Can I wear this? Mob Only and Ally Friendly - Making it easier for you and us :)

Can I wear this? Mob Only and Ally Friendly - Making it easier for you and us :)

Sometimes it can be confusing navigating the space between allyship and appropriation and we get this question all the time at Clothing The Gaps.

The DMs usually go something like this...

"Hi there, I'm a non-Indigenous person and I really love your products. I want to support Aboriginal people and causes but, don't want to offend anyone or for it to be seen as cultural appropriation. Just wanted to double check before I buy something that it's okay I wear your Aboriginal designs and merch?" 

To help navigate this conversation and to stop us repeating ourselves we have made it easier for our supporters and created some Ally Friendly and Mob Only symbols to guide your purchases. These symbols are located in all product descriptions on our website and means it's easier for you to represent Indigenous fashion in Australia and beyond. Read more about what these symbols mean:

Ally Friendly Clothing The GapAlly Friendly merch is created with our mob in our heart and everyone in mind.

Ally friendly merch is for everyone. 

When we see non-Indigenous people wearing our designs, we feel proud that they are repping Indigenous fashion our merch and culture.

When we see Aboriginal designs in the world, it means Indigenous people are not invisible in the landscape. 

Our tees are conversation starters, for example, we have our ‘Free The Flag’ and 'Not The Date To Celebrate' tee. The more tees like this in the world that spark important conversations in different spaces, the better. As an ally and supporter you might find yourself in spaces that the Aboriginal Community may not. This means that you are carrying these conversations and influencing places and people with these messages. Using Indigenous fashion and supporting businesses like Clothing The Gaps is a meaningful way to spark important conversation, and to be an authentic ally.

We wear our values on our tees and we are proud that there are other people who share the same values as us. There are so many non-Indigenous allies that truly and genuinely want to make our country better for First Nations peoples.

But, purchasing from Aboriginal brands, businesses and wearing Indigenous designs alone is surface-level allyship. There needs to be more commitment than just buying from Aboriginal brands and businesses.

Wearing Aboriginal design is not dismantling a system that oppresses Indigenous people. Allies need to do more and learn more. Wearing our tees is a great starting point. We have equipped you with our merch and some of the educational content to go with them. We want you to go out in the world, have these important conversations and find ways to do more and support more. 

Learn more

We also like the term and definition of  'accomplice'  which takes ally-ship one step further. We encourage you to read this article Where do you fit? Tokenistic, ally – or accompliceby Summer May Finlay (Yorta Yorta). 

Clothing The Gap Mob Only

Mob Only merch is designed solely Indigenous peoples to wear.

At Clothing The Gaps we create merch that is just for First Nations people. When we do, we will clearly state this in the product description. For example, the ‘Shades of Deadly’ slogans are made for mob and mob only. If you don’t understand the use of the lingo (language) on the tee… then it’s probably not for you.

Wearing an Aboriginal-designed tee to spark important conversations is just the beginning, or one part of meaningful allyship. At Clothing The Gaps we arm you with educational resources, informative campaigns and storytelling, but the learning journey never stops. At Clothing The Gaps, we’re uniting people through fashion and cause. Clothing The Gaps invites mob and allies to wear their values on their tee. We’re more than a tee, we’re a conversation starter. Conversations influencing social change.

Want to read more:


21 comments


  • Melita

    Thank you for this education- I needed it. I followed the link to the University of Wollongong article and I felt it in my gut. Learning about tokenistic allyship, ally and accomplice was enlightening. I have more to do.


  • James

    I was going to buy some clothes to support my indigenous Aussie brothers and sisters until I found out your organisation have “ally friendly” and “mob only” clothing. Also a whole section about cultural appropriation. I won’t support any racist organisation that wants to divide Australia. Best of luck with your American style bigotry, I’m sure it will lead to a fairer and more equal Australia 🙄.

    With that said I hope you have a great day and learn to love and respect your brothers and sisters.

    Kind regards

    James


  • Dani

    Hi! This is a great article and resource, thank you.
    FYI, the link to Fashion Journal doesn’t work. It seems to want to point to here: https://fashionjournal.com.au/fashion/is-it-cultural-appropriation-to-wear-indigenous-australian-designs/


  • Georgia Davidson

    Amazing products, comfortable tees!
    I feel privileged to wear something that people non-indigenous & Indigenous Australians can wear with pride and spread awareness 🖤💛❤#freetheflag


  • Bec

    Thanks so much for this. Unfortunately growing up and going to school in the 80s and 90s my education was appallingly lacking and I’m working hard to ‘fix this’, so I’m truly, so grateful for this advice. Trying to be a better ally myself, and make sure my three kids can grown into proud and informed allies also.


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