Life Below The Line

eat drink and be southern

Posts tagged "art"

3 months ago 6 notes UGA Georgia Children Charity art

catsarchcardsReblogged from catsarchcards


Do you love the University of Georgia?
My sister Catherine has created these greeting cards for all Georgia  dawgs to use for all of their stationary needs. All proceeds from the sales of these cards will go straight to UGA Miracle’s 2012 donation to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.
If you would like to purchase some, please click H E R E .  For more information about Cat and her cause, click H E R E .

{ catsarchcards }

Front of Card: Sketch of the famous Arch on UGA’s North Campus

Do you love the University of Georgia?

My sister Catherine has created these greeting cards for all Georgia dawgs to use for all of their stationary needs. All proceeds from the sales of these cards will go straight to UGA Miracle’s 2012 donation to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.

If you would like to purchase some, please click H E R E . For more information about Cat and her cause, click H E R E .

{ catsarchcards }

Front of Card: Sketch of the famous Arch on UGA’s North Campus

Download high-res photo

6 months ago 66 notes the south southern art print letterpress The Old Try

The Line | the Old Try
“I remember the first time I crossed it – an event that I didn’t really  think about, but that’s lived in my memory ever since: the Mason-Dixon.  Mason & Dixon’s line is a funny thing. When it was surveyed in 1763,  it was used to settle disputes between the British colonies. For us,  it’s the difference between college and pro ball; the difference between  sweet tea and tea; and the difference between those who will wear white  after Labor Day and those who won’t. Pretty simply, it’s something  Northerners don’t much think about and Southerners don’t much cross. And  it don’t matter where you stand, you’re on one side of it or the other.”
- the Old Try

The Line | the Old Try

“I remember the first time I crossed it – an event that I didn’t really think about, but that’s lived in my memory ever since: the Mason-Dixon. Mason & Dixon’s line is a funny thing. When it was surveyed in 1763, it was used to settle disputes between the British colonies. For us, it’s the difference between college and pro ball; the difference between sweet tea and tea; and the difference between those who will wear white after Labor Day and those who won’t. Pretty simply, it’s something Northerners don’t much think about and Southerners don’t much cross. And it don’t matter where you stand, you’re on one side of it or the other.”

- the Old Try