"Warmth, not ICE" Vintage Portrait Raglan Crewneck | Pro-Immigrant Activism | French Terry Sweatshirt

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$39.22
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$39.22
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Description

Vintage art meets modern activism. This design pairs a 1940s portrait from our family archive with contemporary social justice messaging.


This medium-weight French terry raglan crewneck carries a message that's both literal and urgent. The soft, broken-in fabric feels comfortable from the first wear, with relaxed raglan sleeves and ribbed cuffs for easy movement.

Front artwork features a 1940s vintage portrait in full color—a lady in red coat and elaborate hat, holding a pleated blue-and-white muff—paired with bold typography that reads "Warmth, not ICE." The double meaning is immediate: warmth as physical comfort (the muff) and warmth as human dignity and sanctuary. ICE as frozen cold and ICE as Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

This is reclaimed imagery for contemporary resistance: colonial-era luxury and privilege now demanding protection for immigrant communities. No one deserves to freeze—literally or metaphorically—in detention, at borders, or in a system designed to dehumanize.

About This Design

Part of our Reclaimed: Portraits of Resistance collection, this design subverts colonial-era aesthetics to denounce state violence against immigrants. The elegant vintage portrait—originally representing warmth, comfort, and privilege—now carries a message of solidarity: warmth is a right, not a privilege. Borders are violence. ICE is cruelty.

Product Features

  • Medium-weight 3-end French terry (7.4 oz/yd²)
  • Blended cotton/recycled polyester for comfort and sustainability
  • Relaxed raglan sleeves with ribbed cuffs
  • Twill necktape and tear-away tag
  • Under 5% shrinkage
  • Full-color vintage 1940s Turner archive portrait with bold modern typography
  • Perfect for layering or wearing alone

Care Instructions

  • Machine wash cold
  • Tumble dry low heat
  • Do not bleach or iron directly on design

Production Details

Unknown, Print on Demand by Printify

Description

Vintage art meets modern activism. This design pairs a 1940s portrait from our family archive with contemporary social justice messaging.


This medium-weight French terry raglan crewneck carries a message that's both literal and urgent. The soft, broken-in fabric feels comfortable from the first wear, with relaxed raglan sleeves and ribbed cuffs for easy movement.

Front artwork features a 1940s vintage portrait in full color—a lady in red coat and elaborate hat, holding a pleated blue-and-white muff—paired with bold typography that reads "Warmth, not ICE." The double meaning is immediate: warmth as physical comfort (the muff) and warmth as human dignity and sanctuary. ICE as frozen cold and ICE as Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

This is reclaimed imagery for contemporary resistance: colonial-era luxury and privilege now demanding protection for immigrant communities. No one deserves to freeze—literally or metaphorically—in detention, at borders, or in a system designed to dehumanize.

About This Design

Part of our Reclaimed: Portraits of Resistance collection, this design subverts colonial-era aesthetics to denounce state violence against immigrants. The elegant vintage portrait—originally representing warmth, comfort, and privilege—now carries a message of solidarity: warmth is a right, not a privilege. Borders are violence. ICE is cruelty.

Product Features

  • Medium-weight 3-end French terry (7.4 oz/yd²)
  • Blended cotton/recycled polyester for comfort and sustainability
  • Relaxed raglan sleeves with ribbed cuffs
  • Twill necktape and tear-away tag
  • Under 5% shrinkage
  • Full-color vintage 1940s Turner archive portrait with bold modern typography
  • Perfect for layering or wearing alone

Care Instructions

  • Machine wash cold
  • Tumble dry low heat
  • Do not bleach or iron directly on design

Production Details

Unknown, Print on Demand by Printify

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