Our Exploration Editions collection celebrates the raw majesty and rich history of iconic American landscapes through thoughtfully crafted collegiate-inspired designs. Each tee features our signature crest approach, blending the park's natural symbols with academic and athletic aesthetics that honor each park's legacy.
Designed in California and printed in USA. To explore the meaning of each element in the design, check out our Inspo page.
About Our Exploration Editions
Our Exploration Edition tees are printed to order by a carefully vetted print partner (based right here in the Bay Area!) who shares our commitment to quality and craftsmanship.
And as with all our products, 5% of all proceeds on Exploration Editions are donated directly to our national parks.
Our Exploration Editions collection celebrates the raw majesty and rich history of iconic American landscapes through thoughtfully crafted collegiate-inspired designs. Each tee features our signature crest approach, blending the park's natural symbols with academic and athletic aesthetics that honor each park's legacy.
Designed in California and printed in USA. To explore the meaning of each element in the design, check out our Inspo page.
About Our Exploration Editions
Our Exploration Edition tees are printed to order by a carefully vetted print partner (based right here in the Bay Area!) who shares our commitment to quality and craftsmanship.
And as with all our products, 5% of all proceeds on Exploration Editions are donated directly to our national parks.
The Great Kobuk Sand Dunes stretch across 25 square miles of Arctic wilderness, creating an otherworldly landscape where visitors can experience the surreal beauty of active sand dunes surrounded by boreal forest - a rare geological phenomenon found in few places on Earth.
These migrating herds represent one of nature's most spectacular journeys, as hundreds of thousands of Western Arctic caribou cross the Kobuk River twice yearly during their ancient migration routes, continuing a timeless cycle that has sustained both wildlife and local communities for centuries.
The vibrant Kobuk locoweed, endemic to the park, blooms briefly each summer, adding splashes of color to the tundra landscape and representing the resilient Arctic flora that thrives in this harsh yet beautiful environment.
The Kobuk River serves as the park's lifeline and primary corridor, offering the only practical access to this remote wilderness while providing critical habitat for salmon runs that have nourished this ecosystem for thousands of years.
Kobuk Valley was established as a national park in 1980 through the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, protecting this unique Arctic ecosystem and ensuring its pristine wilderness character for future generations.
The circular shape symbolizes Kobuk Valley's distinction as one of the few national parks located above the Arctic Circle, emphasizing its true wilderness character where visitors must be completely self-sufficient in a land without established trails or designated campsites.