Titty City was born during a season that changed me.
Breastfeeding made me realize how much we whisper.
In 2020, I became a new mom during the start of the pandemic. Motherhood felt isolating in ways I never expected.
And breastfeeding — something my body was designed to do — felt like something I had to figure out completely on my own.
No one had really talked about it.
Not family.
Not friends.
Not even my doctor.
Something so natural, that so many mothers experience, still felt like something we weren’t supposed to talk about.
That felt wild to me.
I learned that breast health is up to you.
With a family history of breast cancer, I grew up understanding risk and advocating for my own screenings to begin early.
Doctors don’t always bring it up. Sometimes you have to start those conversations yourself.
Taking your health into your own hands becomes part of the story.
1 in 8 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime.
And recently people are being diagnosed younger than expected.
Which makes those conversations even more important.
Today that awareness is part of the mission behind Titty City — and part of how we show up for the community.
I found that lack of representation shapes our confidence.
It's has always bothered me that we rarely see the full range of real bodies represented anywhere — and that matters.
I realized that silence shapes how people feel about themselves. The bodies we see on TV or in movies represent only a tiny slice of reality.
Everyone's bodies look different.
Everyone's boobs look different.
No two are the same.
They don’t come in one shape, one size, or one version of “normal.” And our bodies continue to change over time.
Yet so many people grow up believing theirs are somehow wrong. We deserve to know that our bodies are normal — and great.
It's not just apparel. It's not just gifts.
I built a brand that makes people feel celebrated and seen. I design pieces that make people smile.
It's my mission to make it easier to talk about breastfeeding, breast health, and body image — and the beautiful and sometimes complicated changes our bodies go through.
We use humor in our designs to start the conversation — and honesty to keep it going.
Over time those pieces became something bigger.
It evolved into a community of people who desired this same level of openness — and a shift toward normalizing what should have never been taboo.
This is The Boobment.