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- "Nude is Not a Color" Quilt, Made by Hillary Goodwin, Rachael Dorr, and Contributors from around the World, 2017 - Fashion and cosmetics companies have long used the term nude for products made in a pale beige--reflecting lighter skin tones and marginalizing people of color. After one company repeatedly dismissed a customer's concerns, a global community of quilters produced this quilt to oppose this racial bias. To create the shirt designs, the women chose fabric that best represented their own skin tones.

- 2017
- Collections - Artifact
"Nude is Not a Color" Quilt, Made by Hillary Goodwin, Rachael Dorr, and Contributors from around the World, 2017
Fashion and cosmetics companies have long used the term nude for products made in a pale beige--reflecting lighter skin tones and marginalizing people of color. After one company repeatedly dismissed a customer's concerns, a global community of quilters produced this quilt to oppose this racial bias. To create the shirt designs, the women chose fabric that best represented their own skin tones.
- "What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat," 2020 - Aubrey Gordon (born 1983), also known as “Your Fat Friend,” is an author, podcaster, and activist, focusing on fatness, fat acceptance, and anti-fat bias. Her first book, <em>What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat</em>, was published in 2020. It analyzes the anti-fat bias (or “fatphobia”) embedded in American culture, and how it affects the lives of fat people.

- 2020
- Collections - Artifact
"What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat," 2020
Aubrey Gordon (born 1983), also known as “Your Fat Friend,” is an author, podcaster, and activist, focusing on fatness, fat acceptance, and anti-fat bias. Her first book, What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat, was published in 2020. It analyzes the anti-fat bias (or “fatphobia”) embedded in American culture, and how it affects the lives of fat people.
- "You Just Need to Lose Weight: And 19 Other Myths About Fat People," 2023 - Aubrey Gordon (born 1983), also known as “Your Fat Friend,” is an author, podcaster, and activist, focusing on fatness, fat acceptance, and anti-fat bias. She published her second book, <em> You Just Need to Lose Weight</em>, in 2024. It examines myths regarding body weight, and addresses them with scientific and historical research.

- 2023
- Collections - Artifact
"You Just Need to Lose Weight: And 19 Other Myths About Fat People," 2023
Aubrey Gordon (born 1983), also known as “Your Fat Friend,” is an author, podcaster, and activist, focusing on fatness, fat acceptance, and anti-fat bias. She published her second book, You Just Need to Lose Weight, in 2024. It examines myths regarding body weight, and addresses them with scientific and historical research.
- "The Public Universal Friend," Linocut, circa 2020 - Public Universal Friend (1752-1819) defied societal expectations as a genderless Quaker minister. Although assigned female at birth, the Friend assumed their new identity following a 1776 religious epiphany and began preaching across the northeast United States. In 2019, 200 years after the Friend’s death, their life story was spread across social media, and they became emblematic of early American LBGTQIA+ history.

- circa 2020
- Collections - Artifact
"The Public Universal Friend," Linocut, circa 2020
Public Universal Friend (1752-1819) defied societal expectations as a genderless Quaker minister. Although assigned female at birth, the Friend assumed their new identity following a 1776 religious epiphany and began preaching across the northeast United States. In 2019, 200 years after the Friend’s death, their life story was spread across social media, and they became emblematic of early American LBGTQIA+ history.
- "The Public Universal Friend," Linocut, circa 2020 - Public Universal Friend (1752-1819) defied societal expectations as a genderless Quaker minister. Although assigned female at birth, the Friend assumed their new identity following a 1776 religious epiphany and began preaching across the northeast United States. In 2019, 200 years after the Friend’s death, their life story was spread across social media, and they became emblematic of early American LBGTQIA+ history.

- circa 2020
- Collections - Artifact
"The Public Universal Friend," Linocut, circa 2020
Public Universal Friend (1752-1819) defied societal expectations as a genderless Quaker minister. Although assigned female at birth, the Friend assumed their new identity following a 1776 religious epiphany and began preaching across the northeast United States. In 2019, 200 years after the Friend’s death, their life story was spread across social media, and they became emblematic of early American LBGTQIA+ history.
- "my ancestors will not let me forget this," 2020 -

- 2020
- Collections - Artifact
"my ancestors will not let me forget this," 2020
- Record Album, "This Land is Your Land, Songs of Social Justice," 1964 -

- October 01, 1964
- Collections - Artifact
Record Album, "This Land is Your Land, Songs of Social Justice," 1964
- Pattie Moore "Empathetic Elder," 1982 -

- 1982
- Collections - Artifact
Pattie Moore "Empathetic Elder," 1982
- Pattie Moore "Empathetic Elder," 1982 -

- 1982
- Collections - Artifact
Pattie Moore "Empathetic Elder," 1982
- Pattie Moore "Empathetic Elder," 1982 -

- 1982
- Collections - Artifact
Pattie Moore "Empathetic Elder," 1982