Our Story
Iran Was
Beautiful.
Before 1979, Iran was one of the most vibrant, modern, and culturally rich nations on earth. We exist to make sure that story is never forgotten.
A Nation Stolen From History
The Iran They Don’t
Show You
A Nation Rebuilding
Iran emerged from World War II as a sovereign nation with ambitions to match any Western power. Tehran was being rebuilt as a modern capital — wide boulevards, European-style architecture, and a growing middle class hungry for education and opportunity. The University of Tehran, founded just a decade earlier, was already producing engineers, doctors, and artists who would define a generation.
Oil, Pride & Independence
Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh nationalized Iran’s oil industry in 1951 — a bold act of sovereignty that electrified the Iranian people and sent shockwaves through the West. Iran dared to say: this land, this wealth, belongs to us. Though the CIA-backed coup of 1953 reversed his work, the spirit of that defiance never died. It lives in every Iranian who refuses to forget what their country was capable of.
The White Revolution
The Shah launched the White Revolution — a sweeping modernization program that redistributed land to 2.5 million families, established literacy and health corps in rural areas, and most remarkably, granted women the right to vote in 1963. Iranian women entered parliament, led universities, ran businesses, and walked the streets of Tehran in miniskirts and heels. A generation of Iranian women were doctors, lawyers, and engineers — free, educated, and proud.
The Golden Peak
By the mid-1970s, Iran had one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. Tehran’s nightlife rivaled Paris. The Shiraz Arts Festival drew the world’s greatest artists, musicians, and filmmakers. Iranian cinema was internationally acclaimed. Women sat in parliament, led hospitals, and commanded military units. Ski resorts in the Alborz Mountains. Jazz clubs in the capital. A nation of 7,000 years of civilization standing confidently at the edge of the modern world — until it was taken away in a single year.
1979.
In a single year, 2,500 years of Persian civilization were traded for a theocracy. The music stopped. The universities were purged. Women were forced back behind the veil. A generation of Iranians fled — to Los Angeles, to Toronto, to London — carrying their culture, their pride, and their grief with them. They became the diaspora. They became us.
Why We Exist
Born From Pride.
Built For The Movement.
Sun & Sword Co. was built for the Iranian diaspora — for the children and grandchildren of those who fled, for those who grew up explaining their country to people who only knew it from the news, for everyone who carries Iran in their heart no matter where they stand.
We make clothing that speaks without apology. Every piece is rooted in 7,000 years of Persian civilization. Every purchase is a declaration that the story of Iran is not over — that the people who love it have not given up, and never will.
Heritage
Rooted in 7,000 years of Persian civilization and culture.
Strength
For those who stand proud in the face of adversity.
Freedom
Woman. Life. Freedom. Always.
Give Back
Wearing It
Means Something.
A portion of every purchase supports organizations working to advance human rights, freedom of expression, and humanitarian relief for the Iranian people. When you wear Sun & Sword, you’re part of something bigger.
Wear The Movement.
Every piece tells the story. Every purchase keeps the flame alive. Join the diaspora that refuses to forget.