The massive popularity of T-shirts began in the 1970s. In 1973, “Women’s Fashion Daily Wear Daily” claimed that T-shirts were the chief spokesperson of counterculture. In 1975, it was reported that 48 million printed T-shirts flooded the clothing market of the United States, large and small, and maintained this momentum for many years thereafter.
The graphics and text on the T-shirt can be printed as long as you can think of it. Humorous advertisements, satirical pranks, self-deprecating ideals, horrifying desires, and unrestrained moods are all vented by this. For this seemingly unstoppable trend, some people have criticized the attempt to achieve certain goals with T-shirt copy as too pediatric. The author wrote sarcastically: “If people are unwilling to listen to you, how can they expect them to listen to your T-shirt?”
In any case, groups of young people have grown up, but their enthusiasm for T-shirts has not faded. The weirdness of T-shirt printing is not inferior to the past.