbolizing mischief, rebellion, and danger. Members wear it not just as an identifier, but as a warning: The Devil’s Rooks are always thinking two moves ahead, and they never play fair. PNG format, clear background, be specific See more