Organized by Visual AIDS, “Love Positive Women” is a project that distributes hundreds of hand-crafted Valentine's Day cards to women living with HIV.
[How Anthony Daley Abstracts Rubens](https://hyperallergic.com/799845/how-anthony-daley-abstracts-rubens/) [Shalom and Pass the Joint ](https://hyperallergic.com/799710/shalom-and-pass-the-joint-jewish-heritage-cannabis/) [Basking in Vermeer’s Light at Rijksmuseum](https://hyperallergic.com/800021/basking-in-vermeers-light-at-rijksmuseum/) “Why not do something nice for the women most forgotten about?,” LPW founder Jessica Whitbread asks in a text for the project. LPW acknowledges the challenges of living with HIV as a woman while navigating the healthcare system, interpersonal relationships, and motherhood, and aims to boost awareness around the specificity of these social side effects. [A Dazzling and Troubling Display of Spanish Expansion](https://hyperallergic.com/800245/a-dazzling-and-troubling-display-of-spanish-expansion-hispanic-society-royal-academy/) [Icons of Black American History, Illustrated ](https://hyperallergic.com/795992/icons-of-black-american-history-illustrated-george-mccalman/) From tender words of care and encouragement to carefully arranged accessories such as beads, yarn, lace, and sequins, an overwhelming amount of love pours from each card. From February 2 through February 5, over 500 handmade Valentines were mounted on the walls of one of the museum’s second-floor galleries alongside a video work detailing the history and impact of the initiative. Don’t underestimate the value in something as simple as sending a valentine to a stranger.” With the help of Brooklyn-based paper-making mill Dieu Donné, LPW has invited artists, activists, and community members to design hand-crafted Valentine’s Day cards to distribute internationally to women living with HIV. The cards were sent off quickly in order to reach their destinations by the holiday.
Illustrations by Emma Spainhoward. Happy Valentine's Day, Washingtonians! However you're celebrating the day, here are some cheeky DC-themed valentines to send ...
However you’re celebrating the day, here are some [cheeky DC-themed valentines](https://www.washingtonian.com/2021/02/12/washingtonian-printable-dc-valentines-cards/) to send to the special people in your life—especially to those who appreciate a little DC inside joke. [Valentine’s Day](https://www.washingtonian.com/tag/valentines-day/), Washingtonians!
HAZLETON — Shannon Marsyada selected Valentine's Day cards from a shelf. One card burst forth with hearts colored red, pink and even black in offsetting ...
This year, the stamps show a kitten and a puppy placing their paws on hearts. remained for 30 years. The U.S. Esther Howland saw English Valentine’s Day cards that her father sold in his bookstore in Worcester, Massachusetts, and started making some of her own around 1849. But an entrepreneur, now considered the mother of the Valentine’s Day industry in the United States, started by making cards herself. The 151 million cards that the website says Americans buy for Valentine’s Day are slightly more than on Mother’s Day and second only to Christmas.
The NASA Goddard Space Flight Center is located in Maryland. It's packed with scientists and engineers who work on spacecraft and missions for studying the sun, ...
There's one to match any Valentine's mood you're feeling today. The second card stars rubble-pile asteroid Bennu with "Our love is like Bennu: I thought it was solid, but it turned out to be pretty rocky." The NASA Goddard Space Flight Center is located in Maryland.
They posted four cards featuring Aaron Donald, Cooper Kupp, Matthew Stafford and Jalen Ramsey and each one is better than the last. Obviously, they're ...
If you still haven’t sent your Valentine a card yet, the Rams have you covered. The Rams have one of the better Twitter accounts of any team right now, often sharing some great posts for their followers. They posted four cards featuring Aaron Donald, Cooper Kupp, Matthew Stafford and Jalen Ramsey and each one is better than the last.