The Preface
By Definition is an archive of language translated into clothing. Some words have no clean English equivalent. Others existed once and fell out of use. Others arrived from different languages and were never given proper ground. These are words for things felt before they are named — and that, until named, remain without edge or form.
The archive collects them.
Each word is selected for weight, sound, and what it makes possible. Some are older English words, sitting unused in dictionaries for centuries. Some are borrowed — Greek, Portuguese, Japanese — kept in their original form because translation would cost them something essential. Some resist definition by design. Each is handled as an object of language, not decoration.
The Beginning
By Definition began as a refusal of ordinary word-based apparel — the kind that turns language into slogans, jokes, or decoration. The question was not what to print, but which words were worth the surface. Each piece follows the same discipline: word, meaning, garment, restraint.
We are not driven by trends or forecasts. We are language, worn — for those who refuse the ordinary, who find beauty in etymology, who know a word can be as powerful as a symbol.
Uncommon words, worn as artifacts.
The Definitions
The definition printed on each piece is not a dictionary entry. It is a reading — reduced to its essential charge, placed where it can hold. Sometimes the job is to teach the word. More often, it is to name the feeling the word was made to carry.
The Garments
The garment stays quiet so the word can hold the surface. Typography, placement, and spacing are treated with restraint. Nothing is added unless it strengthens the read. The result is clothing that feels considered rather than branded.
On Demand
By Definition prints on demand. Nothing is made before it is asked for. Nothing sits in a warehouse. Nothing is destroyed unsold.
A word, placed well, is enough.