








🌲 Protect Our Parks
“Hear Her.”
This jacket is rooted in reverence. At the center is a powerful forest scene: a tree standing tall with ancient presence, surrounded by ferns, branches, and grounded wisdom. But the real magic is in the details — look closely, and you’ll see the words “Hear Her” etched into the trunk. It’s a call to listen to the land, to tune into the voices of ecosystems that have been speaking long before we were ever here.
This piece honors the legacy of Indigenous land stewardship, the healing power of nature, and the deep need for us to protect spaces that protect us back. It’s been worn at protests, hikes, and storytelling circles — always as a reminder that parks aren’t passive landscapes. They’re living, breathing teachers.
📍 First showcased at the “Hands Off Our Public Lands” protest in Boulder, CO.
“Hear Her.”
This jacket is rooted in reverence. At the center is a powerful forest scene: a tree standing tall with ancient presence, surrounded by ferns, branches, and grounded wisdom. But the real magic is in the details — look closely, and you’ll see the words “Hear Her” etched into the trunk. It’s a call to listen to the land, to tune into the voices of ecosystems that have been speaking long before we were ever here.
This piece honors the legacy of Indigenous land stewardship, the healing power of nature, and the deep need for us to protect spaces that protect us back. It’s been worn at protests, hikes, and storytelling circles — always as a reminder that parks aren’t passive landscapes. They’re living, breathing teachers.
📍 First showcased at the “Hands Off Our Public Lands” protest in Boulder, CO.
“Hear Her.”
This jacket is rooted in reverence. At the center is a powerful forest scene: a tree standing tall with ancient presence, surrounded by ferns, branches, and grounded wisdom. But the real magic is in the details — look closely, and you’ll see the words “Hear Her” etched into the trunk. It’s a call to listen to the land, to tune into the voices of ecosystems that have been speaking long before we were ever here.
This piece honors the legacy of Indigenous land stewardship, the healing power of nature, and the deep need for us to protect spaces that protect us back. It’s been worn at protests, hikes, and storytelling circles — always as a reminder that parks aren’t passive landscapes. They’re living, breathing teachers.
📍 First showcased at the “Hands Off Our Public Lands” protest in Boulder, CO.