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For My Sisters is a vivid, large-format print collection that honours the resilience, brilliance and hard-won joy of Black women. Each poster is an invitation to “see” Black women’s contributions afresh, even as their labour is routinely undervalued.
Art with purpose. 50 % of profits are shared between Sistah Space, Black Minds Matter, and the Jesuit Refugee Service, organisations that protect Black women from domestic abuse, fund culturally competent mental-health care, and support displaced families.
Evidence-based activism. Pakistani & Bangladeshi women face the UK’s steepest aggregated gender pay gap at 26.2 %, while Black African women confront a 19.6 % gap—figures that have scarcely shifted for decades Fawcett Society. Black women are also the least likely group to join the UK’s top earners LSE, and Black female doctors are still paid almost £10,000 a year less than white peers The Guardian.
Museum-grade production. Printed on 310 gsm archival cotton rag with eco-solvent inks for rich, fade-resistant colour. Each poster is hand-signed, numbered in an edition of 100, and shipped in recycled, plastic-free packaging.
Own a piece of art that uplifts—and materially supports—Black women.
For My Sisters is a vivid, large-format print collection that honours the resilience, brilliance and hard-won joy of Black women. Each poster is an invitation to “see” Black women’s contributions afresh, even as their labour is routinely undervalued.
Art with purpose. 50 % of profits are shared between Sistah Space, Black Minds Matter, and the Jesuit Refugee Service, organisations that protect Black women from domestic abuse, fund culturally competent mental-health care, and support displaced families.
Evidence-based activism. Pakistani & Bangladeshi women face the UK’s steepest aggregated gender pay gap at 26.2 %, while Black African women confront a 19.6 % gap—figures that have scarcely shifted for decades Fawcett Society. Black women are also the least likely group to join the UK’s top earners LSE, and Black female doctors are still paid almost £10,000 a year less than white peers The Guardian.
Museum-grade production. Printed on 310 gsm archival cotton rag with eco-solvent inks for rich, fade-resistant colour. Each poster is hand-signed, numbered in an edition of 100, and shipped in recycled, plastic-free packaging.
Own a piece of art that uplifts—and materially supports—Black women.
For My Sisters is a vivid, large-format print collection that honours the resilience, brilliance and hard-won joy of Black women. Each poster is an invitation to “see” Black women’s contributions afresh, even as their labour is routinely undervalued.
Art with purpose. 50 % of profits are shared between Sistah Space, Black Minds Matter, and the Jesuit Refugee Service, organisations that protect Black women from domestic abuse, fund culturally competent mental-health care, and support displaced families.
Evidence-based activism. Pakistani & Bangladeshi women face the UK’s steepest aggregated gender pay gap at 26.2 %, while Black African women confront a 19.6 % gap—figures that have scarcely shifted for decades Fawcett Society. Black women are also the least likely group to join the UK’s top earners LSE, and Black female doctors are still paid almost £10,000 a year less than white peers The Guardian.
Museum-grade production. Printed on 310 gsm archival cotton rag with eco-solvent inks for rich, fade-resistant colour. Each poster is hand-signed, numbered in an edition of 100, and shipped in recycled, plastic-free packaging.
Own a piece of art that uplifts—and materially supports—Black women.