Disabled-led creative studio making bold merch, gifts & designs with purpose, humor, and heart.
Welcome to AMR Creations Studio. My name is Antonette Rascon, and I’m the creator behind the shop. I’m a disabled creative building this business one step, one design, one experiment, and one late night at a time.
AMR Creations started because I needed a way to create a future that actually worked with my life instead of constantly fighting against it. Living with a disability changes the way you move through the world. Energy matters. Flexibility matters. Accessibility matters. Being able to work in a way that fits your body and mind matters. I got tired of feeling like traditional paths were built for everyone except people like me.
This shop became my answer to that.
I’ve always been creative. I love design, colors, symbolism, storytelling, textures, humor, strange ideas, emotional ideas, and turning feelings into something visual. I also genuinely love making things for people. A shirt can make someone feel seen. A mug can become part of somebody’s morning routine. A sticker can say something a person struggled to explain out loud. That matters to me more than pretending everything has to be “serious art.”
AMR Creations is a mix of creativity, advocacy, experimentation, and survival. Some designs are funny. Some are emotional. Some are loud and proud. Some are soft and comforting. A lot of my work is inspired by disability culture, internet culture, personal growth, Americana, alternative aesthetics, humor, philosophy, and everyday life. I don’t want this shop to feel fake, overly polished, or disconnected from real people.
I’m not a giant corporation pretending to be handmade. I’m honest about the fact that I currently use print-on-demand services for many of my physical products. Right now, this is what allows me to create and sell products without needing massive amounts of money, storage, equipment, or physical labor that may not always be realistic for me. Instead of waiting for perfect conditions, I decided to start with what I have.
And honestly? I’m proud of that.
Every design still begins with intention. Every listing still represents my ideas, my direction, my time, and my creativity. Building this shop is helping me work toward larger goals I’ve had for years. I want to expand into more hands-on creative work, physical crafting, body products, books, coloring books, illustration projects, and meaningful items that are even more personal and interactive.
This shop is funding those dreams.
I also care deeply about disability representation and disabled entrepreneurship. Too many disabled people are underestimated, ignored, infantilized, or pushed into survival mode forever. I want to help create spaces where disabled people can be expressive, funny, stylish, creative, ambitious, messy, emotional, intelligent, weird, cool, and fully human without needing permission first.
A lot of my products are inspired by that mindset.
You’ll find designs that are playful, sarcastic, bold, cozy, alternative, colorful, strange, or deeply personal. I don’t believe disabled people should only be represented through pity or inspiration stories. We are entire people with aesthetics, humor, sexuality, goals, opinions, hobbies, relationships, and identities outside of our conditions.
That energy is built into AMR Creations.
I also offer custom creations because I genuinely enjoy helping people bring their ideas to life. Whether it’s a personalized gift, a custom design, matching items, graphics, or a strange niche idea that only makes sense to you, I love collaborating and figuring out how to make something feel personal.
This business is growing alongside me. I’m learning as I go. Some days are exciting, some are exhausting, and some are honestly scary. But I keep building anyway. Every order, follow, share, review, and kind message helps more than people probably realize.
So whether you’re here because you relate to the disability community, like the designs, support small businesses, need a custom gift, or just accidentally wandered into my weird little corner of the internet — thank you for being here.
Seriously.
You are helping a disabled creator build something real.