top of page

End Gun Violence Awareness Enough Wear Orange Shirt

I’ve recently fallen head over heels for NST, a Miami-based accessories brand with a dreamy Instagram and enticing bags and jewels. While something might strike me professionally, these baubles have me taken personally as well. During a time when it is hard to justify nearly any purchase outside of the End Gun Violence Awareness Enough Wear Orange Shirt But I will love this core necessities, I found myself adding this charm bracelet to my shopping cart without giving it much of a second thought. As I continue to stick to a pretty regimented work-from-home Zoom wardrobe of simple button-downs and even simpler jeans, leggings, or track shorts, I can’t help but miss most of my accessories. Gone are my days of packing a bag every day or dressing for the office from the feet up. I’ve even replaced my beloved ring stacks with what my hands really need and want: lots and lots of lotion, creams, and oils—post-sanitizer, of course. So I guess I’m not surprised that I’m feeling so seduced by something shiny and gold. I’ve always been a lover of jewelry—especially anything with a pearl—but this pretty little charm bracelet from NST is just the fashion treat I’m in the mood for, especially for $128.


==================================



Official End Gun Violence Awareness Enough Wear Orange Shirt


It’s easy to rattle off a list of buzzwords born from the End Gun Violence Awareness Enough Wear Orange Shirt But I will love this sustainability movement: “ethical,” “organic,” “conscious,” “transparent,” even “sustainability” itself. Intersectionality has never been on that list, nor has it been mentioned much in mainstream media; the only silver lining is that it was never co-opted or rendered meaningless, either. But a brand can’t really be “sustainable”—even by its own definition—if it isn’t thinking about intersectionality, defined as “an inclusive version of environmentalism that advocates for both the protection of people and the planet” by Leah Thomas in her recent Vogue op-ed. “It identifies the ways in which injustices happening to marginalized communities and the earth are interconnected,” she wrote. “It brings injustices done to the most vulnerable communities, and the earth, to the forefront and does not minimize or silence social inequality.”


Comments


Hi, thanks for stopping by!

I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. I’m a great place for you to tell a story and let your users know a little more about you.

Let the posts
come to you.

Thanks for submitting!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
bottom of page