About Us

Christ Centered Clothing

crafted courteously

Our story
Cross Into The Circle Began With A Simple Vision:
glorify christ with clothing made in a way that intends to honor him

I sat in my bedroom observing my wardrobe. I like shirts with plain colors, and so was most of my wardrobe. But along with plain colors most of my garments beared a logo, logos representing a company I had no connection with but I allowed to advertise on my body. As I began to think more I wondered what these brands really represented. It is an unfortunate but true fact that many of these brands are producing goods through unfair treatment and dis-grace of humans.

There must be a better way
What is actually worth acknowledging?
What am I actually connected to?
What would I be glad for others to see on me?

CHRIST and his work


Then the follow-up question is "can garments be made in a way that is fair to all God's people, without exploitation?" After MUCH searching the answer is yes. It is unfortunate that the majority of these industries are using methods which many would consider exploitation, but it is my prayer that Cross Into The Circle may be one of many initiatives that culminate in an overhaul of these pain-causing practices.

With joy it is said that Cross Into The Circle Products are
100% made in the U.S.A. No Sweatshop, Ever

Quality Assurance

A note on the gurantee:
100% made in the U.S.A.
No Sweatshop,Ever

There are multiple catchy ways to phrase the sourcing of our products. "From Dirt To Shirt", "From Seed To Shirt", "From 0 to 100" ALL in the U.S.A. I hope you get the idea, but to elaborate: our 100% cotton shirts are made up of cotton that has been planted in, grown in, harvested in, spun in, knitted in, dyed in, die cut in, sewn in, made in, printed on in, and printed on with ink made in, the U.S.A. ALL of it.

The mission didn't begin with such intentions, but after MUCH searching (and even searching for what to search) I grew weary trying to determine the legitimacy of certain 'certifications' given by different corporations/agencies which attempt to certify a manufacturer's legitimacy in what I'd call "God-honoring business practices" a.k.a. not exploiting their workers. Guidelines for many of these certifications are easily exploitable, having easy 'work-arounds'. The solution eventually came, that is searching for manufacturer's in the U.S.A. subject to the relatively strict legal enforcement of workers' rights and relatively high quality of those workers' rights.

If these topics interest you or you're looking to source such garments feel free to contact us through the "Contact Us" page, and I would be happy to share what I've learned in this journey. Praise be to God.

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