The space where Black & Afro-Indigenous Vanguards are redefining sustainability through storytelling

Shop the CCC Heirloom Tee Made From 100% Organic Cotton Grown by Black Farmers

The CCC Signature “Heirloom” Tee is a collaboration across the African Diaspora, produced by a 90% Black woman-led supply chain. From Black-grown cotton to ethical print, this shirt is a bold embodiment of ancestral wisdom, cooperative power and the future of sustainable fashion.

  • Created by Seed2Shirt: GOTS-certified cotton grown in Burkina Faso, milled in Uganda, sewn in Kenya

    Screen-printed in Atlanta by Cher’Don Reynolds of She Prints

    • Unisex fit – true to size

    • Hand-printed in small batches

    • Crewneck, lightweight, breathable

    • Available in S–3XL

  • This is a pre-sale to support bulk production and reduce unsustainable shipping. Please allow 2–3 weeks as we honor slower, more intentional and eco-conscious practices. Thank you for your patience.

When a t-shirt “becomes a sustainability love letter from Black women to the village”!

-Cher’Don Reynolds

From doulas and scientists to farmers and fashion designers - we are nourishing the Black voices who are re-defining sustainability discourse for liberation, cultural preservation and planetary well-being. This is an intersectional ecosystem that defies geographic lines, genders identities and generational groups as we celebrate the expansiveness of Black and Afro Indigenous regenerative practices.

Compost, Cotton and Cornrows is more than a podcast - it’s an archival database where we are actively reimagining futures.

“They tried to rig the game … but you can’t fake influence” - K. Dot

  • "I discovered you on IG and am so glad I did! The topics of your podcast are all things I love to hear and want to learn more about. Thank you for educating the community and opening the door to new ways of thinking and reconnecting with our natural selves. I appreciate you."

    Kiangaj, Apple Podcasts Review

  • "You brought me home with this one. I love the range of perspectives that you bring to this podcast - truly one of a kind."

    Camille Forde, Instagram

  • "I just listened to the first episode on Black in Marine Science and I am so excited to get through this season. Hearing about the impactful work of the Black and Indigenous community leaders is so valuable as they are the originators of sustainability."

    B. Nation, Apple Podcasts Reviews

“Definitions are vital starting points for the imagination. What we cannot imagine cannot come into being.” - bell hooks

Photograph by Wild Gina