<P> In subsequent years, the poster was re-appropriated to promote feminism . Feminists saw in the image an embodiment of female empowerment . The "We" was understood to mean "We Women", uniting all women in a sisterhood fighting against gender inequality . This was very different from the poster's 1943 use to control employees and to discourage labor unrest . History professor Jeremiah Axelrod commented on the image's combination of femininity with the "masculine (almost macho) composition and body language ." </P> <P> Smithsonian magazine put the image on its cover in March 1994, to invite the viewer to read a featured article about wartime posters . The US Postal Service created a 33 ¢ stamp in February 1999 based on the image, with the added words "Women Support War Effort". A Westinghouse poster from 1943 was put on display at the National Museum of American History, part of the exhibit showing items from the 1930s and' 40s . </P> <P> In 1984, former war worker Geraldine Hoff Doyle came across an article in Modern Maturity magazine which showed a wartime photograph of a young woman working at a lathe, and she assumed that the photograph was taken of her in mid-to - late 1942 when she was working briefly in a factory . Ten years later, Doyle saw the "We Can Do It!" poster on the front of the Smithsonian magazine and assumed the poster was an image of herself . Without intending to profit from the connection, Doyle decided that the 1942 wartime photograph had inspired Miller to create the poster, making Doyle herself the model for the poster . Subsequently, Doyle was widely credited as the inspiration for Miller's poster . From an archive of Acme news photographs, Professor James J. Kimble obtained the original photographic print, including its yellowed caption identifying the woman as Naomi Parker . The photo is one of a series of photographs taken at Naval Air Station Alameda in California, showing Parker and her sister working at their war jobs during March 1942 . These images were published in various newspapers and magazines beginning in April 1942, during a time when Doyle was still attending high school in Michigan . In February 2015, Kimble interviewed the Parker sisters, now named Naomi Fern Fraley, 93, and her sister Ada Wyn Morford, 91, and found that they had known for five years about the incorrect identification of the photo, and had been rebuffed in their attempt to correct the historical record . Naomi Parker Fraley died age 96 on January 20, 2018 . </P> <P> Although many publications have repeated Doyle's unsupported assertion that the wartime photograph inspired Miller's poster, Westinghouse historian Charles A. Ruch, a Pittsburgh resident who had been friends with J. Howard Miller, said that Miller was not in the habit of working from photographs, but rather live models . However, the photograph of Naomi Parker did appear in the Pittsburgh Press on July 5, 1942, making it possible that Miller saw it as he was creating the poster . </P>

Yes the one who designed the house was (she her)