Cranes For Our Future tee
A tee made in Collaboration with the Nuclear Threat Initiative for their #CranesForOurFuture campaign. Made on 100% cotton, using screen-printing.
I am joining people around the world who are marking 79 years since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. We are hoping to spread awareness in the hopes that world leaders will move closer, not further, to a world without nuclear weapons.
The story of Sadako Sasaki reminds us how important nuclear disarmament is. Sasaki was diagnosed with radiation induced leukaemia when she was just 11 years old, 10 years after the bombing in Hiroshima. She attempted to fold 1,000 paper cranes in the hopes of her wish to survive coming true. Whilst she sadly didn’t get granted this wish, her legacy lives on so strongly today, and paper cranes are now used not just in Japanese folklore, but also to symbolise a hope for a better future, so no more lives are lost needlessly.
A tee made in Collaboration with the Nuclear Threat Initiative for their #CranesForOurFuture campaign. Made on 100% cotton, using screen-printing.
I am joining people around the world who are marking 79 years since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. We are hoping to spread awareness in the hopes that world leaders will move closer, not further, to a world without nuclear weapons.
The story of Sadako Sasaki reminds us how important nuclear disarmament is. Sasaki was diagnosed with radiation induced leukaemia when she was just 11 years old, 10 years after the bombing in Hiroshima. She attempted to fold 1,000 paper cranes in the hopes of her wish to survive coming true. Whilst she sadly didn’t get granted this wish, her legacy lives on so strongly today, and paper cranes are now used not just in Japanese folklore, but also to symbolise a hope for a better future, so no more lives are lost needlessly.
A tee made in Collaboration with the Nuclear Threat Initiative for their #CranesForOurFuture campaign. Made on 100% cotton, using screen-printing.
I am joining people around the world who are marking 79 years since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. We are hoping to spread awareness in the hopes that world leaders will move closer, not further, to a world without nuclear weapons.
The story of Sadako Sasaki reminds us how important nuclear disarmament is. Sasaki was diagnosed with radiation induced leukaemia when she was just 11 years old, 10 years after the bombing in Hiroshima. She attempted to fold 1,000 paper cranes in the hopes of her wish to survive coming true. Whilst she sadly didn’t get granted this wish, her legacy lives on so strongly today, and paper cranes are now used not just in Japanese folklore, but also to symbolise a hope for a better future, so no more lives are lost needlessly.