
This sharp green-and-white ballcap honors the remarkable legacy of Jimmy Carter. With crisp embroidery marking his 100th birthday, this cap lets you rep the 39th President’s enduring commitment to peace, democracy, and humanity.

Three Taverns Brewery brings Belgian brewing traditions to Decatur, pouring imaginative ales in a warm brick lined taproom made for long conversations. Regulars love the rotating taps, food trucks, and the feeling that every visit could turn into a legendary story. The A Night On Ponce T shirt celebrates their citrusy IPA inspired by Atlanta's iconic Ponce de Leon corridor. Slip it on and you are instantly ready for neon lights, late night tacos, and explaining to friends why this beer is their new favorite.
The Little Tart Bakeshop has been a beloved fixture in Atlanta's Grant Park, Summerhill and Inman Park neighborhoods, known for turning simple, classic pastries into something that feels genuinely worth slowing down for. This baby blue milk glass mug with its delicate flower trim feels like a natural extension of that same sensibility, the kind of object that makes a morning ritual feel considered rather than rushed. It holds 8 oz of whatever you love most, and honestly, that's plenty.

Roy Lichtenstein's House III has sat on the lawn outside the High Museum's Stent Building since 2002 — a sculpture designed to fool you. The corner appears to jut toward the viewer, but walk around it and the whole illusion flips: it actually recedes. Lichtenstein spent his final years playing with perspective on the suburban American home, and House III is the punchline of that project. This 10 oz glass puts it in your hand.

The National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta holds one of the most powerful interactive exhibits in any American museum: a replica lunch counter where visitors sit and experience what it felt like to hold a nonviolent position against resistance. The sit-ins that inspired it — in Greensboro, Nashville, Atlanta — changed the country. This royal blue tee carries the message those activists lived by: "Freedom Can't Wait." Every purchase supports civil and human rights education.

The National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta isn't just a museum — it asks something of you on the way out. The pledge printed across the back of this charcoal grey ladies tee puts it plainly: "promote human rights and challenge injustice." Front carries the NCCHR logo. It's a quiet commitment worn in public, which is exactly how most change actually happens. Every purchase supports civil and human rights education.

Atlanta buzzes with creativity, food, and neighborhoods that each have their own personality. The city's energy draws people in and keeps them exploring. This map print captures that spirit with crisp details and a stylish layout that feels perfectly at home on any wall. Hang it up and people will assume you have strong opinions about BeltLine access, brunch spots, and which street names make no sense.