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'50 Years of Soil' Boxier Trash Tee

'50 Years of Soil' Boxier Trash Tee

Regular price $70.00
Regular price Sale price $70.00
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'50 Years of Soil' Boxier Trash Tee Variant(s)
Color: Potting Soil
Size
  • Tiara is 5'4" and is wearing size M in Potting Soil

Low stock: 2 left

Cropped, boxy T-shirt garment dyed five shades of soil. All proceeds go to the Altadena Community Garden, a nonprofit rebuilding and restoring its historic growing spaces from the ground up after the Eaton Fire.

A totally tubular body with no side seams. This world-first fabric has a satisfying handfeel, made entirely from post-industrial cotton waste to conserve water and energy. Knit, sewn, and dyed in Los Angeles, keeping our carbon footprint low.

About the Nonprofit Organization

Altadena Community Garden is an active and vital gardening space that has provided information and education to Garden members and the local community since the 1970s.

It's a place to grow fresh food, share knowledge, and spend time together. A rare and meaningful third-space within Loma Alta Park, organized and cared for by local residents and shaped by decades of volunteer effort. Their commitment is rooted in the idea that tending land builds both nourishment and connection.

Since the Eaton Fire burned through the Garden, they have been using a regenerative process to restore their soil health. The Garden has relied on mutual aid to rebuild new plots and practice sustainable soil renewal through mycoremediation. This organic approach uses mushrooms to absorb and metabolize contaminants, cleaning and restoring the soil. And step by step, the Garden is coming back to life. Community-led, forward-looking, and ready to grow again.

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Altadena Community Garden

  • Archival image of three people working together in a garden, with one person holding a hose.
  • Archival black and white photo of a community garden with people tending to plants

Since the 1970s, the Garden has been an active and vital place to learn, grow, and gather together. A rare third-space shaped and sustained by decades of volunteer care. Their commitment is rooted in the idea that tending land builds both nourishment and connection.

After the Eaton Fire burned through, they’ve been using a regenerative process to restore soil health. This has relied on mutual aid to rebuild new plots and practice sustainable soil renewal through mycoremediation. An organic approach using mushrooms to absorb and metabolize contaminants, cleaning and restoring the soil.

In celebration of the Altadena Community Garden, this limited-edition Boxier Trash Tee was garment dyed five shades of soil. Proceeds support the nonprofit as they rebuild from the ground up. "As true gardeners we knew that rebuilding and restoration isn't just about what you put about on the land," says Erica Slater, a volunteer with the Garden. "It's also about what you nurture beneath it, and that starts with the soil."