For Red Nose Day, an L.A. lifestyle brand is mixing uplifting quotes and quartz crystal

The backside of a hooded sweatshirt created by Advisory Board Crystals to raise funds for Comic ReliefOs campaign to end child poverty. It features the Red Nose Day campaign slogan over the brandOs OEarthO graphic. Abc. only made five in each size for $500 a piece. They sold out shortly after going up on the campaignOs eBay for Charity page. The frontside of the sweatshirt features the embroidered phrase "Suddenly we all understood it didn't have to be this way and realized we have the power to change it,O which its co-founders say is inspired by Red Nose DayOs mission. Made in collaboration with Swarovski, Abc. used 1,350 crystals to create the brand graphic. Regarding the phrase emblazoned on the front, Abc.Os co-founder Heather Haber said: OSeeing the mission statements that these organizations have, we try to eternalize them, think of what that actually is saying to us, and how would we say it in another way.O The hooded sweatshirt is part of a Red Nose Day collection, including a $60 zine (which comes with a free T-shirt) and a massive quartz cluster sourced from Avant Mining.
Advisory Board Crystals designed this hooded sweatshirt, among other pieces, to raise funds for Comic Relief's campaign to end child poverty. (Zaul Zamora)

Is Advisory Board Crystals a lifestyle brand? Technically. A streetwear label? Reluctantly. A wellness company? Mistakenly. Five years since the label's inception, its founders — couple Heather Haber and Remington Guest — are still reluctant to put their baby in a box. The one thing they know for sure is that their designs have become a driver for crucial causes — the latest of many being Thursday's Red Nose Day.

“We realized we do drive awareness. We do make an impact and we can make a difference by what we do,” said Guest, who serves as co-creative director with Haber.

The L.A. brand, commonly known as Abc., has partnered with nonprofit Comic Relief’s annual campaign to end child poverty this year by offering a collection including a limited-edition hoodie, a T-shirt and a massive quartz crystal. All proceeds from the goods, including a $60 digital zine available Thursday, will be donated to the cause.

This project, like everything else Abc. does, is steeped in intention — a theme that’s been driving the brand since its start.

Advisory Board Crystals' co-founding couple, Remington Guest and Heather Haber.
Advisory Board Crystals' co-founding couple, Remington Guest and Heather Haber, are quarantined in Weehawken, N.J., where they were when the COVID-19 pandemic hit. (Advisory Board Crystals)

As for the couple's story, boy met girl in the backseat of an UberPool in Los Angeles. They ran into each other again at the Ace Hotel later that evening, began dating, bonded over a shared interest in healing crystals, humanitarianism and overlapped work experiences. Both Haber, 33, and Guest, 31, worked for designer Scott Sternberg’s Band of Outsiders in the mid-aughts but had never crossed paths. They fell in love and decided to create Abc.

Their brand started gaining traction in spring 2016 after making its debut with a collection of baby-pink T-shirts, which were not only inspired by the aesthetics of a crystal but also incorporated their so-called healing properties by using a rose quartz-infused dye.

This affinity for crystals, vague existentialism and the arcane has anchored the brand through countless — and wide-ranging — projects in the last four years.

In addition to working with major retailers Bergdorf Goodman and Kith, rappers Lil Wayne and Joey Badass and arts institutions such as the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the brand’s scope has widened to include supporting benevolent causes.

In 2018, Abc. collaborated with artist Ai Weiwei on a hoodie to benefit the International Rescue Committee and the now-closed Marciano Art Foundation. When Haber and Guest worked with Lil Wayne, it was in part to raise funds for free information through the Wikimedia Foundation. They’ve also worked with Houston Rockets point guard Russell Westbrook to bring attention to Inner-City Arts in Los Angeles.

The Red Nose Day collection includes five limited-edition hooded sweatshirts ($500) made in collaboration with Swarovski, which sold out soon after going up on the campaign’s eBay for Charity page Tuesday. The heavyweight gray sweatshirts are embellished with 1,350 crystals in a brand graphic on the front, haloed by the embroidered phrase, "Suddenly we all understood it didn't have to be this way and realized we have the power to change it.”

Made in collaboration with Swarovski, the sweatshirt uses 1,350 crystals to create the brand graphic.
Made in collaboration with Swarovski, the sweatshirt uses 1,350 crystals to create the brand graphic. (Zaul Zamora)

It’s a statement that applies to a lot of issues in the world, the couple said, and remains open to interpretation. But more than anything, it’s a reminder that the power to end child poverty is in our hands.

According to the Red Nose Day’s website, nearly 20% of children in the U.S. are living under the poverty line. Nearly double that live in homes that struggle with food insecurity. Worldwide, 1 billion children lack access to basic needs. These issues have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It really lined up with what we believe in and the humanitarian aspect of our brand,” Guest said. “We felt like it was a really important cause to get behind.”

The back of the hooded sweatshirt features the Red Nose Day-inspired slogan, "Change their story for good!" over the brand's Earth-style graphic.
The back of the hooded sweatshirt features the Red Nose Day-inspired slogan, "Change their story for good!" over the brand's Earth-style graphic. (Zaul Zamora)

Regarding the phrase emblazoned on the front of the sweatshirt, Haber said, “Seeing the mission statements that these organizations have, we try to eternalize them, think of what that actually is saying to us and how would we say it in another way.”

Also up for grabs through Red Nose Day’s eBay for Charity site is a colossal clear quartz cluster that Abc. sourced from Avant Mining. The bidding starts at $2,500.

An image inspired by this very crystal is depicted on the project’s T-shirt, which feature the phrase, “We are the force for transformation in this world,” orbiting the Red Nose Day slogan, “Change their story for good.”

As Guest points out, “Quartz is all about the amplification of a message.” The T-shirt also features a scannable barcode that takes you directly to the donation page for Red Nose Day.

A T-shirt comes free with the purchase of the $60 digital zine themed “People Saving Information.” It builds off Red Nose Day’s message to end child poverty, and will be available on Abc.'s website at 11 a.m. Pacific time on Thursday.

The project was conceptualized long before the pandemic shaped a new global reality. Comic Relief reached out to Abc. shortly after Red Nose Day last year, and they’ve been working on these pieces since. But the designs’ metaphorical message take on a whole new meaning today.

“The project really lends itself to the ways a lot of people are feeling right now,” Haber said. “It feels much more relevant to almost everyone.”