Small Seal. Big Nope.
A clean, low-profile shirt for a very loud position: don’t turn Lone Pine Canyon into a corporate chew toy.
This version keeps it simple with the Lone Pine Canyon Protection Alliance seal front and center, just smaller, sharper, and less “souvenir shop” than “quietly furious local with receipts.” No giant landscape print, no scenic over-explaining, just the mark of the people trying to keep the canyon from being blasted, crushed, trucked, dusted, and then politely described as “progress” by folks who won’t have to live with the consequences.
It comes in a bunch of colors, because apparently shirts can offer more thoughtful options than a mining proposal.
Wear it to town halls, trail walks, grocery runs, public meetings, or anywhere you’d like to communicate, “I’m against the quarry,” without immediately opening the entire binder of reasons why. Though, to be clear, we do have the binder.
Proceeds support the Lone Pine Canyon Protection Alliance and the ongoing fight to protect Lone Pine Canyon from becoming someone else’s extraction spreadsheet.
A clean, low-profile shirt for a very loud position: don’t turn Lone Pine Canyon into a corporate chew toy.
This version keeps it simple with the Lone Pine Canyon Protection Alliance seal front and center, just smaller, sharper, and less “souvenir shop” than “quietly furious local with receipts.” No giant landscape print, no scenic over-explaining, just the mark of the people trying to keep the canyon from being blasted, crushed, trucked, dusted, and then politely described as “progress” by folks who won’t have to live with the consequences.
It comes in a bunch of colors, because apparently shirts can offer more thoughtful options than a mining proposal.
Wear it to town halls, trail walks, grocery runs, public meetings, or anywhere you’d like to communicate, “I’m against the quarry,” without immediately opening the entire binder of reasons why. Though, to be clear, we do have the binder.
Proceeds support the Lone Pine Canyon Protection Alliance and the ongoing fight to protect Lone Pine Canyon from becoming someone else’s extraction spreadsheet.