


Our Food is Fighting Print
$26.00
A wartime appeal rendered in bold strokes and starker truths, this poster from the United States Office of War Information, issued circa 1943, translates the global into the local, the battlefield into the backyard. Created as part of the broader Victory Garden campaign, this print represents a pivotal shift in American wartime rhetoric, one that enlisted not only soldiers, but citizens, in the campaign for resource preservation and food security.
Reproduced here as a high-quality archival print, this poster is a relic of civic idealism, an artifact from a moment when cabbages, carrots, and corn became symbols of resistance.
• 18" x 24:
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan
Reproduced here as a high-quality archival print, this poster is a relic of civic idealism, an artifact from a moment when cabbages, carrots, and corn became symbols of resistance.
• 18" x 24:
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan
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A wartime appeal rendered in bold strokes and starker truths, this poster from the United States Office of War Information, issued circa 1943, translates the global into the local, the battlefield into the backyard. Created as part of the broader Victory Garden campaign, this print represents a pivotal shift in American wartime rhetoric, one that enlisted not only soldiers, but citizens, in the campaign for resource preservation and food security.
Reproduced here as a high-quality archival print, this poster is a relic of civic idealism, an artifact from a moment when cabbages, carrots, and corn became symbols of resistance.
• 18" x 24:
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan
Reproduced here as a high-quality archival print, this poster is a relic of civic idealism, an artifact from a moment when cabbages, carrots, and corn became symbols of resistance.
• 18" x 24:
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan
A wartime appeal rendered in bold strokes and starker truths, this poster from the United States Office of War Information, issued circa 1943, translates the global into the local, the battlefield into the backyard. Created as part of the broader Victory Garden campaign, this print represents a pivotal shift in American wartime rhetoric, one that enlisted not only soldiers, but citizens, in the campaign for resource preservation and food security.
Reproduced here as a high-quality archival print, this poster is a relic of civic idealism, an artifact from a moment when cabbages, carrots, and corn became symbols of resistance.
• 18" x 24:
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan
Reproduced here as a high-quality archival print, this poster is a relic of civic idealism, an artifact from a moment when cabbages, carrots, and corn became symbols of resistance.
• 18" x 24:
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Opacity: 94%
• ISO brightness: 104%
• Paper is sourced from Japan