Tell Your Story with Silver and Charms {{& a Giveaway}}

O2 new baby

Happy weekend! Please allow me to introduce you to Tricia Jennings, who helps women create wearable, personal art with Origami Owl.

Origami Owl is a unique way to tell a story with a lovely locket. Tricia has me thinking Easter basket treasures for teen and tweens. These lockets can be personalized to touch a woman's (or a girl's) heart and capture for her any special occasion or sentiment.

Pictured above is a wonderful example of how a locket can be a window into a woman's world, celebrating the life of a new baby girl. As her family grows and interests expand, her locket's design possibilities can also expand by switching out charms for a new set of charms that can then be moved back and forth as desired, all at an affordable price point.

The mission of Origami Owl  is very clear:

To be a force for good;

To love, inspire, and motivate

women of all ages to raech the dreams and empowere them to make

a difference in the lives of others

When you wander into Tricia's online shop, you will be guided through the artistic process to create a unqigue, meaningful locket that will tell your story exactly how you choose to express it.  If you get stuck or you need alittle extra inspiration, Tricia is happy to help you choose the lockets, charms, tags, and dangles that best reflect your heart. .

You will have the opportunity to shop,  host an Online, Catalog, or In-real-life party,  or join the Itty Bitty Pretties Team as a Designer-in-Waiting. 

The Origami Owl party model of creating personalized high quality costume jewelry - on the spot - is the first of its kind among social selling businesses. The home party becomes more than just a social gathering amidst a backdrop of a sale going on - the jewelry creation becomes the focal point of the party as each person begins to create her own locket design.
AlternatePhiMuLocket

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Specifically, Tricia can offer readers here a fun, social, jewelry buying experience with many affordable lockets and hundreds of charms from which to choose. 

Personalized service from Tricia is available if you would like lockets assembled, packaged as gifts, and shipped directly to the gift recipient.

And here's a wonderful feature dear to my heart: Expandable Mother/Grandmother Charm necklaces that  have space for the extra children that are welcomed into a family that is open to life (no need to 
go buy a new Mommy/Grandmother Necklace when new baby comes along, just add an affordable  $5 charm to existing locket)

Tricia also offers a discount on baby charms for 5th child and beyond and discount on Angel Babies to remember our babies  already in Heaven.

From now until the end of June, 10% of the proceeds of sales will go to the St. Bryce Foundation, a missionary outreach foundation by Colleen Mitchell and her husband. Great things have been happening through this ministry and we're all happy to have another opportunity to support them.

{{Giveaway}}

Click through to Tricia's site and take a look around. Come back here and report on our ideas and inspirations. You will be enteredt to win a $ 75 credit towards purchase of Origami Owl through Tricia.

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The winner of the giveaway is Kristen! Kristen said...

Kristen said...

The first person I thought of when I was looking over the site, was a wife of a teacher at our children's school that was just diagnosed with Breast Cancer. We send our children to a small Catholic School and everyone is like family. It would be awesome for the kids to design a special necklace for her. I saw the awareness charm for breast cancer and hope and faith and thought of her. What a great idea for meaningful and personalized gifts!

 

There's Nothing Like a Library

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When I was little, the library was a big part of every day life. We moved around a lot, but I can still see the library in every town where we lived. Each of those buildings gave structure to my formation. Every dusty shelf, every old table, that musty, ivy covered smell of the library on Charleston Air Force Base still stand sharp in my  mind. I was there during the seventh and eighth grade. My father challenged me to read every book in the young adult section. I rose to the challenge. Every single volume.

 

When the three big boys were little, I took them faithfully to the library in our hometown, the same library where Mike’s mom found me the morning after he and I had had an epic argument during college. She spotted my car in the parking lot, went inside, offered her undiluted perspective, and changed the course of my life. In the library. It was also in that library that I first read about homeschooling.

 

When we moved west to our new hometown, the library was about 40 minutes away. I wasn’t daunted. I packed those little boys and my pregnant belly and we went to the sweet, beautiful library in Purcelville. My dear friend Leah was the manager there, so library day was a chance for me to visit a little and get a book fix. After that baby arrived though, and our homeschool co-op was in the opposite direction of the library, more often than not, I just called Leah with a list and she brought me books.

 

A little while later, a library opened a bit closer. I was game to pack five kids (or was it six by then?) into the car for the half hour ride to the library. The first day there, as I was trying to keep everybody still and quiet in the checkout line, Librarian One sighed loudly to Librarian Two, “Now we are going to have all these people from South Riding at this branch. We don’t have a circulation to support that.” I have no idea if it was coincidence or if she knew I was from South Riding. I just know we never returned.

 

And Amazon has been our friend (and our nemesis) ever since. We have a formidable home library.

 

Late last month, a new library opened five minutes from my house. A beautiful, amazing new library. And we were there. Oh, were we there!

 

I got a sneak preview before the opening, met my friend Megan there for a tour for educators. We might have gotten lost for a few minutes back in the cookbooks.

 

The children counted down the days until it was their turn. We began our day at home with a thorough reading of B is for Bookworm, every detail, sidebar, and rabbit trail was carefully considered. I discussed the nuances of the library and quizzed my kids to be sure they knew what they were doing and how it all worked.

 

They were blown away.

 

This library is astonishing! Every book in the library is brand new. All those unbroken spines! The children’s section alone is larger than that library where people from my town are not welcome. There is a dedicated Teen Room (no adults allowed??), a quiet room (because the rest of the library isn’t expected to be quiet), banks of computers, an eating area, and super cool self-checkout stations. Set in the wetlands, the outdoor theme has been brought inside, so the interior flows beautifully into the huge picture windows and back to the nature outdoors. We’ve been there four times in the last two weeks. Because we can.

 

After spending a couple hours at the library the first time, Nicholas reluctantly walked with me to the car. “I think I know what I want to be when I grow up. A librarian. I just want to stay here all day. Every day.” 

 

Fast. Pray. Give.

Fast

Today, remember that you are expecting someone very important for dinner toinght. With your children, plan your husband's homecoming as if you were welcoming a king back to his castle.

Pray

"Love consumes us only in the measure of our self-surrender" (St. Therese of Lisieux)

Give

"You can do nothing with children unless you win their confidence and love...by breaking through all the hindrances that keep them at a distance. We muct accomodate ourselves to their tastes..." (St. John Bosco). Do something you children want you to do with them today.

needle & thREAD

Sorry this is so late! We had an unexpectedly long morning at the orthodontist and now i'm dashing out the door (also unexpecedly) to gather Mike up from the airport (hooray!).

So, yesterday was a whole lot of this:

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And some of this (Easter dresses, at last):

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I've been listening to Daring Greatly. I can't say enough good things about this book and since I have to leave now, I can't really say any things. So, that review will have to wait until next week.

Leave me a note and let me know what you're stitching and reading!