Immigration

Who's the Illegal Alien, Pilgrim
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Who’s The Illegal Alien, Pilgrim?

This is a poster I have seen at countless rallies, demonstrations, plastered on walls and held in hands above heads. It is one of Yolanda López’s better known pieces and seasonally appropriate but she has a tremendous body of work addressing issues of indigenous and immigrant rights, family, heritage, labor and solidarity. Who’s the Illegal Alien, Pilgrim? 1978 Offset lithograph – 22″ x 17.5″ Homenaje a Dolores Huerta (from Women’s Work Is Never Done series) 1995 Silkscreen – 20″ x 20″ Margaret F. Stewart: Our Lady of Guadalupe (from the Guadalupe series) 1978 Oil pastel on paper, 22″ x 30″

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We Are AZ
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Immigration Speak Out at Statehouse

Today, Voices of Liberation and the Student Immigrant Movement have organized an Immigration Speak Out at the Statehouse in protest of recent laws and amendments passed limiting immigrant rights within the Commonwealth and across the nation. Pen and Sword is proud to provide flyers for this action. Please support these efforts and SIM’s 24/7 Vigil and encourage your elected officials to pass the DREAM Act and immigration reform. Check out our portfolio for more print design work.

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Free SB 1070 Stickers

Presente.org is offering free stickers to help you express your disappointment and spread the word about Arizona’s new discriminatory law with our new sticker. They’ll ship you one for free or you can pay to get more than one. Get your sticker here http://presente.org/sticker/az/?im=mo.

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Stencil: How About Now?

So, in our last stencil demo, we promised a future one showing how to do lettering with contained white spaces. After watching my people’s video for First Wave Panama – We got the perfect example to do a follow up demo. So, we’ll do the “How About Now?” stencil with the centers of the letters NOT cut out. As always, please use the following information responsibly. So, how to do a better stencil: 1) Starts out the same way as before. With a simple image and a simple print out. Stencil 1 – Prints Tiled Across 2 8.5×11 Pages 2) The main difference is that when you get to letters that have enclosed white space or “counters” (Q, R, O, P, A, D, B, 4, 6, 8, 9, 0 etc…) you need to leave the middle space attacjed with a small strip to the rest of the stencil. You can do this any number of ways but the most traditional is a thin vertical line. Note the way the triangle of the “A” or the middle of the “B” or “O” are connected to the outside of the letter. Also not the copious tape – proof that you can mess up and cut too much and fix it with tape and cutting again.  3) When you have everything cut ouy it should look like this. With all the totally enclosed white connected with little struts to the rest of the stencil. Then paint and on to the next one. 

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