I Love Sending Postcards!
I’m Irmo, South Carolina-based designer and political activist Adam FN, and I have long loved sending postcards to friends, family and even strangers through sites like Postcrossing.
Over the years, I have designed countless local postcards to share the history and beauty of South Carolina, Columbia and the Midlands.
Now, I am selling some of my favorite designs. I have hand-picked a dozen different designs to sell for just $3 each (or 10 for $20) plus shipping. You can now purchase online from this website or…
Stop by and check out his inventory at Woodrow Marketplace in Irmo today! No shipping or waiting needed!
about adam fn
FIRST AND FOREMOST: FREE PALESTINE, SUDAN & CONGO!!
I AM…
a father, brother, son and dreamer located in so-called Irmo, South Carolina. When I’m not organizing for my fellow disabled and marginalized peoples everywhere, I am writing, sending and designing postcards.
My favorite postcard designs include historical photos (especially of events with explanations/stories on the back), dedications to revolutionary or anti-colonial struggles, and anything with old maps. I can stare at a good map for hours.
I also enjoy Gamecocks football, basketball and baseball, as well as Tottenham Hotspur futbol, reading critical theory and history, and listening to a wide variety of music from all over the world (especially on vinyl).
I truly enjoy using my postcards to educate folks on historical information to which they might otherwise be unaware and showing them how history is made by everyday people like you and me.
So grab one (or ten) of my personally-designed postcards in the shop here or at Woodrow Marketplace in Irmo TODAY!
Please Support South Carolina Tenants
Housing is a right that must be won again and again every single day against a capitalist-imperialist system designed to prioritize profit over people.
Landlords, corporations, politicians and their complicit police have created a housing crisis where rent soars, homes crumble, and tenants are left to fend for themselves.
But SC Tenants, a statewide union formerly called the South Carolina Housing Justice Network, refuses to accept the ruling class vision of housing as a commodity.
They aim to dismantle structures that uphold landlord control and build popular systems that put housing in the hands of the people who live there.
Their campaigns respond to injustices and are declarations of what’s possible when tenants take the lead — a grassroots organization of working class tenants with a focus on disproportionately Black, working class tenants in a state with one of the highest eviction rates in the country.