Lucha libre wrestling
La lucha libre — littéralement « lutte libre » — est bien plus qu’un sport mexicain : c’est un spectacle total, un art populaire où le masque de catcheur est au cœur de tout. Chaque luchador incarne un personnage, héros ou villain, reconnaissable à son masque de lucha libre unique. Mais la culture lucha libre rayonne bien au-delà de l’arène : plaques décoratives, autels artisanaux, cartes postales — autant d’objets qui font entrer cet univers iconique chez vous. Tous nos produits sont fabriqués artisanalement au Mexique et nichés aux abords des arenas mexicaines le soir après les spectacles. Ambiance incluse !
💡 Découvrez notre sélection ci-dessous et en bas de page une histoire de la lucha libre, ce spectacle mexicain pas comme les autres.
Showing 1–18 of 39 results
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Decorative ex-voto plaque lucha libre Blue Demon
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Decorative ex-voto plaque lucha libre Canek
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Decorative ex-voto plaque lucha libre Caristico
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Decorative ex-voto plaque lucha libre Keyra
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Decorative ex-voto plaque lucha libre Máscara Sagrada
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Decorative ex-voto plaque lucha libre Místico
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Decorative ex-voto plaque lucha libre Rey Misterio
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Decorative ex-voto plaque lucha libre Sin Cara
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Lucha libre embroidered patch – Atlantis
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Lucha libre embroidered patch – Blue Demon
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Lucha libre embroidered patch – El Santo
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Lucha libre embroidered patch – Místico
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Lucha libre embroidered patch – Rey Mysterio
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Lucha libre embroidered patch – Sin Cara
12,50 € inc. VAT Add to cart -

Lucha libre sticker – Blue Demon El Demonio Azul
4,00 € inc. VAT Add to cart -

Lucha libre sticker – El Cruzado
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Lucha libre sticker – El Templario
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Lucha libre sticker – Lady Shani
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Showing 1–18 of 39 results
A history of lucha libre wrestling
The origins: between Western wrestling and Aztec combat
Mexican lucha libre was officially born in the 1930s, when Salvador Lutteroth founded the Empresa Mexicana de Lucha Libre (EMLL) in Mexico City in 1933. But its roots go deeper: from the late 19th century, Greco-Roman wrestlers and American catch wrestlers toured Mexico, and their techniques blended with local hand-to-hand combat traditions. This cross-pollination gave birth to a radically new style — more aerial, faster, more theatrical — where athletic prowess rivaled showmanship.
The mask: soul and identity of the luchador
At the heart of lucha libre lies the mask. Introduced in the 1930s by figures like El Murciélago Velázquez, the mask is not a mere accessory: it is the fighter's entire identity. Losing one's mask — in a match called apuesta (wager) — is one of the most symbolic defeats there is. The luchador mask is handcrafted by specialized artisans called mascareros, who work with lycra, leather and embroidery to create unique pieces blending totemic animals, pre-Hispanic geometric patterns and vibrant colors.
The great figures: El Santo, Blue Demon, Rey Mysterio
Three names dominate the mythology of lucha libre:
- El Santo (1917–1984) is the ultimate icon. His silver mask, his code of honor and his film adventures made him a national hero, a secular saint whose face was never revealed during his lifetime. He also inspires today's luchador nichos — those small artisanal altars that pay tribute to him as an almost divine figure.
- Blue Demon, El Santo's rival and friend, popularized the blue-faced rudo figure, embodying the hero/villain duality inherent to the genre. His likeness now adorns decorative plaques and ex-votos throughout Mexican popular culture.
- Rey Mysterio Jr., who crossed over to the worldwide WWE, exported the aerial style of lucha libre far beyond Mexico's borders, making the Mexican wrestling mask a global cultural object.
Techniques and style: high-flying as a signature
What sets lucha libre apart from Anglo-Saxon wrestling is its aesthetic of acrobatics. Luchadores perform spectacular aerial maneuvers — plancha, tope suicida, huracánrana — that demand exceptional flexibility and coordination. The ring becomes a stage, the fighters acrobats as much as athletes. This theatrical dimension is doubled by a binary narrative between técnicos (the good guys) and rudos (the villains), which structures each bout as a folk tale with universal archetypes.
Lucha libre wrestling as decoration and collectibles
Since the 1990s, lucha libre imagery has largely spilled beyond the arena to invade contemporary Mexican decoration. Ex-voto lucha libre plaques — in the style of religious ex-votos — depict the great champions in a colorful, popular style, half-sacred half-festive. Luchador nichos, those small glazed altars inherited from the Mexican domestic altar tradition, transform El Santo or Místico into tutelary figures displayed at home. As for lucha libre postcards, they carry on the tradition of Mexican popular imagery — the fight posters plastered on the walls of Mexico City's working-class neighborhoods.

Wear, gift, decorate: lucha libre wrestling for everyone
Whether for a Halloween costume, a themed party, a carnival, a photo shoot or simply to decorate an interior with character, lucha libre culture offers an instantly recognizable visual vocabulary. Giving an original Mexican wrestler mask, a decorative plaque featuring Blue Demon or a handcrafted luchador nicho means passing on a piece of a living popular culture, handmade in Mexico by artisans who have kept this craft alive for generations.
