1,000 Unicorns. 1,000 Stories.
Charlotte learned that autism doesn't have one "look," not even in the same family. Her brother is also autistic, and he experiences the world completely differently. That's why we're creating 1,000 unique unicorns. Each one different. Each one celebrating what makes us who we are.
Sparkle Nurse
A unicorn dressed as a nurse in a white uniform stands by the castle.
For some autistic people, anatomy and medicine become special interests. Deep, joyful learning about the body as a clear, logical system with endless details to explore.
Tidal Rider
A unicorn carries a T-Rex in scuba gear through a flooded neon cityscape.
Special interests are deep, focused passions common among autistic people, often lasting years or a lifetime. Dinosaurs and prehistoric life are among the most common, driving extensive learning, memorization, and joyful expertise.
Swing Coder
A unicorn in a pop star outfit sits on a park swing while coding on an tablet under floating lights.
Swinging creates a predictable, rhythmic physical sensation that many autistic people find deeply calming. The vestibular stimulation regulates the sensory system, supports focus, and reduces anxiety through repetitive motion.
Midnight Gamer
A unicorn dressed in a Gothic dress holds a tablet under a red parasol beside a coffee cup and crescent moon window.
Gaming offers autistic people clear systems with predictable rules and immediate feedback. Hyperfocus during gaming sessions allows deep immersion in structured environments with minimal sensory overload.
Royal Guardian
A unicorn dressed as a king in formal red attire holds a watermelon scepter in a fruit market.
Royalty and monarchy provide structured systems with clear hierarchies, detailed histories, and ceremonial protocols. Autistic people often develop deep expertise in these organized worlds where rules, lineages, and symbolism create predictable frameworks for learning.
Pool Scientist
A unicorn wearing a lab coat and red snorkel mask analyzes samples with a microscope and test tubes beside a luxurious pool.
Many autistic people excel in STEM fields because these disciplines reward systematic thinking, pattern recognition, and sustained attention to detail. Scientific methods provide clear logical frameworks with testable hypotheses and reproducible results that align with autistic cognitive strengths.
Pattern Creator
A unicorn wearing a flowing pink kimono paints a cactus scene at a yellow table in a castle courtyard surrounded by tall cacti.
Painting provides autistic people with controlled sensory experiences through texture, color, and repetitive brush movements. Visual art creation allows sustained focus on pattern, detail, and composition while offering predictable, self-directed sensory input that regulates rather than overwhelms.
Pink Guardian
A unicorn wearing ornate viking armor and a red dress sits confidently on a pink sofa on a rooftop terrace overlooking foggy San Francisco.
Knights and medieval history provide structured systems with detailed armor specifications, hierarchical orders, codes of conduct, and extensive documentation. Autistic people often develop encyclopedic knowledge of these organized historical frameworks where rules, roles, and equipment create clear patterns for deep study.
Popcorn Cowboy
A unicorn dressed as a cowboy with hat and boots sits eating popcorn in front of a yellow tent surrounded by colorful foliage.
Popcorn provides autistic people with predictable texture, repetitive sensory feedback, and simple flavor profiles. Safe foods like popcorn offer reliable sensory experiences without the unpredictability of mixed textures or complex tastes that cause sensory overwhelm.
Wave Rider
A unicorn in a pressed outfit with swirl patterns leans on a skateboard while water splashes across the floor.
Water movement provides autistic people with repetitive visual patterns that are both predictable and endlessly variable. Watching splashes, waves, or flowing water offers calming or organizing sensory input through rhythmic motion that helps regulate the nervous system.
Comfort Champion
A unicorn in a polka dot pajamas outfit runs along a riverside holding pink and yellow balloons.
Comfortable clothing without restrictive elements reduces sensory overload for autistic people. Soft fabrics, tagless designs, flat seams, and loose fits prevent the constant sensory input from scratchy textures or tight pressure that can overwhelm the nervous system throughout the day.
Spin Dancer
A unicorn in a purple denim jacket spins and twirls in mid-air surrounded by floating waffles and purple shapes against a pink background.
Spinning and twirling provide vestibular stimulation that helps autistic people regulate their sensory systems. The rotational movement offers predictable physical feedback and visual input that organizes spatial awareness and creates calming or organizing effects on the nervous system.
Switch Keeper
A unicorn in a striped vest and white shirt stands by a brick wall flipping a light switch in an industrial loft with a toy train on the floor.
Light switches provide autistic people with predictable sensory feedback through visual change, tactile click, and immediate cause-effect relationships. Repetitive switching offers controllable sensory input that helps regulate the nervous system through reliable, repeatable actions with consistent results.
Detail Seeker
A unicorn in a hipster outfit holds a remote control close to their face inspecting it at an airport terminal surrounded by green plants.
Many autistic people examine objects at close range to see details, patterns, and mechanisms more clearly. Bringing items near the face allows focused visual processing and understanding of how things work at a level that typical viewing distances do not provide.
Dino Cook
A unicorn in a green tunic cooks golden French fries in a black cauldron over flames in a prehistoric jungle surrounded by dinosaurs and mushrooms.
French fries provide autistic people with predictable texture, simple flavor, and consistent preparation methods. Safe foods like fries offer reliable sensory experiences without the unpredictability of complex tastes or mixed textures that can cause sensory distress or digestive issues.
Lore Guardian
A unicorn drawn in crayon style combines dragon features with Egyptian pyramids and a vintage airplane in a colorful surreal composition.
Dragons as a special interest provide autistic people with rich systems to explore including mythology across cultures, anatomical variations, elemental classifications, and symbolic meanings. The topic connects to history, literature, art, and world cultures, allowing deep multidimensional learning.
More Uniqorns Coming Soon…
These are just the beginning. We're working our way toward 1,000. Every Uniqorn tells a story and there are more stories to be told.
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Every contribution funds therapies that help Charlotte and his brother learn, communicate, and thrive.