

Soar High Tee
William Blake
"No bird soars too high, if he soars with his own wings."
Blake wrote this in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, c. 1790 — a book of proverbs that upended every conventional wisdom it touched. This one is short, clean, and absolute: the only ceiling is borrowed power. Your own wings have no limit.
It's an invitation, not a boast. It doesn't say soar high. It says there is no too high — provided the wings are yours.
About the Design
The word Soars sits higher on the chest than you'd expect — not centered, deliberately placed above the natural midpoint. It's a design choice that earns its meaning: the word itself demonstrates what the line describes. Typography as argument.
Blake would have appreciated that. He designed, engraved, and printed his own books by hand. For him, the way a word sat on a page was never separate from what it said.
About This Tee
Soft, lightweight, and built to move:
- 100% combed and ring-spun cotton — smooth, close drape
- 4.2 oz lightweight fabric — easy to wear, easy to layer
- Side-seamed construction — holds its shape
- Pre-shrunk — reliable fit wash after wash
- Quoteiac logo on left sleeve
Who It's For
This tee is for the person who stopped asking for permission. The one who already knows the difference between borrowed ambition and the real thing. Who has felt the difference in their chest between doing something because someone said to and doing it because it came from inside.
They don't need to be told to soar. They just need the reminder that the height is theirs to set.
Your wings. Your altitude.
The same line lives on the Soar High Journal — for the writing that happens after the declaration.
William Blake, in Plain English
- Lived: 1757–1827, London
- Poet, painter, and printmaker — he created his books from scratch, writing, illustrating, and printing every page himself
- Largely unrecognized in his lifetime; now considered one of the most original voices in English literature
- This line comes from The Marriage of Heaven and Hell — a fierce, visionary work that turned conventional morality on its head
- Blake's "Proverbs of Hell" were not dark — they were liberating. He believed the energy of the imagination was sacred.
Size Chart (Bella + Canvas)
| Size | Width (in) | Length (in) |
|---|---|---|
| XS | 16.5 | 27 |
| S | 18 | 28 |
| M | 20 | 29 |
| L | 22 | 30 |
| XL | 24 | 31 |
| 2XL | 26 | 32 |
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