THE MISSION
Dirty Grace exists to restore dignity to people who have been taught they are too broken, too messy, or too far gone to belong.
This project is built on the belief that grace does not wait for improvement. It meets people where they are in confusion, addiction, grief, doubt, and transition and reminds them that their lives still matter, they are enough, and they do not have to walk alone.
Through writing, clothing, gatherings, and practical resources, Dirty Grace exists to spread a message that resists shame and restores humanity. Every expression of this work: books, workbooks, apparel, events, and future offerings serves the same purpose: to create connection, spark conversation, and carry light into places where people have felt overlooked or forgotten.
Dirty Grace is not about fixing people or cleaning them up.
It is about honoring the humanity that remains even in the darkest places and bearing witness to the truth that no one is beyond grace, dignity, or belonging.
WHERE THIS WORK GOES
Dirty Grace isn’t just a message, it's a movement.
From books and workbooks to apparel, gatherings, and future offerings, every expression of this project carries one shared purpose: to remind people they matter, they are enough, and they don’t have to walk alone.
A portion of proceeds from this work is reinvested into spreading that message, helping place these resources where grace has been absent, misunderstood, or withheld including outreach, recovery spaces, and communities often left out of traditional conversations.
ABOUT THE FOUNDER
I didn’t come to this work from a place of certainty or comfort. I came to it through lived experience navigating seasons of loss, confusion, and environments where belonging felt conditional. For a long time, I carried belief without safety. I had walked away from Christianity not because I stopped believing in God, but because I didn’t believe I was welcome as I was. Faith felt distant from real life, and grace felt fragile.
It was during a deeply personal season of reckoning that my understanding of Jesus shifted not as judgment or doctrine, but as presence. That experience changed the direction of my life and reshaped how I understand faith, dignity, and belonging. Dirty Grace grew from that turning point. I don’t write as someone who has arrived or has it all figured out. I write as someone who believes deeply that people are worthy of grace, honesty, and dignity without having to prove themselves first.
There are also people this work is written in honor of. BobbI was one of them. Her loss marked me deeply and shaped the urgency behind this project, a reminder that people matter, that presence matters, and that no one should feel invisible or alone in their darkest seasons. Dirty Grace exists, in part, because of that knowing.
This work is about walking alongside others, not standing above them.
Tiffany
Founder, Dirty Grace Project

