"EVERY CHILD MATTERS" OSS Official Orange Shirt Day 2022 T-Shirt **LIMITED QUANTITIES**
IF A SIZE IS GREYED OUT, WE DO NOT HAVE ANY OF THAT SIZE AVAILABLE.
Please take care that you correctly select ENGLISH or FRENCH for the language, then YOUTH or ADULT for the FIT in your size. THERE ARE NO MORE FRENCH AVAILABLE FOR THIS YEAR
Note that the smallest sizes up to XL shirts qualify for our custom letter mail $5 shipping to anywhere in Canada! You can even fit up to two medium shirts (or a large adult and a youth) in the same envelope! (Sizes 2XL and over do not fit)
Please choose "shipping" if you think there is a possibility of you wanting it shipped instead of picking it up. It is a lot less work for us to refund a shipping fee than it is to create a separate invoice for shipping.
Where your money is going:
The Orange Shirt Society has requested that $8 from every shirt be donation to them, and another $2 be donated to Indigenous causes this year. The remainder of the cost includes the cost of the shirt, the printing of the logo, shipping fees to get it to us, and packing materials, admin costs and labour to advertise, handle, and get it back out to you. We must order the shirts from the OSS distributors and unfortunately we do not receive any kind of a bulk discount regardless of how many we order, therefore we cannot in turn offer any kind of a bulk discount to our customers.
NOTE: ALL SHIRT SALES ARE FINAL. Please be sure about your sizing. We cannot do exchanges.
CLICK HERE For more information about this program.
ORANGE SHIRT DAY IS SEPTEMBER 30TH
This is the official 2022 t-shirt design of the Orange Shirt Society.
"Every Child Matters" 2022 Orange Shirt Day design. Art by Geraldine Catalbas, Grade 11 student, from Ponoka, Alberta.
FROM THE ARTIST:
The remembrance of children lost their lives in residential schools and how it’s important to recognize the impacts of their deaths and the survivors triumph through the actions of the past and making up for the mistakes made.
WHAT MY DESIGN IS ABOUT
The shoes represent the children who died in residential schools. The shoe lace coming off into an eagle representing their freedom up in the heaven and their fight through difficult times.