Eva St. Clair and Rebecca Melsky Make Gender Non-Specific Patterns for Clothes

SILVER SPRING, MD- SEPT 04: Eva St. Clair, with daughter Marielle, age 1. Marielle is wearing a dress and headband that has dinosaurs as part of the pattern. Seeing a gap in options for little girls, Rebecca Melsky and Eva St. Clair created Princess Awesome. They make simple dresses using non-traditional prints and patterns like robots, planes, pirates and trains.(Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
SILVER SPRING, MD- SEPT 04: Eva St. Clair, with daughter Marielle, age 1. Marielle is wearing a dress and headband that has dinosaurs as part of the pattern. Seeing a gap in options for little girls, Rebecca Melsky and Eva St. Clair created Princess Awesome. They make simple dresses using non-traditional prints and patterns like robots, planes, pirates and trains.(Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Eva St. Clair and Rebecca Melsky Make Gender Non-Specific Patterns for Clothes
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Credit:
The Washington Post / Contributor
Editorial #:
487348006
Collection:
The Washington Post
Date created:
04 September, 2015
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Source:
The Washington Post
Object name:
LL-Gender
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2600 x 1901 px (22.01 x 16.10 cm) - 300 dpi - 4 MB