BridgeOutlet
Autism advocacy apparel built to bring the community together — from the same family behind Harborlight and the Autism Parent Club podcast.
Last reviewed: May 2026
More than just clothes
BridgeOutlet was built around a simple idea: the autism community is scattered, overwhelmed, and often invisible to itself. A t-shirt that says what you believe — about acceptance, about neurodiversity, about showing up for your kid — is a small act of visibility that adds up.
The brand's tagline is "Apparel to Bring Us Together,"and that's the literal goal: people who share this experience finding each other in grocery stores, school hallways, and waiting rooms.
The connection to Harborlight
BridgeOutlet, Harborlight, and the Autism Parent Club podcast are all projects from the same family — Chris and Becky Fry, parents raising a nonspeaking autistic son.
None of these projects exist because autism parenting is easy. They exist because it isn't, and because building things that help other families is one way to make sense of that.
What they sell
BridgeOutlet sells t-shirts and hoodies with autism awareness and acceptance designs — things like the infinity symbol, sunflower designs, and "Bridge the Gap" messaging. All designed to be wearable advocacy: visible, not preachy.
Primary sources to verify details
Rules and programs change. Use these official links for forms, income limits, and state specifics.
- Shop BridgeOutlet.comT-shirts, hoodies, and more with autism awareness and acceptance messaging.