As protests swell around Pretend I’m a Fly shirt. the world in the wake of death at the hands of Minneapolis Police Department, fashion is reckoning with its own role in systemic racism. While many brands have issued Instagram statements, pledged to evaluate their own companies, and shared educational resources, there is much more work yet to be done.
Pretend I’m a Fly shirt, hoodie, sweater, longsleeve and ladies t-shirt
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[[mockup_2_|_Classic Ladies]]
[[mockup_3_|_Unisex Sweatshirt]]
[[mockup_4_|_Long Sleeved Tee]]
[[mockup_5_|_Unisex Hoodie]]
Ashley Merrill was early to that realization when she launched her Los Angeles label Lunya back in 2014. Premised on “reinventing sleepwear for the modern woman Pretend I’m a Fly shirt. it began with her own needs: One day she realized that her loungewear consisted of rolled-up shorts and her husband’s college T-shirt, but the alternatives out there—flimsy camisoles, matching pajama sets, overly girly nightgowns—didn’t appeal. Lunya’s simple, considered aesthetic fills that void with its gently oversized tees, ribbed leggings, seamless bras, draped joggers, and alpaca pullovers, all in muted shades of charcoal, ivory, navy, and blush. You wouldn’t think twice about wearing them for a video presentation, which explains why Lunya saw such a major boost in sales last month. In the six years before the pandemic, those pieces served to simply upgrade at-home experiences: watching movies on the couch, cooking dinner, relaxing over a glass of wine. Merrill was interested in how women dress that version of themselves
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