Some shirts exist because a designer had a deadline. This one exists because a poster got slapped on a wall somewhere and refused to come down. The Free Palestine baby tee started as a piece of street art, wheat-pasted and weathered, and that DNA is still in the ink.
JULZ made this. And when we say it's a collab, we mean the design has a real history behind it. The print is grimy on purpose. Textured on purpose. That is what happens when art lives in public before it ends up on a tee. You can feel the rough edges.
The graphic is a face covered by a keffiyeh, eyes forward, and the word FREE underneath in red. It is direct. It is not asking permission. It is for the people who know that Palestine, Gaza, and the West Bank are not political talking points. They are places. With people in them.
This is a women's Y2K baby tee, which means it runs small and cropped. That is the whole point. Layer it over a long sleeve, tuck it into high-waisted jeans, throw it on with whatever you actually wear. It moves the way the 90s intended. It looks like you mean it.
This is also a tee that means something at a protest, at a show, at a vigil, at dinner with people who need to be uncomfortable. It is not a costume. It is not a trend. It is a position.
Strange Gang makes this alongside people who give a damn, and we are not going to pretend otherwise. This design stands against Israeli occupation and for the right of Palestinians to exist freely. That is what the word FREE is doing on the shirt. In case it needed saying.
Wear it to the next rally. Wear it on the way to work. Wear it when you are the only person in the room who has said anything. It is a Y2K crop that fits like conviction and washes like a regular shirt. Carry it everywhere until the word FREE stops being something people have to fight for.