Using natural, grounded colour, the Unisex Colour Edition confronts abstraction, distance, and denial, holding exploitation firmly in the present tense. These designs dismantle the illusion that cruelty belongs to history or exists only at the margins, restoring immediacy and moral weight by revealing reality as active, systemic, and ongoing. What is shown here is not memory or symbolism, but reality, current, unsoftened, and unavoidable.
The imagery confronts industries and cultural practices built on confinement, forced impregnation, mutilation, separation, and slaughter, systems sustained not by necessity, but by profit, entitlement, and collective moral disengagement. Colour restores immediacy and accountability: bodies are shown as bodies, environments as they are, and violence as it occurs within modern frameworks of control. Nothing is softened. Nothing is displaced into metaphor.
T-shirt colour choices intentionally avoid brightness and lightness. Predominantly darker, grounded tones are selected to carry weight and seriousness, honouring the gravity of the subject matter. These colours resist distraction and false optimism, ensuring the imagery remains confrontational rather than decorative, the message intact, undiluted, and impossible to overlook.
This collection does not aestheticise suffering. It exposes how violence becomes acceptable through repetition, regulation, and rebranding, how exploitation is rendered “normal” once it is processed, labelled, and marketed as ethical. Colour collapses the distance that allows denial to persist, forcing confrontation with lives engineered, used, and discarded at industrial scale.
This integrity extends beyond the visual. Each piece is made from premium organic cotton, produced under rigorous ethical standards, entirely vegan, and built for longevity rather than disposability. The Unisex Colour Edition demands presence with what is done to animals, and to the earth, when sentient life is reduced to inventory and efficiency is valued above autonomy. It rejects the language of “humane” exploitation, exposing it as a moral contradiction: there can be no ethical domination where consent, agency, and freedom are impossible.
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, normalise suffering, and rely on silence to endure.