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Nice WrestleMania Cody Rhodes Defeats Seth Rollins Shirt! There was a time, not so long ago, when fashion and politics didn't really mix. But after the 2020 election cycle, COVID, and social justice calculations, that's no longer the case. In fact, apolitical doesn't even feel like an option anymore. Into this vibrant atmosphere is the arrival of Grover Rad, a new Los Angeles-based clothing brand that leads the press to challenge patriarchy and champion rebellion, using art and fashion media. Founder Lizzie Grover Rad made abortion the trendy theme for her debut capsule collection. Rad comes to fashion from the world of technology and interior design. After co-founding two companies (Hutch and Zoom Interiors), she started a private practice but became restless. “There is something about interior design that is so safe… I like the risks that can be taken in the fashion space and [that] is what drew me in,” she said on a call from Zoom. But a strong sense of fashion isn't the only thing pushing Rad in a new direction; She is an avid art collector and it is her interactions with artists that help clarify her vision
Clothes are my medium to talk about what's going on in the world, similar to what artists do with their work,” she says. Nice WrestleMania Cody Rhodes Defeats Seth Rollins Shirt! At launch, the brand is operating more or less like a sharing platform. For her first work, Rad commissioned the original work of mother and daughter cartoonists Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Sophie Crumb. “Aline is known for her dark sense of humor. I think she's really a natural fit and [her work has made for a very seamless transition to clothing," says Rad. Artists' collaborations in fashion are nothing new, but few tackle such serious subjects as the simple autobiography that Crumbs created for Grover Rad. "It's an exciting and brave idea," Aline said on a call from France. “We were really touched by the topic and that's why we agreed to do it… because we really wanted to say something about it.” The mother and daughter wrote about their own abortions and the vastly different experiences they've had. Aline's, taking place in New York in the days leading up to Roe vs. Wade, was very painful. In contrast, Sophie said, “I haven't had any bad experiences here [in France], and that's also an important thing to say."