
Today Joshua Tree is a high-desert town with a double life: a national-park gateway of campgrounds and trailheads, and a bohemian outpost of artists, musicians, roadside galleries, and desert-modern cabins. Pioneertown’s 1946 movie-set saloons sit up the road; Noah Purifoy’s junk-sculpture museum sprawls across the open desert. It is rugged, weird, and wide open — a place people come to climb the rocks, watch the stars, and feel the desert get under their skin.
Today Joshua Tree is where the Mojave’s strangest tree reaches for the darkest, starriest sky. Our Joshua Tree designs gather that identity — the bear-and-star emblem, the trees, the boulders, the desert night — into wearable form. Joshua Tree — where two deserts meet under California’s darkest sky.
Why People Visit Joshua Tree
People come for the strangeness: trees out of a storybook, boulders made for scrambling, and a night sky so dark the Milky Way throws shadows. Pair the park with the town’s desert-arts scene and you have a high-desert getaway unlike anywhere else in California.