New York Times Fashionさんのインスタグラム写真 - (New York Times FashionInstagram)「Across New York and Los Angeles, T-shirts advertising support for creative workers’ labor unions are nearly everywhere you look. On the subway, in line at the grocery store and at the coffee shop, creative types and their allies in both cities are eager to wear support for the strikes on their literal sleeves.  SAG-AFTRA, the actors’ union, decided on its own strike last week. The Writers Guild of America, the labor union that represents screenwriters, went on strike in early May. As the demonstrations head into a 13th week, a pressing need has arisen: clean T-shirts.  Enter WGAStrikeShirts.com. The online shop, run by a screenwriter and 12-year member of the Writers Guild named Tripper Clancy, sells WGA. and SAG-AFTRA strike paraphernalia including hats, tank tops and a tomato-red pencils down T-shirt of Neil Gaiman fame. Since its creation on May 5, the website has sold more than $100,000 worth of merchandise, according to Clancy, with 100 percent of the net proceeds going to the Entertainment Community Fund, a charity that supports performers, artists and entertainment industry workers.  Its best sellers include a plain white shirt with black lettering that reads, “Pay the Writers and the Actors and the Crew and the Teamsters and Anyone Else Who Makes You All the Money,” and a black T-shirt with a red “fist of solidarity” naming unions involved in the strike.  Personal style has long been a way to express political or social affiliation, but what one wears to the picket line is especially important: By wearing matching union gear, workers become a visual representation of the solidarity they’re trying to reflect.  Read more about these messages in the merch at the link in our bio. Photos by @poupayphoto, @markabramsonphoto and WGAStrikeShirts.com」7月26日 6時05分 - nytstyle

New York Times Fashionのインスタグラム(nytstyle) - 7月26日 06時05分


Across New York and Los Angeles, T-shirts advertising support for creative workers’ labor unions are nearly everywhere you look. On the subway, in line at the grocery store and at the coffee shop, creative types and their allies in both cities are eager to wear support for the strikes on their literal sleeves.

SAG-AFTRA, the actors’ union, decided on its own strike last week. The Writers Guild of America, the labor union that represents screenwriters, went on strike in early May. As the demonstrations head into a 13th week, a pressing need has arisen: clean T-shirts.

Enter WGAStrikeShirts.com. The online shop, run by a screenwriter and 12-year member of the Writers Guild named Tripper Clancy, sells WGA. and SAG-AFTRA strike paraphernalia including hats, tank tops and a tomato-red pencils down T-shirt of Neil Gaiman fame. Since its creation on May 5, the website has sold more than $100,000 worth of merchandise, according to Clancy, with 100 percent of the net proceeds going to the Entertainment Community Fund, a charity that supports performers, artists and entertainment industry workers.

Its best sellers include a plain white shirt with black lettering that reads, “Pay the Writers and the Actors and the Crew and the Teamsters and Anyone Else Who Makes You All the Money,” and a black T-shirt with a red “fist of solidarity” naming unions involved in the strike.

Personal style has long been a way to express political or social affiliation, but what one wears to the picket line is especially important: By wearing matching union gear, workers become a visual representation of the solidarity they’re trying to reflect.

Read more about these messages in the merch at the link in our bio. Photos by @poupayphoto, @markabramsonphoto and WGAStrikeShirts.com


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