Fat Artists Rule Magnet Nalgona Positivity Pride

$10.69

❀ DETAILS:

Yellow magnet that features different fat artists (listed below) and reads, “Fat Artists Rule”

Made with glossy paper
Magnet 4.33″ x 5.59″

Description

❀ DETAILS:

Yellow magnet that features different fat artists (listed below) and reads, “Fat Artists Rule”

Made with glossy paper
Magnet 4.33″ x 5.59″
Poster might be slightly bigger and may require cutting when putting the poster in frame.
Made with love in Southern California. Want poster in a different size? Message Us

As seen in HuffPost, BuzzFeed, Remezcla, & NYLON.

Colors may vary slightly due to different color monitors”

Also available in:
Tshirt:Β https://etsy.me/2UCnQ8k

➣ See the full Nalgona collection: https://etsy.me/3bBvFkg

Art By: Dulce Ibarra Soledad

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🌍 SHIPPING
Do take note that our shipping time frames vary from a couple of days to a week. Is your order time-sensitive? Send us a message. Thank you for the support.”

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✨The MISSION BEHIND THE MERCH✨
Nalgona Positivity Pride (NPP) is an in-community eating disorders and body-positive organization dedicated in creating visibility and resources for Black, Indigenous, communities of color (BICC.) Since 2016, NPP has been raising awareness around the specific needs of BICC through digital media, education, grassroots eating disorders treatment models, and art. Rooted in Xicana indigenous feminism and DIY punx praxis, NPP emerged out of a great need not only to shed light on the experiences and barriers that exist in BICC affected by body-image and troubled eating but to create opportunities of healing by and for BICC.

www.nalgonapositivitypride.com
Instagram: @nalgonapositivitypride
Be the first to see our merch before we release by signing up to our email list: https://bit.ly/2AsP7Tc”

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✨THE STORY✨

Brittany Howard: “Brittany Howard, the lead singer, songwriter and guitarist with Alabama Shakes, says she still remembers the day she decided to start a band. She was 11 or 12 and attending a concert in her school gym put on by some classmates (including future Alabama Shakes guitarist Heath Fogg) (…) Howard’s sister taught her how to write poetry and play the piano; Howard learned guitar, bass and drums on her own. Eventually, she joined together with other musicians from her town to form Alabama Shakes. Sound & Color, the band’s second record, has been nominated for six Grammy Awards, including Album Of The Year and Best Alternative Music Album.”
http://www.npr.org/2016/01/28/464631594/alabama-shakes-brittany-howard-on-small-town-life-big-time-music

Debora Iyall: “Debora Iyall is best known simply by her professional name Debora, a Cowlitz Native American, is an artist and was lead singer for the new wave band Romeo Void. Debora got her surname from her family adopting their ancestor Iyallwahawa’s “first” name written at the time as Ayiel.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debora_Iyall

Beth Ditto: “As lead singer of indie-disco trio Gossip, non-conformist Beth Ditto became just as famous for challenging the perceptions of female beauty and sexuality as she did for her spell bindingly raw gospel-soul voice. Born Mary Beth Patterson in 1981, she grew up in a tiny house in Searcy, AK with her large family, before moving to Washington at the age of 18, where she teamed up with guitarist Brace Paine and drummer Hannah Blilie to form post-punk outfit the Gossip.”
http://www.allmusic.com/artist/beth-ditto-mn0001862849

Big Mama Thornton: “Willie Mae Thornton (1926-1984) was an influential African American blues singer and songwriter whose career extended from the 1940s to the early 1980s. She was called “Big Mama” for both her size and her robust, powerful voice. She is best known for her gutsy 1952 rhythm and blues recording of “Hound Dog,” later covered by Elvis Presley, and for her original song “Ball and Chain,” made famous by Janis Joplin. Thornton’s compositions include more than 20 blues songs. – See more at: http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/h-1573#sthash.ycGGnQKg.dpuf”