About this product
"¿Todo bien?" does not need a question mark to work. The tone carries it. In Colombian Spanish — and across most of Latin America — the phrase operates as a greeting, a temperature check, and a quiet signal of goodwill simultaneously. You say it when you walk into a room. You say it when a difficult conversation just ended and you want to confirm the air has cleared. You say it to a stranger you bump into on the street, to your tía when you call, to a friend you haven't seen in three weeks and don't actually need a status report from. The exchange is the point.
In Colombia specifically, "¿todo bien?" runs at a warmth and frequency that sets it apart from the more formal "¿cómo está?" Colombian greeting culture is layered — "¿qué más?" and "¿todo bien?" often arrive in the same breath, stacked, neither one expecting a medical update. What they're doing is establishing that you see the person. That the channel is open. That whatever comes next comes from a good place. The question is a handshake.
The phrase lives across the Spanish-speaking world — Argentina, Venezuela, Ecuador, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Mexico, everywhere. It runs the same frequency almost everywhere it lands. The Colombia-primary read on this design is about register, not exclusivity: in Colombia, they mean it with a particular warmth that earns the phrase its own design.
Bold typography on black boxy cotton. Front only.
6.0 oz Airlume combed and ring-spun cotton. Oversized boxy fit, dropped shoulders, double-needle hem.