Showing posts with label Rosie the Riveter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosie the Riveter. Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2011

30 Days of Creativity - Day 16 Rosie the Riveter Puzzle

I'm so disappointed in myself for skipping a few days of my 30 Days of Creativity challenge!!  Unfortunately, a really busy work schedule has gotten in the way (I was creative at work - does that count?) and not feeling well.  I was feeling pretty crappy for most of today and spent a good part of it geeking out in bed reading Wonder Woman.  I wanted to do something, though, so I pulled out the puzzle I picked up on sale recently.

Rosie the Riveter PuzzleI really enjoy doing puzzles and I'm a huge fan of Rosie the Riveter, so this was a no brainer when I saw it in the store.  I only just pulled it out for the first time today and sorted through the pieces.  I got little bits of it put together, but haven't gotten very far yet.  It's a start!  It's only 500 pieces, but a lot of areas with the same color so we'll see how long it takes.  But really, that doesn't matter.  It's just fun to focus and work on it for me.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Three Happy Surprise Features!

I just very happily discovered that Athena's Armoury is featured in not one, not two, but three different places over the course of the last few days!

First, I received a notice through Blog Catalog from FishHawk informing me that I was featured in his Five for Friday feature. FishHawk says: "FIVE FOR FRIDAY is a weekly feature on this blog that is meant for the SOLE purpose of calling attention unto sites that I think that many would find interesting." He featured my Euro 4-1 stainless steel bracelet with lovely lavender glass dangles:

Thank you FishHawk!!


I was just scrolling through the referring URL's of people who visited my blog and noticed that quite a few people were coming from two different places over the course of the last few days: Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories and The Scarlett Rose Garden.


The Scarlett Rose Garden is a totally charming blog featuring (among other things) fantastic vintage clothing. Nikki at Scarlett featured my blog post on Rosie the Riveter for her "How to look Rosie for the 4th!" blog post.

Thank you Scarlett Rose Garden!!


And lastly, Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories did a fantastic tutorial on how to make your own DIY d12 Handbag (of Holding) . In their intro, they linked back to my blog post featuring the alternative use of my Chain Maille Dice Bag as an evening purse.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Women's History Month: Rosie the Riveter - America's First Career Woman

Perhaps one of my all time favorites, the first true career woman in the United States, the spark that ignited the women's lib movement nearly thirty years before it officially planted its roots. . . Rosie the Riveter.


Rosie the Riveter is not one woman, but a cultural icon in the United States representing the six million women who worked in the manufacturing plants that produced munitions and material during World War II. These women took the place of the male workers who were absent fighting in the Pacific and European theaters. The character is now considered a feminist icon in the US, and a herald of women's economic power to come. Rosie and her slogan (We Can Do It!) were featured on posters, magazines, and more.

These women came from all over the country and discovered skills they never knew they had, both as laborers, and as independent women. They were self-sufficient and strong (many of them endured double-shifts on a fairly regular basis), and they eventually discovered new freedoms by earning their own incomes and making their own choices on how to spend that money.

What many people don't know is that the character of Rosie the Riveter was, in fact, associated with real woman Rose Will Monroe. She worked as a riveter at the Willow Run Aircraft Factory in Michigan. She was asked to star in a promotional film about the war effort at home and was also featured in a poster campaign. There was also, albeit briefly, a Wendy the Welder icon fashioned after Janet Doyle, a worker at the Kaiser Richmond Liberty Shipyards in California.

Unfortunately, however, it wasn't all roses. Old films show the armies of the eager, smiling women working shoulder to shoulder with the men, their babies lovingly cared for in official day care. A welder’s visor is snapped up to reveal the immaculately made-up face of an actress who delivers a tidy script about the fulfillment she finds in doing her duty. It was not a bit like that, say the actual women, three decades on. The men did not want women and nobody wanted blacks. Sexist and racial discrimination was virulent; the struggle for unionization and fair wages was met with bullying and lockouts. Families were broken up; they never heard of day care. Standards of hygiene and safety were terrible. Despite everything, however, the women stayed cheerful and funny and brave. They needed still more bravery after the war when their jobs had to go back to the men and the official propaganda changed. The films of the time now strove to return the women to their proper roles of cooking and sewing and serving; the government trailers offered horror pictures of the neglected and delinquent children of undutiful working mothers. Women who had acquired valuable skills could only find jobs as kitchen hands or lavatory attendants.

But you cannot keep a good woman down. This taste of economic freedom and independence may have been put on hold for some time, but the women's liberation movement of the 1970's surged forward. Women may still, to this day, be earning $.70 to each $1.00 a man makes, but imagine where we would be had Rosie not answered that call.