I am a young american purple haired woman learning to code and this project was me riding the meme because I really enjoyed the aesthetic and design of the character and how it has been represented as a disaffected younger millenial in the current world. I would describe myslef as a techno-futurist and libertarian, which is a fancy way of saying I think technology should move faster, people should be freer, and the existing political menu has very little to offer which is why I was inspired by the works of others with the character Amelia and wanted to use this project as a test of my skills and a proof of concept that I could build an end to end full stack project after two years of learning coding from scratch and working with AI. I had a lot of fun with the Amelia meme while building this site and I hope you enjoy it and get a laugh from the content. Yes its AI sloptastic but real human work did go into refining the work that came out of the machine.
I would like to stay anonymous because the spotlight belongs on Amelia. Memes work because they're bigger than any one person. The moment a meme becomes about its maker, it stops being a meme.
So: no name, no face, no socials. Just the work. Just Amelia. Welcome to the resistance!
Incase you havent seen the meme yet or don't know the character, Amelia is a character from the Pathways game made part of the British government as an antagonist in an anti-radicalization videogame. The message missed the mark by a mile and Amelia was adopted by a very sympathetic internet tired of current political messaging and turned into the hero for free speech, national pride and independent thought. She has been brought to life throug the use of AI and has gone viral in a short window of time bringing many people who feel friction with the current state of the world together through a common banner of resistance against government overreach and protection of personal freedoms. This site is designed to celebrate the meme without the meanness, lean into the fun without the fringe, and keep Amelia alive as what she really became: a mascot for free expression in a world that's gotten a little too comfortable telling people what they're allowed to think.
The art comes as printable, high-resolution PDFs. Pricing varies by item and you can choose what to pay if you feel the work is worth more to you — some pieces are a couple of dollars, others a little more depending on size, complexity, and what's included. The fees keep the site running, the artist working, and the next batch of designs coming. No subscriptions, no upsells, no nonsense. You buy a thing, you own a thing.
For each design, you can choose your Amelia:
The backgrounds are intentional collages — fragments of iconic locations from each country, mashed together rather than reproduced. That's a deliberate artistic choice. Real cities have real residents and real businesses, and we'd rather not stick anyone's pub or shopfront behind a meme. The collage approach gives each piece a sense of place without tying it to anywhere specific.
More designs go up regularly. If a meme moves fast, the art has to keep up.
Every image on this site was made with AI, and I'm not going to pretend otherwise. But "made with AI" doesn't mean "typed three words and hit go."
The artist behind these pieces spends real time on each one — writing detailed prompts, generating dozens of versions, picking what works, throwing out what doesn't, and then opening the result in an editor to clean up pixels by hand. Fingers that came out wrong. Backgrounds that needed sharpening. Details the model fumbled. Anyone who's actually tried to make something good with these tools knows that the work is in the iteration, not the click.
The designs themselves draw from the visual language that made Amelia resonate in the first place: the goth-girl archetype, the doomer-girl-turned-defiant, the anime-style portraiture that's been a staple of online culture for two decades. Some pieces nod to British iconography — Big Ben, the Union Jack, a proper pint — because that's where Amelia comes from and that's part of her charm. Others keep things simple: just her, against a clean background, looking like she's about to say something you weren't expecting.
A particularly heavy influence on this project is Skyebrows' "A Million Amelias" — the AI-generated music video that took Amelia from "viral character" to genuine cultural moment. It's funny, it's chaotic, it's a love letter and a warning shot at the same time, and it's basically the gold standard for what AI tools can do in the hands of someone who actually cares about the craft. A lot of the energy on this site — the playful patriotism, the affectionate irreverence, the willingness to lean into the joke — comes directly from watching what Skyebrows pulled off and trying to honor that spirit in still images.
We picked designs that felt approachable rather than aggressive. Amelia with attitude, not Amelia with a grievance.
Thanks for being here. Grab something, share something, say something. That's the whole idea.