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Slash 32
Slash 32

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Why I Named My Clothing Brand After a /32 And What It Says About IT Culture

If you work in networking, you already know what a /32 is.
It is the most specific subnet mask possible in CIDR notation, a host route that identifies exactly one IP address on a network. Not a range. Not a block. One single, unique host. In a world of millions of addresses, a /32 says: this one, specifically.
That precision is why I named my brand after it.
A Little Background
I am a retired U.S. Army Signal NCO with 18 years of experience as a network and data center engineer. CCNP certified across routing and switching, data center, wireless, and design. I have architected infrastructure for enterprises, managed data centers, and spent more time than I would like to admit troubleshooting spanning tree issues at 2am.
A few years ago I started thinking seriously about something that had bothered me throughout my career: the IT and cybersecurity community is one of the most technically sophisticated professional groups on earth, and it has absolutely no fashion identity.
Every other professional community with a strong culture has a visual language. We do not. We wear vendor swag and conference shirts and call it a day.
So I built Slash-32 and coined the term infrawear to describe

what it is.

What Is Infrawear?
Infrawear is a new clothing category built specifically for IT professionals, ethical hackers, network engineers, DevOps specialists, and the infrastructure-minded.
It is not techwear. Techwear is about technical fabrics — Gore-Tex, waterproof membranes, outdoor performance. Infrawear is about technical meaning. Our designs encode real references that the community recognizes:
Binary string on a shirt: 01001001 01010100
Decoded: IT
Subnet masks rendered as typographic elements. Protocol names as design motifs. OSI model layers as visual architecture. The goal is clothing that rewards the technically literate — that creates a moment of recognition between two people who both understand what they are looking at.
The /32 Philosophy
In networking, every device on a network needs an address. Routers use subnet masks to understand which addresses belong to which network. A /32 mask means the network contains exactly one host — the most specific, most individual address possible.
Network: 192.168.1.1/32
Hosts: 1 (just this one)
Subnet mask: 255.255.255.255
That specificity is intentional in the brand name. The IT community is not a monolith. There are network engineers, security analysts, cloud architects, penetration testers, CTF competitors, SREs, sysadmins, each with their own specialization, their own expertise, their own path. A /32 honors that individuality. Slash-32 is for that specific host you, precisely.
Why This Community Deserves Its Own Fashion Identity
The numbers are worth knowing:

  • ISC2 estimates the global cybersecurity workforce at 5.5 million professionals
  • The global cloud computing market is projected to reach $1.2 trillion by 2028
  • DEF CON draws 30,000+ attendees annually
  • Bug bounty platforms like HackerOne host 300,000+ registered researchers

This is not a small hobbyist community. It is a massive, skilled, culturally distinct professional group that has conferences, competitions, ethics, folklore, and heroes. It has everything a culture needs, except clothing that reflects it.
Infrawear is the answer to that gap.


Every Slash-32 design goes through a technical review before it goes to production. References have to be accurate. Binary has to decode correctly. Subnet math has to check out. Protocol references have to be genuine.
This matters because the community we serve will immediately spot an error. And it should matter, if you are going to wear something that claims technical authenticity, it needs to actually be technically authentic.
Our current collection includes designs referencing TTL (Time to Live), broadcast domains, network enumeration concepts, and CIDR notation. Each design tells a story that is legible to the technically literate and visually interesting to everyone else.
An Invitation
If you are a network engineer, ethical hacker, CTF player, cloud architect, or anyone who has ever felt like the IT community deserved better than vendor swag, Slash-32 was built for you.
Check out the full infrawear concept and collection at slash-32.com.
And if you have thoughts on what infrawear should look like, what references matter to your corner of the community, what designs would make you stop and say "that's exactly right", I genuinely want to hear from you. Drop a comment below.
The infrastructure is yours. The clothing should be too.

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