No garment embodies loud and proud style like the slogan tee. The least cryptic footnote in fashion’s history, slogan tees, be them camis or crop tops, are simple vehicles for effortlessly identifying oneself as an unapologetic dresser.
In recent years, slogan tees have reemerged with a new cultural charge. Hailey Bieber's 'Nepo Baby' tee turned heads and triggered debate, poking the bear of nepotism discourse with Instagram-ready irony. Jonathan Anderson’s ‘I Told Ya’ tees worn by Josh O’Connor and Zendaya in Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers gripped the fashionscape. Sabrina Carpenter surprised her Coachella audience by wearing an oversized top reading ‘Jesus Was A Carpenter.’
It’s safe to say that these pieces were not made for the traditionalists - particularly during the 2000s. Text-baring tops were the gaudy antidote to quiet style that fashion craved in the Noughties. In 2002, following her high-profile breakup with Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears stepped out in a baby tee featuring the slogan ‘Dump Him’ - a pop culture moment that has gone down in history books. Paris Hilton pleaded with fans to ‘stop being so desperate’ (famously photoshopped to read ‘stop being poor’), and Kim Kardashian professed that she ‘likes nerds’ via her outfit choice.
A decade later, former Dior creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri drew both praise and criticism for her spring/summer 2017 collection featuring £580 'We Should All Be Feminists' shirts, seen by many as a consumerist co-opting of feminism. Most controversially, in 2018, US First Lady Melania Trump wore a $39 Zara jacket emblazoned with the words ‘I really don't care, do you?’ during a trip to a migrant child detention centre. Subtlety and slogans were never meant to co-exist.
In light of Gen Z’s reaction against ‘clean-girl’ aesthetics, these chaotic staples are on the up once again. Quasi-political and utterly unmissable, they are solely worn by those with something to say - and this season, it seems like the tees have struck a chord with those who are not feeling the love.
We’ve all heard that 'having a boyfriend is embarrassing' thanks to a recent article, but this sentiment has now manifested itself visually. Gen Z-adored brands like Omighty, OGBFF and Cowboys of Habit have utilised slogan tees as a form of tongue-in-cheek protest against monogamy. A middle finger to dull fashion yes, but more specifically, a stark rejection of romance altogether.
A surge of text-heavy pieces featuring delightfully sarcastic, deadpan quips from ‘But Daddy I Love Him!’ to ‘It’s Not Me, It’s You’ to ‘Trophy Wife’ has arisen among independent labels with cult followings. They sell like hotcakes. But what does this tell us about how consumers are feeling about, well, feelings?
“Cynicism has become a culturally acceptable form of emotional self-protection and in relationships can allow people to appear self-possessed whilst avoiding the risk of being hurt and this is reflected in slogans on T-shirts that celebrate detachment,” says hypno-psychotherapist Sophie Cresswell. “However many young people are using slogans to signal empowerment, to say ‘this matters, and I am brave enough to own this.’ Slogans allow the expression of boundaries and experiences and wearing them is an exposed unapologetic choice. It gives people a voice wherever they are in the world and means they are actually standing behind what they believe.”
The return of the Y2K slogan neatly coincides with the rise of the parasocial relationship. Social media has fostered a swell of one-sided relationships, where regular users can cultivate bonds with celebrity figures who are unaware of their existence. As a result, people are growing bolder in their limerence-fuelled fascination with celebrity romances.
“Social media can make relationships of all sorts into a public performance that is curated as part of a fabricated or ‘wished for’ persona, often presented as either blissfully perfect or ironically detached,” Sophie continues. “Slogan T-shirts feel like a reaction to this, they move expression back into the real world. Unlike a post, what you wear is visible, embodied, brave and harder to edit.”
Certain artists have tapped into this form of fangirl fashion. Upon announcing their new single Relationships, Haim released a series of T-shirts featuring the words ‘I’m Single,’ ‘I’m Taken,’ and “I’m ???’ Likewise, Olivia Dean dropped a selection of merch tees, displaying the diamanté-dotted words ‘I Don’t Want A Boyfriend,’ which sold out rapidly. Even the stars are saying it’s cool to be aromantic.
Some interpret the wearing of a slogan as comedy-tinged self-deprecation, while others see it as a very Gen Z embrace of unfiltered honesty. “Gen Z doesn’t connect with empty fashion - they want to feel seen and understood,” says Bruno Casanova, co-founder and director of Nude Project. “We’re a generation that talks openly about emotions, identity, mental health, love, insecurities - topics that weren’t always present in fashion. A slogan lets you express how you feel without having to explain yourself. The person who wears a slogan piece is someone who isn’t afraid to show vulnerability and who uses fashion as a form of self-expression, not just aesthetics.”
Gen Z consumers also seem less afraid to embrace their sexuality than their millennial counterparts, often turning to slogans to make their point. Last month, Stella McCartney released a series of naughty slogan pieces in collaboration with Jeff Koons. One featured the words ‘Slippery When Wet’ alongside a graphic of a woman riding an inflatable dolphin float, while another paired the phrase ‘Doggy Style’ with a poodle - leaving very little to the imagination. Most famously, Christopher Kane released a plain white tee boldly emblazoned with the word ‘Sex’ as part of his More Joy capsule collection. Omighty took this sentiment a step further with its fairly unforgiving ‘The Sex Was Bad,’ top.
From a brand perspective, slogans help to create community, which is highly valuable in today’s noisy online world. “They’re natural conversation starters,” says fashion designer Geordie Campbell. “People notice them, they want to share them, and they photograph really well. If someone tags me on Instagram, it’s almost always in one of the slogan tees. That kind of exposure is amazing because it gets people asking questions and looking into the brand for themselves.”
Slogan options also radiate commercial appeal. “They usually live on more affordable, everyday pieces like T-shirts, which makes them an easy way for someone to buy into the brand,” Geordie adds. “It’s a first step. People want to feel like they’re part of something, and wearing a slogan piece gives them that feeling - like they’re in on it, not just observing from the outside.”
Such is the charm of the cynical slogan top. It fosters a sense of solidarity, a reminder that you’re not alone in your singleness - hardly a negative in today’s girl-power zeitgeist. They are the sartorial trifecta - embracing vulnerability (helping women in particular to reclaim their space), cultivating community and enlivening your wardrobe - all while ruffling a few feathers. As Sophie tells me, “It’s safer to wear a joke than to verbalise something, it creates distance, whilst still allowing expression.” In this way, slogan pieces are playfully paradoxical: they help you stand out, yet their widespread appeal lets you fit right in. A simple tee, but a statement all the same.
Editor's Slogan Top Picks for 2026:
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