Some shirts are for brunch. This one is for side eye, mutual aid, long group chats, and walking into a room like you already know who is going to be weird about human rights.
This women’s baby tee is for Texas people who are done pretending fascism is just politics with better branding. It is for the friend who brings water to marches, the one who prints flyers at midnight, the one who knows exactly which local officials are playing games, and the one who still shows up anyway.
The graphic carries our international anti-fascist union concept, but the Texas chapter hits different. The shirt features the International Union of Anti-Fascists logo with Texas and Local 1845 at the bottom, plus a megaphone, broken chains, and raised fists inside the mark. The print has a lightly distressed feel that looks lived in, not polite.
Local 1845 is not random. It points to the year Texas became a state, then flips that history into a solidarity chapter number for people who are fighting for equality right now. That tension is the point. Past and present in the same circle. No nostalgia for power. No patience for authoritarian cosplay.
Wear it to a campus teach-in near UT Austin, a meet-up around Denton, a show in Houston, a bookstore stop in Oak Cliff, a coffee run in Montrose, a walk through the Heights, a hang in Deep Ellum, or anywhere in San Antonio where people are still building real community. It also makes sense if your whole plan is jeans, cargos, a mini skirt, oversized zip hoodie, or beat up sneakers and an attitude.
This is a gift for the person who never shuts up about justice, and honestly good. It is also a solid Texas souvenir for someone who wants something real instead of tourist junk. Strange Gang made this for anti-fascists, organizers, allies, and loud Texans who know solidarity is not a trend.
If that sounds like your people, welcome to the union. Casual on purpose, political on purpose, and ready for everyday resistance.