Using natural, grounded colour, the Women’s Colour Edition Collection refuses to let exploitation hide behind time, tradition, or abstraction. These designs place violence exactly where it belongs, in the present, dismantling the comforting myth that cruelty is historical, accidental, or rare. What is shown here is not memory or metaphor, but reality as it exists now.
The imagery confronts industries and customs built on confinement, forced impregnation, mutilation, separation, and slaughter, systems that persist not out of necessity, but through profit, entitlement, and collective moral disengagement. Colour restores immediacy and accountability. Bodies are bodies. Blood is blood. Steel, dust, machinery, and living beings are presented as they exist within modern systems of control, stripped of romanticisation and excuse.
T-shirt colour choices intentionally avoid brightness and lightness. Deeper, muted tones have been selected to honour the gravity of the subject matter, ensuring the imagery is carried with seriousness rather than softened by aesthetic appeal. These colours resist distraction and false comfort, allowing the message to remain grounded, confrontational, and emotionally intact.
This collection does not beautify suffering. It exposes how violence becomes normalised through repetition, how exploitation is rendered acceptable once it is regulated, branded, and marketed as ethical. Colour collapses distance and denial, eliminating the space that allows abstraction to persist.
The Women’s Colour Edition demands presence with what is done to animals, and to the earth, when sentient life is reduced to inventory and profit is placed above autonomy. It rejects the language of “humane” exploitation, exposing it as a moral contradiction: there can be no ethical domination where choice, agency, and freedom are denied.
Each piece stands as refusal.
Not trend.
Not provocation.
But record.
A Declaration of Freedom for All Beings.
A visible act of witness affirming non-participation in systems that commodify life, disguise violence, and normalise suffering.