The Ameriquins™


Heroes. Symbols. Stories That Still Matter.

250 Years. 13 Characters. One American Identity.

The Ameriquins™ are more than mascots.

They’re icons forged from truth, resilience, and the relentless spirit of a people who never gave up.

Each one tells a story.

Together, they stand for something bigger than all of us.

Portrait of the seven core Ameriquins™ standing together, representing everyday American strength, faith, and resilience, including a preacher, welder, patriot, justice advocate, digital rebel, and military veteran.

What Is an Ameriquin™?


An Ameriquin™ is a symbolic American — not a statue, not a celebrity, and definitely not a politician.

They’re fictional characters built from real values, real struggles, and the kind of grit history tends to forget.

They don’t whine.

They don’t quit.

And they sure don’t apologize for being American.

Each of the 13 characters represents part of our shared heritage — farmers, fighters, tradesmen, rebels, writers, and builders.

Portrait of Valentina Cruz, young Latina woman in bomber jacket holding a small American flag, standing proudly before a faded flag backdrop.

Valentina Cruz

Daughter of two worlds. Defender of one.

Portrait of Everett Boone, elderly white American man in suspenders and bow tie holding a Bible and Constitution, symbolizing wisdom, faith, and patriotism.

Everett Boone

The voice of reason in unreasonable times.

Portrait of Jackie Ridge, middle-aged Black woman in denim jacket with American flag patch, arms crossed, symbolizing resilience and working-class strength.

Jackie Ridge

Strong, sharp, and unbothered.

Portrait of Rev. Gramps Booker, elderly Black man in collar and blazer, holding the Holy Bible with gentle strength and soulful eyes.

Rev. Gramps Booker

Light keeper of the American soul.

Portrait of Mason Reyes, young Latino man in hoodie and headphones, carrying a military radio pack and scanning the horizon with intensity.

Mason ‘Rex’ Reyes

The signal in the noise.

Portrait of Darla Knox, middle-aged white woman in work gloves and oil-stained coveralls, holding an American flag, with quiet pride.

Darla Knox

Fueling the fire of American grit.

Portrait of Keisha Tormund, professional Black woman in charcoal blazer with justice pin and case files, standing with calm conviction.

Keisha Tormund

Defender of families and truth.

 

Illustration of Calen Park, a young Asian-American man with glasses, smiling warmly. He wears a patterned blue shirt over a graphic tee featuring the Ameriquin Eagle and the word “AMERIQUIN.”

Calen Park


Clarity beats chaos. Every single time.

A cartoon-style digital illustration of Grace Lin, a stylish, Americanized woman of Chinese descent in her mid-30s. She wears a blue T-shirt with the word "Ameriquin" printed on it and holds a confident expression.

Grace Lin 

Tradition isn’t a cage. It’s a launchpad.

Illustration of Kenji Nakamura, a Japanese-American man with short-cropped black hair, wearing a dark jacket over a red Ameriquin Eagle T-shirt.

Kenji Nakamura


Build it like it matters—because it does.

Illustration of Nina Redbird, a Native American woman wearing traditional beaded jewelry and a “FREEDQUIN” T-shirt with a cartoon eagle. She has long dark hair and a warm, confident smile.

Nina Redbird

 

My ancestors didn’t survive for me to stay silent.

Illustration of June P. Maddox, a smiling woman with shoulder-length chestnut hair, green eyes behind black glasses, and gold earrings. She wears a navy shirt featuring a brown-winged cartoon eagle and the word “AMERIQUIN.”

June P. Maddox

The Ameriquin standard-setter—graceful grit in motion.

Illustrated wooden eagle mascot for the Ameriquins™ puzzle series, used in Wood Shoppe 2.0’s “Name the Eagle” contest.

The Ameriquin Eagle™

When the stars fall silent, I speak for them all.

The Seal. The Standard. The Story.

Every Ameriquin™ product bears the Eagle Seal — a mark of strength, honor, and unity.

Whether you wear it, display it, or pass it down, it means something.

In a divided culture, the Ameriquins™ remind us we’re not here to be average.

We’re here to build.

 

 

 

Wood Shoppe 2.0 Logo

Why We Created The Ameriquins™


The Ameriquins™ were born out of frustration — and faith.

We’re tired of being told what we’re allowed to celebrate, who we’re allowed to believe in, and what history we’re allowed to remember.

These characters are for the forgotten middle.

The hard-working families.

The tough old birds.

The quiet patriots.

The fighters, the farmers, the freedom-lovers.

They’re not political.

They’re principled. And they’re ours.

They Don’t Just Represent Us. They Are Us.


Become part of something bigger than clickbait and headlines.

Add an Ameriquin™ to your desk, your wall, or your family legacy.