This site is for an 18+ audience.
Teeshit makes clothes about the stuff people are still made to whisper about. Periods. Therapy. Burnout. Men crying. Asking for help. We thought a tee was a quietly loud way to change what's normal to talk about. So we made some.
In a lot of the world, half the population spends a week every month pretending nothing's happening. Periods get whispered about. Pads come wrapped in three layers of brown paper at the chemist. Girls grow up learning that a body doing exactly what it's built to do is somehow embarrassing.
It isn't. It just got framed that way for a long time. Nobody updated the frame.
The same thing happens with mental health. With men crying. With burnout. With asking for help. With bodies that look like actual bodies. Real, normal, human stuff — treated like a problem the person needs to solve quietly.
Teeshit is a clothing brand because clothing is the loudest quiet thing a person can do. A t-shirt walks into a room before you do. It can shift what a stranger thinks is okay to talk about, just by existing on a Tuesday at the supermarket.
So we made tees that say cramps & crushing it, and therapy did this, and boys cry too, and tired & valid. Pieces a guy can wear to show up for the women in his life. Pieces a woman can wear to feel proud of a body that works exactly the way it's supposed to. Pieces anyone can wear to make the next person in line feel a bit less alone in their own head.
We're not here to lecture. The graphics are funny on purpose — half a joke, half a flag. The fastest way to make a hard topic easier is to laugh at how strange it is that it was ever hard.
Build from mood swings. Mean it.
Teeshit is 18+ on purpose. Not because the clothes are inappropriate — because the conversations they start are the kind adults can actually hold. If you've lived a few of these moods, this is yours.
280–500 GSM cotton. Double-needle stitching. Garment-dyed. Pre-shrunk. Hand-pulled prints that don't crack after the third wash. Pieces that break in instead of falling apart.
Awareness pieces are unisex. A guy wearing the period stamp tee is showing support. A woman wearing it is claiming pride. Both shift the room a little. That's the whole point.
Drops are small on purpose. Supply chain stays clean, the planet stays a bit happier. When a piece sells out, it's gone — no restocks. The next drop will say something new.
Ten percent of every awareness piece goes to organisations doing the work on that topic — menstrual health programs, crisis lines, body-positive education, youth identity support. Donation receipts get published every quarter. You can hold us to that.
Menstrual health charities and period-poverty programs. Pads in schools, supplies in shelters.
Therapy access funds and crisis support lines. The phone numbers that answer at 3am.
Youth identity programs. The kind of support nobody had to ask for when they were figuring it out.