Product mockup
Product mockup
Product mockup
Product mockup
Product mockup

Liberation Sankofa Embroidered Hat

Regular price$22.50
/

Color
  • In stock, ready to ship
  • Inventory on the way

Liberation is not a destination. It is a practice. A remembrance. A choice made daily.

 

This embroidered hat carries the word LIBERATION in bold letters, anchored by the Sankofa bird—an ancient Adinkra symbol from the Akan people of Ghana. The Sankofa teaches us: "Se wo were fi na wosankofa a yenkyi," which translates to "It is not wrong to go back for that which you have forgotten." We honor the past to move forward with purpose.

 

Crafted with premium embroidery on a classic structured hat, this piece is more than an accessory. It is a statement. A reminder that freedom is both legacy and lived practice. It is a wearable altar for those who refuse to forget where they come from and who they are becoming.

 

Features:

       Premium embroidery in gold and black thread

       Classic dad hat or baseball cap style

       Adjustable strap for comfortable fit

       Available in brown, black, and cream

       Unisex design for all journeys

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.


Recently viewed

FAQs

Cimarron honors the legacy of those who chose liberation over bondage—people who escaped, resisted, and built new worlds rooted in ancestral memory. Our name is a tribute to freedom seekers and the spirit of self-determination that guides our work.

Our garments are not just clothing—they are wearable altars. Every piece carries symbolism drawn from African and Afro-Indigenous traditions, intentionally designed to awaken memory, honor lineage, and protect the spirit. We center community, empowerment, and ancestral storytelling in everything we create.

Yes. All Cimarron garments are created for all genders and all journeys. Liberation has no boundaries—and neither does our clothing.

Each design emerges from the duality of movement and stillness, resistance and rest. We draw inspiration from traditional symbols, liberation stories, ancestral ceremonies, and the lived experiences of Afro-diasporic communities across the world.