• Fat Cat Card

    $5.75

    This adorable kitteh is lifting weights that are both useful and delicious! The gray cat is dressed in a blue shirt and headband and is holding a weightlifting bar with three iced donuts on each side.

    Each card measures around 6×4.5 inches and comes with a colorful envelope. The inside is blank for your message. Envelope colors vary.

  • Fat Girls Card

    $5.75

    This 4×6-inch card from fat-positive artist Rachelle Cateyes features a gray-lavender front with the words Fat Girls Can Do Whatever They Want (Yup It’s Really Really True) in colorful letters and white banners. The inside is left blank for your message.

    Comes with an envelope in a medium brown color. Also suitable for framing!

  • Fat is Beautiful Zine

    $6.75

    This fat-positive zine by Crystal Hartman contains 44 pages of thoughts, articles, and reprints about America’s fat-phobic, sizism, and pointing us toward fat acceptance — including articles from Marilyn Wann and other major figures in the fat activism world. Each zine measures 4.25×5.5″ (8.5×11 sheets folded in half), and all covers are pink as shown.

  • Fat Mermaid Drink Koozie

    $8.50

    Nothing harshes a beach day like achingly cold fingers wrapped around a cold drink. Protect your extremities with this cushy koozie (or cozy, or kozy) for soda or beer. Each koozie measures about 4×5″ when flat, features eye-catching holographic text, and is just the right size to hold a standard aluminum can.

    Colors vary; the packing unicorns will pick out a beautiful one for you.

  • Chubby Mermaid Makeup Brush

    $4.50

    These adorable makeup brushes resemble the bottom half of a metallic, glamorously curvy mermaid, with a soft brush on top. Each measures around 3.5 inches. Colors vary; our packing unicorns will choose a beautiful one for you.

  • Curves & Class Drink Koozie

    $8.50

    Nothing harshes a beach day like achingly cold fingers wrapped around a cold drink. Protect your extremities with this cushy koozie (or cozy, or kozy) for soda or beer. Each koozie measures about 4×5″ when flat, features eye-catching holographic text, and is just the right size to hold a standard soda can.

    Colors vary; the packing unicorns will pick out a beautiful one for you in one of the colors shown.

  • Dear Fatty Zine

    $6.00

    The Dear Fatty zine from artist and author Rachelle Abellar is the most moving thing you’ll read this month about living in a fat body. Abellar is a designer, fat activist, and body love advocate. She is the founder of PNW Fattitude, a group that hosts events for people of size in an effort to foster a fat-positive community in the Pacific Northwest.

  • Donut Cat Sticker

    $3.86

    This adorable, sturdy vinyl sticker from TurtlesSoup reminds us that round is a shape, too. Each sticker measures approximately 3×3 inches and depicts a donut-shaped cat with icing features and small nommable donut ears.

  • My Stretch Marks Are Sexy Enamel Pin

    $9.00

    Stretch marks: Almost all women have them — no matter their body size — and they’re a perfectly normal feature of our bodies. And they’re sexy. This pin by Golden Tooth Club features a panty-clad, stretch-marked booty and the words “My stretch marks are sexy” in purple, blue and black.

    These beautiful hard enamel pins sit heavy in the palm and are fastened with double posts in the back to ensure they sit firmly on your jacket, backpack, or bulletin board. (Or Girl Scout sash, I don’t know your life.) Each one measures 1.5″ tall and comes on a heavy paper backing. Shipped in a padded envelope to protect it on its way to you.

  • “Breathe” Art Print by Jiji Knight

    $6.00

    This dreamy art print by illustrator and artist Jiji Knight features a plus-size babe with long hair depicted in pink, black and white. She’s holding flowers that drift around her, and a spiky halo hovers behind her head on a field of stars.

    > 5×7″ print on sturdy, glossy fine art stock

    > Shipped in protective packaging

  • Book cover with two plus-size women relaxing on a couch and the book title.

    Educator Copy: Fat-Positive and HAES-Aligned Support Groups, Courses & Workshops Online and Around the World

    $19.99

    This educator copy grants permission for perpetual commercial use for classes, clients and workshops. (You may share with specific individuals and classes only. You may not share or post a copy publicly online. All front and end matter must remain intact.) Since the guide is a living document, rather than receiving a download upon ordering,…

  • A fat white woman in a sleeveless floral dress stands holding a red suitcase and looking out over water. Text on the image reads, "A fat person criticized your favorite author. What happens now? Unpacking Weight Stigma 1. Questions for reflection for fat allies and Health at Every Size® practitioners. Lindley Ashline."

    Unpacking Weight Stigma I: A Workbook for Fat Allies and Health at Every Size® Practitioners

    $4.99

    When someone criticizes our favorite works — whether it’s a book, movie, workshop, song, blog or painting — it can feel really bad. And that’s putting it mildly.

    When someone disagrees with us over a minor issue of aesthetics or style, it’s easy enough to either debate, or agree to disagree. But what about when we find out that people and works we admire aren’t as great as we thought?

    When a person in a marginalized group points out that a work you really love hurts them in some way, it can be hard to put our attachment to the work and its creator aside long enough to listen. It’s time to learn to process our feelings about criticism and use them as fuel for our anti-oppression work in the world. 

    This 15-page workbook contains 34 questions for study, reflection and journaling to spark your awareness of—and help you confront—weight stigma and oppression. These questions are an opportunity to grow in your own anti-oppression and Health at Every Size® alignment and knowledge, and work on fatphobic beliefs and tendencies. They are not comfortable questions, but they’re important.

    The entire workbook is printable at 8.5×11″ paper size and contains space for your reflections so that you can fill it out in your preferred format.

    (As in all Lindley’s works, the word “fat” is used as a neutral descriptor for large bodies.)

    Image description: A fat white woman in a sleeveless floral dress stands holding a red suitcase and looking out over water. Text on the image reads, “A fat person criticized your favorite author. What happens now? Unpacking Weight Stigma 1. Questions for reflection for fat allies and Health at Every Size® practitioners. Lindley Ashline.”