About

About the creator:

The RESIST design was created in March 2025 by Lisa V, an independent artist living in the American midwest: a woman, a feminist, a descendent of immigrants, and someone who feels that America's diversity and democracy are its greatest strengths. 

From Lisa: We are in grave danger of being overtaken by billionaires who will install a theocratic, white supremacist dictatorship that will destroy life as we know it, for both us and our planet. Increased suffering will be felt worldwide -- it's already started. In these early days, many find it hard to come to terms that such a hellish nightmare could possible, and that it's actually beginning. If we have a chance at fighting back, the time is NOW. My hope is that this design can serve as a signal for those who understand the danger we are in, and are ready to mobilize. All we have in this fight is each other, and we are by far the majority -- let's inspire each other to summon all our courage and resist this destruction of our democracy and the loss of our freedom. 

Sending love to all represented by their flags:
U.S.A., Canada, Ukraine, Mexico, Pride, Women/19th Amendment, Palestine

About the font:

The font used in this artwork, Mujeres Libres, has a rich and significant history based in the 20th century antifascist movement and was made available thanks to the work of the Justseeds Open Type Project. The following is taken from their website:

"[This particular font was] created from letterforms found in publications associated with three Spanish Civil War era publications: Mujeres Libres (associated with the anarcho-feminist organization Mujeres Libres, produced in Barcelona), and also from Mujeres (a feminist communist publication associated with the Madrid chapter of the Association of Antifascist Women (AMA).

Mujeres Libres, or Free Women, was an organisation founded in 1936, largely by anarchist women workers who defended anti-fascism and social revolution, but without losing sight of women’s protests and demands. Inheriting the ideas of Teresa Claramunt, the federation would come to gain 25,000 members in the Civil War years, a total of 147 groups across the whole Spanish State. Their declared primary goal was “to emancipate women from the triple enslavement to which they have been subjected: ignorance, as women, and as producers,” and their gender perspective never dissipated. In their endeavours to position themselves as an independent feminist organisation from the National Confederation of Labour (CNT) and Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI), they were not supported by prominent anarchist figures such as Federica Montseny, who was not an advocate of establishing the feminist struggle separate from the anarchist movement.”   (Free Women and AMA: Associations and Their Magazines)

The adapted font here, titled ‘Mujeres Libres’ was the title font used on at least 9 covers of their magazine of the same name. This is an all lower case font with solid and humble aspects."