Fashion ain’t just fabric. It’s emotion, rebellion, identity—stitched together with sharp objects and a middle finger to mass production.
At Razors on the Dashboard, we don’t design clothes to “fit the trend.” We make pieces that fit a feeling. You know that moment when you're in the mirror, gearing up to face the world, and the only thing protecting your soul is that one old shirt that still smells like paint and defiance?
Yeah. That’s the energy we’re on.
Every Shirt is a Story
Our gear doesn’t just look alternative. It is alternative. Alternative to fake fashion, fast fashion, fashion built on unpaid labor and hollow slogans.
Each piece we drop comes from the garage, the notebook, the basement show in your heart.
Every shirt in our online store was born from:
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A sketchbook with too many torn-out pages
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A guitar riff that wouldn’t leave us alone
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A thought we couldn’t post on social media without getting flagged
We don’t mass-produce meaning. We hand-craft a feeling and throw it on cloth.
Wanna feel what we mean? Start with this piece right here — our Razors Embroidered Patch. It’s the simplest, rawest way to join the scene.
Style Is Survival
This isn’t cosplay.
This isn’t “90s revival.”
This is how we survive in a world trying to flatten us.
We wear black because color feels too dishonest.
We stitch patches on our sleeves because no one else lets us speak our truth.
We layer chains and scuffed boots like armor, because tomorrow is never guaranteed.
Check out our latest blog post to go deeper into the why behind this whole movement.
This is What DIY Looks Like
Look around your room. Odds are there’s a pile of half-finished stuff somewhere:
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A beat you never exported
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A painting you abandoned halfway through
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A shirt you keep meaning to design
Don’t throw it out.
Finish it.
Or better yet — wear it unfinished. Wear it raw. Wear it like you mean it.
We sure as hell do.
And if you're into deeper reflections on identity, art, and surviving this mess of a world, slide over to josephinviere.com for the personal side of the story. That’s where things get extra human.