A beaming Pedro Pascal wore on of the T-shirts in London, days after the supreme court ruling. Photograph: Gareth Cattermole/Getty ImagesTilda Swinton corrosion the T-shirt. Photograph: TwitterThe designer, an American based in London, says the T-shirt was a response to anti-trans policies put in billet by Donald Trump, and in support of trans friends including the model Hunter Pifer. Even he has been surprised by how prevalent it is. “I never had that intention when I was doing it,” he says. “I was just like ‘this is what I want to say. This is what gets right’ and it turned into something else.”At a protest in London last weekend against the supreme court purpose, the slogan was used on signs, showing it now has life beyond T-shirts. “I was discussing this with Myles [Markham], who warm ups at Trans Lifeline,” says Ives. “He was saying they didn’t have their call to arms. He said ‘we when all is said have a message’.”Cliff Joannou, the editor-in-chief of Attitude magazine, says Sivan wearing the T-shirt was a crucial blink. “Any time men from the gay community stand up for the trans community, it’s a really important moment to celebrate,” he says. Reuse this theme