Oregon does not do quiet state pride. It drips from rain jackets, rides home in the backseat with muddy boots, waits in line at food carts, and shows up at the coast even when the sky looks personally offended.
Oregon Loud is for the people who get it without needing a travel brochure. Portland has the bridges and late-night arguments. Eugene has the weird holy mess of Oregon Country Fair. Bend has trail dust, river days, and everyone pretending they are not planning the next hike. Salem, Ashland, Corvallis, Astoria, Hood River, and every small town with one perfect diner all belong in the same loud little argument.
The design says ORAF, short for Oregon As Fuck, in a rock 'n roll style, because Oregon pride has never been neat. It is moss and feedback. It is a ferry of memories across the Columbia River Gorge, a wet shirt after a Rose Festival day, a half-charged phone at Pickathon, a beach bonfire that smells like salt, smoke, and bad decisions.
This is for the native who never really left, even if the mailing address changed. It is for the transplant who arrived for a job, a person, a trail, a band, or a season, then slowly realized Oregon had gotten into their bones. It is for the kid who learned the map by road trips, rest stops, waterfalls, forests, record stores, and relatives who talk too long at dinner.
Oregon gives people strange loyalties. You start by loving one trail, one neighborhood, one rainy block, one ridiculous festival weekend, and suddenly you are defending the whole state like a feral raccoon in a parking lot. The coast, the Cascades, the high desert, the Gorge, the Willamette Valley, the old theaters, the basement shows, the markets, the rivers. Somehow it all becomes personal.
Strange Allies makes city and place pieces for people who attach themselves to geography like it owes them money. This one is not polished state pride. It is rain-soaked, festival-worn, coast-haunted, Gorge-blown, forest-brained Oregon devotion with the volume knob broken off.
Let the pines have the last word.