Welcome To

The Experiment

Where artificial intelligence meets cotton fabric. Every design is generated by AI, numbered sequentially, and limited forever. No designers. No mood boards. No focus groups. Just an algorithm, a curator, and a print-on-demand operation turning digital hallucinations into wearable reality.

This Shouldn't Work. But It Does.

Prompt & Cotton started with a stupid question: What if we let AI design everything?

Not "AI-assisted." Not "AI-enhanced." Just pure, unfiltered artificial intelligence translating prompts into prints. No design team. No mood boards. No trend forecasting. Just a neural network dreaming up graphics and a human pressing "print" on the ones that don't suck.

Every design you see here was born from a text prompt. Some elegant. Some unhinged. All numbered, logged, and limited. When they sell out, they're gone forever—retired to the Logbook where dead designs go to become mythology.

Rules

of the

game

1. Every design must be AI-generated.
No exceptions. No human touch-ups.

2. Every design gets a number.
APD-001, APD-002, etc. Sequential. Permanent.

3. Limited quantities only.
Most designs cap at 100-200 units. Some less.

4. No resurrections.
Sold out = extinct. The Logbook is a graveyard.

5. Daily fresh drops.
New prompts nearly every day.

6. The prompt is the product.
Every shirt includes its origin prompt.

Why This Matters (Or Doesn't)

Fashion is dying. Everyone knows it. Fast fashion is killing the planet. Luxury fashion is boring. Streetwear is eating itself.

So we asked: What if fashion wasn't human at all?

What if instead of chasing trends, we just fed prompts to a machine and wore whatever came out? What if scarcity was real, not manufactured? What if every piece told you exactly how it was made—down to the prompt that created it?

This isn't about replacing designers. It's about what happens when you remove human ego from the equation. When aesthetics are accidental. When beauty is a bug, not a feature.

You're not buying a shirt. You're buying proof that chaos can create culture

See the Prompts

Frequently asked questions

The Basics

Is this real?

As real as anything else you buy online. More real than the metaverse. Less real than your electricity bill.

Who designs these?

Nobody. That's the point. An AI generates them based on text prompts. A human (barely) quality-checks them.

Are you trying to replace human designers?

No. We're trying to replace human decision-making in design. Subtle difference. Massive implications.

What's with the weird product codes

APD stands for "Artificial Prompt Design." The numbers are sequential. APD-001 was born first. APD-567 was born 567th.

The Products

Why are quantities so limited?

Because artificial scarcity is honest scarcity. We cap prints at 100-200 units. No reprints. No resurrections.

No. The AI doesn't take requests. Neither do we. That would defeat the purpose.

We are unable to accept returns on certain items. These will be carefully marked before purchase.

When will I get my order?What if I miss a design I loved?

Then you'll live with regret. Check the Logbook to torture yourself with what could have been.

How's the quality?

Better than it should be. 100% cotton. Direct-to-garment printing. Will survive multiple washes and one apocalypse.

The Purchase

How long does shipping take?

5-7 business days. Each shirt is printed on demand because we refuse to guess what you weirdos will actually buy.

What about international shipping?

We ship everywhere capitalism has reached. Rates vary. Customs might judge your taste.

Can I return it?

Within 30 days if unworn, unwashed, and un-Instagrammed. But why would you return a piece of history?

Do you offer different sizes?

XS to 3XL, depending on style. The AI doesn't discriminate by body type.

The Philosophy

Is this art?

If you have to ask, it probably is. Or isn't. Art is dead anyway. AI killed it. We're just printing the obituary.

What's the environmental impact?

Print-on-demand means no waste inventory. But we're still printing shirts, so we're not saving the planet. Just destroying it slightly slower.

Are you high?

Not currently, but the AI might be. Have you seen some of these designs?

What happens when AI becomes sentient?

We'll probably give it equity.

The Money Part

Why $25-35 per shirt?

Because $20 felt too cheap and $40 felt too expensive. Print-on-demand isn't cheap, and we need coffee money.

Do you make money on this?

Define "money." Define "make." Actually, yes, marginally. It's an experiment with a business model.

Will prices ever go down?

Will inflation ever go down? (No.)

The Future

Just T-Shirts? What's next?

Hoodies. Hats. World domination. Or bankruptcy. Probably both.

Will you ever use human designers?

That would violate the prime directive. The experiment must remain pure.

What happens when you run out of prompts?

We'll prompt the AI to generate prompts. It's prompts all the way down.

The Current Collections

All Products
Area 51 Supply Chain - UFO Warehouse T-Shirt

All Products

Fresh Prompts
Fresh Prompts

Fresh Prompts

Limited Drops
Limited Drops

Limited Drops

Threadnecks

Threadnecks

IlluminaTEEs
Area 51 Supply Chain - UFO Warehouse T-Shirt

IlluminaTEEs

Nightmare Mode
Nightmare Mode

Nightmare Mode

Minimal

Minimal

Surreal

Surreal

THE TECH STACK NOBODY ASKED ABOUT

  • AI Models: Multiple. Evolving. Classified. (It's mostly Midjourney and DALL-E but that sounds less cool)
  • Human Oversight: One caffeine-addicted curator with questionable taste.
  • Production: Print-on-demand because we're not idiots with warehouse money
  • Quality Control: If the AI generates nipples, we don't print it
  • Distribution: Direct-to-consumer because middlemen are so 2019

Join The Experiment

Get notified when fresh prompts drop. No spam. Just chaos.

The Bottom Line

We're not trying to revolutionize fashion.
We're just trying to see what happens when you remove human intention from design.

We're not trying to replace creativity.
We're trying to redefine it.

We're not trying to build a brand.
We're trying to document an experiment.

You're not customers. You're participants.
You're not buying clothes. You're funding chaos.
You're not following trends. You're wearing accidents.

Welcome to Prompt & Cotton.
Where fashion goes to get weird.

The experiment continues.

How to Reach Us

Legal Stuff That Robots Made Us Add

  • All designs are © whenever the AI generated them
  • We're not responsible for existential crises caused by our shirts
  • Side effects may include: compliments, confusion, conversations with strangers
  • No AI was harmed in the making of these products
  • Several humans were moderately inconvenience.

Things
You
Should Know