About this campaign
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Designed in collaboration with Massachusetts-based artist, Brittany Arita, this line is inspired by the recent and unexpected blooming of a rose bush that was planted more than 80 years ago by Japanese Americans held in Amache (or Granada), Colorado. Withstanding harsh weather and no proper care or watering since the closing of the camps, it is a remarkable and beautiful reminder of the resilience from behind barbed wire. Though the original caretaker of the roses are likely long gone, their presence is still seen and felt across the landscape of the desert.
On the front reads "tessaku," or iron fence.
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