
Greetings With Herstory
Greeting cards are little hugs in envelopes that can spark laughter and tears, whether you are opening a card that just arrived or when you pull it decades later from a drawer or keepsake box in the closet.
Our handmade cards are built from historical images with a feminist perspective. We are located in Asheville, NC on the ancestral land of the Cherokee/Tsalagi (ᏣᎳᎩ).
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5" x 7" folded greeting cards printed on all sides in full color. Archival images with historical context included. Each order includes a white envelope.
Birthdays, new spouses, sick days, missing you, and fake no orgasm: We have covered a lot of life's major moments.
Appalachian Feminist
bell hooks, Kentucky born and beloved, shows us that abolition feminism is for everyone: “As long as women are using class or race power to dominate other women, feminist sisterhood cannot be fully realized.”


In 1905, amateur photographer Hattie Hill took 43 photographs while on a family camping trip to the Toxaway region of North Carolina. "Toxaway" is anglicized version of Cherokee phrase “ta ha wey” meaning land of the red bird. Fourteen designs are available in the postcard collection, which can be purchased individually, as a five pack, or a complete set (14 postcards).
4" x 6" postcards can be mailed with or without a white envelope. Images from the Ora Rives Collection, UNC Asheville.
Photographs from Library of Congress focused on child labor in North Carolina and farm life in Kentucky.
COMING SOON
