Tag: urban homestead

  • Victory Garden Posters for Modern Day Patriots, Homesteaders & Locavores

    Victory Garden Posters for Modern Day Patriots, Homesteaders & Locavores

    victory garden poster

    The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.
    –Eleanor Roosevelt

    Man, I want chickens. You guys want to start a letter-writing campaign to my husband, letting him know he’s depriving me?

    Anyway, when I was researching my post earlier this week about victory gardens and their modern day relevance, I came across this Etsy seller with the most awesome posters and t-shirts celebrating the Victory Garden of Tomorrow— “artful advocacy for the modern homefront.”

    Of the chicken poster (my favorite), the seller says:

    I just love the idea of taking chickens, who are anything but heroic, and illustrate them so. I was inspired by the posters that used to hang in WWII aircraft factories, and posters selling war bonds.

    Today, our heroes are the common, the simple and can be right in our own backyard.

    A man after my own heart.

    A couple more that I love:

    victory garden poster 2

    “Eat real food” sounds like an obvious thing to say, like it should go without saying. But in today’s industrialized world of processed products-that-are-edible, a reminder to eat only whole, real foods is necessary. I was inspired by an old canning manual cover to create this print that will remind and inspire to eat what is wholesome.


    victory garden poster 3

    I consider this to be one of the most important messages I have made as a designer activist: that there is ground all around us that can and should be cultivated. It’s in empty city lots, on rooftops, in window boxes, and other surprising nooks and crannies. This image is inspired by a 1944 Garden for Victory poster that also featured a foot and pitchfork along with the slogan, “Groundwork for Victory.” The setting then was the suburban or rural lawn–the setting now is the urban food deserts. Urban farming as source of nutrition and education has to be part of our future.

    Awesome sauce.

    The posters are 12″ x 18″ and printed on acid-free Mohawk Options FSC certified recycled content 80# cover stock. They sell for $12; the seller has some bundled into 3-packs for $30 and it looks like he’ll allow substitutions. These are gonna look sah-weet in my dining room!

    I think I might be seriously addicted to Etsy.

    Who are your favorite sellers?

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  • Breakin’ the Law: I’m a (Sub)Urban Homesteader

    Breakin’ the Law: I’m a (Sub)Urban Homesteader

    garden green tomatoes

    I was not designed to be forced.

    I will breathe after my own fashion.

    Let us see who is the strongest.

    -Henry David Thoreau,
    On the Duty of Civil Disobedience

    Actually, I’m not even suburban, I’m really borderline rural, but that’s beyond the point.

    Some people I’ve never heard of before, the Dervaes family in Pasadena, has trademarked the phrases “urban homestead” and “urban homesteading,” and apparently going after bloggers who use the terms.

    In addition to URBAN HOMESTEADING® and URBAN HOMESTEAD®, the terms PATH TO FREEDOM®, HOMEGROWN REVOLUTION®, and FREEDOM GARDENS® have been claimed by Dervaes trademark machine.

    Now, see, I was under the impression that these were common terms, going back to war effort Victory Gardens. I thought it was part of Michelle Obama’s healthy eating initiative. I thought it was an umbrella that, historically, communities had formed under.

    Why would the Dervaes seek to take that umbrella away?

    It doesn’t make any sense to me. Bloggers who literally wrote the book on The Urban Homestead, who were the inspiration for many to build themselves a self-sustainable lifestyle— why would they work to disenfranchise those they had inspired in the first place? Those who stand together and share their experiences in an effort to make the world better?

    Who does that?

    What precisely is an urban homestead, anyway? According to Wikipedia:

    “an urban homestead is a household that produces a significant part of the food, including produce and livestock, consumed by its residents. This is typically associated with residents’ desire to live in a more environmentally conscious manner.”

    Aspects of urban homesteading include:

    • Resource reduction: use of solar/alternative energy sources, harvesting rainwater, greywater use, line drying clothes, using alternative transportation such as bicycles and buses
    • Raising animals, such as chickens, goats, rabbits, and fish, as well as worms and/or bees
    • Edible landscaping: growing fruit, vegetables, culinary and medicinal plants, converting lawns into gardens
    • Self-sufficient living: re-using, repairing, and recycling items; homemade products
    • Food preservation including canning, drying, freezing, cheese-making, and lacto-fermenting
    • Community food-sourcing such as foraging, gleaning, and trading
    • Natural building
    • Composting

    Ruh-roh. My husband hasn’t allowed me my chickens or goats yet, but we’ve got that worm farm. We garden as many herbs and vegetables as the deer will leave for us to harvest. We reuse and repair like our lives and wallets depend on it. We recycle, upcycle, and make ourselves. I’m still a little scared by canning but we do plenty of freezing. And we’re double-dealing with the composting; in addition to the worm bin we’ve got a straight-up compost heap happening in the backyard.

    So, it looks like we fall under the umbrella of the (sub)urban homestead. Are we in trouble?

    Of course not, they can’t trademark our way of life. All they can do is try to take away our efforts to align ourselves with a community that values the same ethic. You can be an Urban Homesteader, you’re just not allowed to SAY you’re one without giving credit to the Dervaes, even if you’re seeking to align yourself with a movement that began decades before.

    They’ve very generously (that’s sarcasm, folks) mentioned that formerly urban homesteaders can now brand themselves as Modern Homesteaders, which really burns my britches because that’s not what we are AT ALL. What we are is trying to relearn the ways generations before us lived, to fit the skills and environmental responsibility and independence and connection to the land of times gone by to the reality of the world we live in now. That’s, like, the opposite of modern. It’s retro.

    This whole business is like me saying, I’m an Asian mother. I know a bunch of ya’ll are Asian mothers too, but I wrote the book on being an Asian mother in a very specific way (let’s pretend I wrote a book called On Being an Asian Mother ). Now, it doesn’t matter if ya’ll are Asian mothers or not, I trademarked the commonly used, descriptive term, so you gotta call yourselves something else. May I suggest Oriental Matriarch? It’s pretty much the same thing.

    ONLY IT’S NOT. It’s a bunch of BS, and you can quote me on that.

    urban homesteaders day of actionDo you consider yourself an Urban Homesteader? Can a lifestyle be trademarked?

    Let me know if you’ve written about this today, as it’s the Urban Homesteaders Day of Action. I’d love to hear your take.

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