
Wear Peace.
Connect with Society.
In an age where silence feels safer
and speaking out demands extreme caution,
we created another option besides “raising one’s voice” ––
a way to quietly express intention in everyday life.
This is a social art T-shirt
that lets you express your will by wearing it.

What you receive with this T-shirt
- Art woven from the testimonies of young people across five regions of the world
- A “passport” that carries peace forward through wearing
- Japanese-quality craftsmanship, designed to be worn and loved for years
The price is $240.
–– Its value grows over time, shaped by the life of the person who wears it.
We are N4_project, a Japan-based peace awareness initiative
that collaborates with organizations awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
If this were just another piece of clothing…
we would never have woven so many voices and so much time into it.
Because this is
social art, shaped by a world-renowned fashion designer,
bringing together the pain and hope of five regions:
Gaza, Afghanistan, Hiroshima, the United States, and Ukraine.
By wearing it, your city, your school, your social media––
your everyday life itself becomes a place where stories are encountered.
A world where even “calling for peace” is difficult
You don’t need to shout big words.
You don’t need to have the right answers.
The feelings of a girl who lost relatives and friends to bombings.
Prayers delivered from a shattered city.
The words of a child inheriting the memory of the atomic bomb.
A designer who created this garment amid the war in Ukraine.

What this T-shirt holds is authentic “voices” connected beyond nations and positions.
What is expensive is not the T-shirt itself.
What we may have overlooked
is the value of peace.
This is an everyday garment––
and at the same time, an artwork that invites reflection on the future.
Bringing young people’s words into everyday life

Their words are not arguments,
but testimonies born from lived experience.
That they could be shared through something as ordinary as “wearing”––
even we never imagined that day would come.
What is embedded in the minimal design
The design was created by
Ksenia Schnaider, a world-renowned designer from Ukraine.
The motif, reminiscent of a laundry tag on the chest,
quietly weaves in the thoughts of young people.
Not overly assertive.
Yet conversations naturally begin.
These are the answers the youth arrived at.

Through the QR code at the center,
you can download for free a paper-theater story translated into 113 languages:
“The Cloud That Won’t Disappear by Kei,” a testimony of the atomic bombing.
The value of this single piece lies in
Art × Testimony × A gateway to peace.
Uncompromising commitment to top-tier quality and principles
––We rejected the idea that “because it’s for donation, quality can be lowered.”
Only because it can be worn again and again
can the message continue to be carried.
- Produced by Morishita Knit Factory, one of Japan’s finest
- Manufacturing lines on par with international fashion houses
- 100% organic cotton
- Hand-inspected by skilled artisans


Unisex, with a balanced weight.
A silhouette that fits naturally, on or off duty.
A luxury-brand T-shirt costing well over $1000,
or this $240 T-shirt that lets you share awareness with others––
which is the true luxury?
We do not offer the luxury of ownership.
Through quality that lasts,
we offer the luxury of sharing values with others.


10% of sales are donated to Ukraine, Gaza, and Afghanistan.
All remaining profits are used to spread the paper-theater project.
More than the amount donated,
what matters is creating a system that allows continued involvement.
That is the world we aim for.
Only 869 pieces will be produced worldwide––
to preserve August 6 and 9, 1945, in global memory.
The tangible ripple created by 869 pieces
If 869 people wear it,
and each shares the story with just a few people per week,
the story could reach 100,000 people.
That is the same number as today’s atomic bomb survivors.
Even as time passes,
their experiences do not have to disappear.
This is a small chain reaction,
born from the extension of everyday life.
Your one piece
holds the potential to carry memory to the next generation.
In closing
This is not a typical donation product.
Nor does it demand anything strongly from you.
It is simply a proposal
to layer a small awareness of the world
onto the everyday act of choosing clothes.
If this one piece creates a conversation,
or a moment of pause,
we believe that alone gives it sufficient meaning.
First, pick it up simply as clothing.
What you feel afterward is up to you.


Even without saying a word,
society can change little by little just by wearing it.
It is a slightly unusual T-shirt with that kind of nature.
The feeling you have toward this T-shirt now
may fade into everyday life with time.
Please don’t miss the chance to take it in your hands.
Bana (Gaza): Age 16. Lost family and friends in bombings.
Aito (Hiroshima): An elementary school student inheriting the memory of the atomic bombing.
Rhianna (United States): 25 years old, living in a nuclear-armed nation.