Woman Power Pillows

Description: WOMAN POWER features a powerful and beautiful floral design of an educated Black, African American woman sitting on a pile of school books with a laptop surrounded by flowers. Powerful women's rights, woman power, girl power design for feminists, female teenagers, black girls, black women, African-American women, peaceful protesters, civil rights and social justice activists.
Nobody's Free Until Everybody's Free | Fannie Lou Hamer | Black Woman | Civil Rights Pillow
by UrbanLifeApparel
$25

Description: Copyright of all these designs belongs to the artist (Meghan Wallace or Doodle by Meg) and may not be reproduced by anyone other than the artist for sale or any other commercial use. In accordance with Intellectual Property Policies my designs have been created using my own process and personal references. With that said if you like my style and are interested in commission design work feel free to email me!

Description: God is My Strength, Black Woman Praying, Black Lives Matter, Strong Black Woman
God is My Strength, Black Woman Praying, Black Lives Matter, Strong Black Woman Pillow
by UrbanLifeApparel
$25
African American Leaders, Black History, Black Heroes, Civil Rights Leaders Pillow
by UrbanLifeApparel
$25

Description: Educated Flower Power Feminism features a beautiful floral design of an educated Black, African American girl, teenager, student, woman sitting on a pile of school books with a laptop changing the world. Powerful women's rights, woman power, girl power design for feminists, female teenager, black girls, black women, African-American women, peaceful protesters, civil rights and social justice activists
Description: Electra Woman and Dyna Girl is a live action superhero children's television series from 1976. The series aired 16 episodes in a single season, and when released on home video, the 16 segments, which were each about 12 minutes long, were combined into eight episodes. The program followed the crime-fighting exploits of caped superhero Electra Woman and her teen sidekick Dyna Girl, who worked in their normal lives as reporters for Newsmaker Magazine. In each episode, the duo dons brightly-colored spandex costumes, in a bright flash of light called an "Electra-Change;" get into the "ElectraCar;" and use an array of technically-advanced gadgets to thwart an eclectic collection of super villains.