Some shirts are just there to fill space. This one shows up with an opinion and refuses to lower its voice.
Strange Gang made this women’s baby tee for the people who are not drifting through any of this half awake. It is for the ones who hear the dog whistles, clock the hate, and answer back with community, clarity, and zero patience. The fit pulls from that retro Y2K energy, which makes the whole thing hit even harder. It can wear close and sharp, or bigger and messier, depending on how much room you want to take up that day.
Front and center is the Canada Rebel Alliance emblem: a loon lifted inside the rebel crest, with the maple leaf above it. Not random. Not decorative filler. The loon carries that watchful, cold-water, national-symbol charge. The maple leaf locks it to Canada. Together they turn the shirt into a signal for anti-fascists, equality defenders, human rights people, and anybody still willing to physically show up for their neighbors.
This is for Toronto sidewalks, Montreal venues, Vancouver meetups, Winnipeg winters, Halifax bars, Ottawa marches, and long train rides where you are already tired of pretending bigotry is just a difference of opinion. It works for students, organizers, artists, punks, campus people, and community weirdos around places like U of T, McGill, UBC, Concordia, and anywhere else people are trying to keep each other awake.
And yes, huge thanks to Bernie Anderson for the original Rebel Alliance design. That history matters. Strange Gang took that energy and pushed it through our own Canada lens so it feels rooted, regional, and alive. Not polished into mush. Not turned into some safe little patriotic nod for people who want symbols without responsibility.
This baby tee is for the person who wants the fit to feel playful while the message stays deadly serious. It is for the one who will pair it with cargos, beat-up denim, plaid, a tiny skirt, busted sneakers, giant boots, or whatever else survives the week. It is protest gear, everyday armor, late-night diner uniform, and a reminder that community is not abstract.
You do not wear this because things are fine. You wear it because people matter, and hate deserves a public problem.