A San Antonio design company created and is selling a packet of stickers inspired by the posters used during the Spanish Flu in 1919. DeuxSouth is donating proceeds to the @safoodbank https://t.co/EshqME5XfE
— KSAT 12 (@ksatnews) April 22, 2020
Tanner Freeman. of DeuxSouth Creative in San Antonio, said he hopes the stickers will recreate the past and educate people on the current pandemic.
Each packet contains three stickers and sell for $15. Proceeds will go to the food bank, Freeman said.
"I love history, so it's really inspired by the 1918 influenza posters and things that we've kind of lost touch with," Freeman told KSAT.
The stickers had an old-fashioned look to them and advise people to “Spread Good Vibes in Strange Times,” “Stay Home, Save Lives San Antonio” and “Help, Don’t Hoard.”
"I just want a way where people can show their support or for our city," Freeman told KSAT. "Its culture, people and vibrancy."
Freeman admitted the inspiration for the stickers came from the work of artists through the years.
"The arts community as a whole is really what defines value," Freeman told KSAT. "I wouldn't have seen the posters that were made 100 years ago if it wasn't for an artist who made posters. It's all cyclical and it really influences who we were then and who we are now."
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