"Gorilla Glue girl" Tessica Brown wants to stick around in the public eye.

New photos show the mom of five has returned from her hair-saving surgery to Louisiana — where she’s trying to flog a line of clothing to cash in on her viral infamy.

Brown went viral on TikTok when she revealed how her hair was stuck together solid for a month after she used the extra-strong glue because she ran out of her usual hair product, Got2b Glued.

Tessica Brown is cashing in on her short-lived Internet fame.

Tessica Brown is cashing in on her short-lived Internet fame. (YouTube)

Snaps from Saturday show a casually dressed Brown, 40, strolling in her hometown of Violet after returning from getting her glued locks freed by a plastic surgeon in Beverly Hills.

Brown kept her now-famous hair covered — but her face clear to see in a cartoon of herself covering her white sweatshirt.

It’s an image she hopes will stick — as she is now offering similar images on a line of official merchandise online. 

There are $28 T-shirts, $50 sweatshirts and $45 sweatpants — making it $123 to get a full outfit cementing her viral fame.

The clothing range includes outfits with a photo from her TikTok videos of her holding her then-locked solid hair — and the words, "Bonded for life." Other items feature a cartoon drawing of her holding up a can of "heavy duty spray adhesive" with the words, "Stiff where ma hair?"

Brown launched the line with posts on social media, saying, "Feeling blessed" — and is already making a "small fortune," according to TMZ.

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It was one of the reasons she was willing to donate more than $20,000 raised for her on GoFundMe to a foundation started by the surgeon who treated her for free, according to the outlet.

"Words cannot even explain how I feel about [Dr. Michael Obeng] you really gave me my life back and I am forever grateful," she told the surgeon as she posted a photo of them together before leaving California.

Obeng called her "amazing," and replied, "I’m glad I could be of service!"

Brown, in her original Tiktok clip about her hair disaster, admitted, "Bad, bad, bad idea."

The clip had been seen more than 35 million times by Sunday.

In previous interviews, she has insisted her video was a genuine plea for help and not a stunt to make her famous.

"Who in their right mind would say, ‘Oh well, let me just spray this in my head and become famous overnight’? Never!" she told "ET."

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Not everyone got the message, however — with fellow Louisiana native Len Martin, 37, ending up in the emergency room after applying the extra-strength glue to his lip to try to prove it was "not as serious as she was trying to make it."

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