Boulevard Workshop: Sharing the Tools

September 18, 2025

At L’Boulevard, while the scene pulsed with music and energy, we set up a small corner for something different. No stage, no crowd just ink, screens, and people ready to create. We brought a few blank tees, some posters, and our designs, and invited anyone who stopped by to print by hand, pull their own prints, and experience the process themselves. Some even printed directly on their own clothes. Watching that happen never gets old.

Hands-On, Real, and Honest

This wasn’t about selling merch it was about giving people the tools to make. To experiment. To mess up, fix it, and walk away with something completely their own.

There’s a magic in seeing someone lift a screen for the first time and discover that they just made art. It’s messy, it’s imperfect, it’s real and that’s exactly how we like it.

Why We Do It

95Lab exists for moments like this: small, intense, creative, and human. L’Boulevard is big, loud, and exciting but our stand reminded everyone that art doesn’t need a stage. It just needs a space, some ink, and open hands.

We left the day inspired by the people we met, the prints they made, and the energy they brought. This is what keeps us going: sharing tools, sparking creativity, and letting everyone leave a little mark of their own.

Why It Mattered

This workshop wasn’t just another pop-up. It was a space for creation, for experimentation, and for ownership. People weren’t just buying a product —they were making it, shaping it, leaving a part of themselves behind.

At 95Lab, we care about more than tees and prints. We care about the experience, the process, and the connection. Seeing someone take a blank piece of fabric and transform it into their own design reminds us why we exist: to share tools, inspire creativity, and celebrate individuality.

In a world full of ready-made, mass-produced goods, these moments matter. They remind us that art isn’t just for the trained or the famous it’s for everyone willing to pick up a squeegee and make it real. This was more than a workshop. It was a small revolution in hands-on creativity, one print at a time.