Journal
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Oh, purr.
Meow, right? Our stylish cat notecards are, dare we say, purrrrrfect?
For a list of nearly 85 retailers and places where you can purchase Design With Heart products, visit www.designwithheart.com/where-to-buy/
Or, if you wish to place a retail or wholesale order, just visit our website at www.DesignWithHeart.com
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Design Trend: Marble Everything
We can all agree that marble is nothing new. Ancient Greeks were pretty much fascinated by it, and built majestic structures that stand to this day. The fact that modern graphic designers are bringing marble back is, however, quite fascinating. It’s been around us for centuries, but now we’re starting to see it being used as an inspiring texture in almost every single design field, including fashion design, interior design, print desing and even web design.Blending a little bit of glam with a little boho, raw gems and rocks such as gilt agate, marble and geodes are popping up in stylish stationery across the globe. At Design With Heart, we’re delighted to be right on trend! Our super chic geometric marble designs are available as notecards, boxed card sets and art prints.
Trending: Gentle Time-Out
According to Interior Design & Lifestyle trend expert, Gudy Herder, the next trend to watch can be thought of in terms of a “Gentle Time Out.”“With its restrained colours, natural materials and simple forms, the style world of ‘gentle time-out’ creates a retreat, a place to relax. The trend radiates an all-pervasive tranquillity and generates a light and relaxed mood whereby everything is balanced, nothing stands out – everything in this unostentatious and serene trend is in tune. The interaction of color, light and shade calms the senses at the same time as providing new energy. The emphasis in ‘gentle time-out’ is on fine pastel shades: gentle nude, rose quartz and mint form a harmonious series of colours. They go perfectly with natural shades, from ivory, via biscuit, to stone whereby chrome sets a cool accent. The light and restrained colors underscore the elegant and fine materials, as well as the haptic surfaces. Genuine wood, cork, marble and concrete are combined with suede, matt glass and brushed metal to create both haptic and visual stimuli. Besides natural wood or stone graining, the patterns include abstract designs, sequences and geometric nuances.”
For a list of nearly 85 retailers and places where you can purchase Design With Heart products, visit www.designwithheart.com/where-to-buy/
Or, if you wish to place a retail or wholesale order, just visit our website at www.DesignWithHeart.com
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Cheers! It’s Wine Wednesday!
Happy Wine Wednesday. Our witty wine greeting cards will instantly turn any bottle of wine or bubbly into the toast of the town.
For a list of nearly 85 retailers and places where you can purchase Design With Heart products, visit www.designwithheart.com/where-to-buy/
For businesses looking to place a wholesale order, please visit our award-winning website at Design With Heart.
Or, if you wish to place a retail order, just visit our website at www.DesignWithHeart.com
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Who has a July Birthday?
If you’re a summer baby, You’re in good company! There are more babies born in the summer in America than any other season. But just because everyone has them doesn’t mean they should be ordinary. We celebrate birthdays with a dash of panache.
For a list of over 80 retailers and places where you can purchase Design With Heart products, visit www.designwithheart.com/where-to-buy/ Or, if you wish to place a retail order, just visit our website at www.DesignWithHeart.com
For businesses looking to place a wholesale order, please visit our award-winning website at Design With Heart.
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Celebrating June 26th. A lot can happen in a year.
We’ve Had 365 Days of Marriage Equality
By Dave Holmes – Esquire Magazine
A lot can happen in a year.
On June 26, 2014—one year before the Obergefell v. Hodges decision—marriage was an option for same-sex couples in twenty states. Twenty-eight states had constitutional amendments banning marriage equality. If you were married in Massachusetts and you had to move to Michigan, by the time you got there, you’d be roommates. In California, as in many states, the rules changed from county to county; you could be next of kin on one corner and strangers when you crossed the street.
On June 26, 2015, we turned on the news at 10:00 a.m. at to see interns spilling out of the courthouse—sprinting like Tom Cruise in every Tom Cruise movie—to deliver the Supreme Court’s Obergefell ruling to waiting reporters.
We won.
Marriage equality was the law of the land. All of it. We felt relief. Joy. And a feeling whose name gets thrown around a lot in LGBT circles: pride.
If same-sex marriage was a thing that seemed inevitable, it also seemed unreachable, at least in our lifetimes. We knew we’d have a state here and a state there, a patchwork of different rights and titles across the country. But full, coast-to-coast marriage equality? In a country whose last president supported a constitutional amendment to ban it? Preposterous.
We won. The celebration lasted all weekend, and then some. The White House was lit up in the colors of the rainbow flag. Brands—beers, breakfast cereals, the late Colonel Sanders—seemed determined to outgay one another. In the real world, people voiced their support for the decision, without the “…but I’m not gay myself” disclaimer I was so used to hearing; if the jubilation made a straight person appear gay to a passing stranger, who could possibly care? We were equal.
We won, and we were one.
I remember taking a moment to savor the victory, to think about the generations of American kids who would grow up reading about same-sex marriage bans the way mine did about Jim Crow. I thought about the gay kids in that generation who would have the chance to grow up feeling fully equal. I thought about all of us who’d been fighting this fight on the streets and in courthouses and at Thanksgiving dinner tables for decades, and our younger counterparts—being born that very day—who wouldn’t believe we ever had to.
And then, because it was June 2015, I got back to work and wrote another post about Donald Trump’s latest gaffe and how it surely signaled the end of his campaign.
A lot can happen in a year.
Two weeks shy of the one-year anniversary of the ruling, we watched the horrific news come in from Orlando. A mentally unstable person—or a terrorist, or a possibly closeted gay man, or maybe all three of those things—got his hands on a semi-automatic rifle and a Glock, and he slaughtered dozens of LGBT people. Hours later, Los Angeles police stopped a man in a car stocked with explosive chemicals and weapons, on his way to the Los Angeles Pride Festival. In one brutal morning, the security and stability we were starting to feel were torn away.
What we began to suspect in the last year became absolutely clear: the fight for our freedom is just beginning.
After Obergefell, we got to work—setting dates for weddings that were decades overdue or coming up with new excuses for why we didn’t plan to get married ourselves or—and we ask your forgiveness here—filming the flash-mob surprise-proposal videos we’d then post on YouTube. We had a lot of catching up to do.
So did the people who oppose us, not all of whom carry assault rifles. They clocked in, and they worked overtime. Claiming, as then-viable GOP presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee did, that Obergefell would effectively make Christianity illegal. Saying with conviction that the most essential element of freedom is that cakes only be made for people whose private behavior aligns with the baker’s religious beliefs. Invoking the specter of cross-dressing pedophiles to strip cities of their LGBT anti-discrimination laws.
Religious-freedom proposals are creeping their way across the country, state by state, a photo negative of the slow progress marriage equality made in the last fifteen years. Our safe spaces, our bars and dance clubs and parades, feel at least for the moment like risky places to be. Whether this is a death spasm or the beginning of a longer, larger struggle, this much is clear: we have a fight on our hands.
So where are we now, one year later? After a year that gave us marriage equality and the worst mass shooting in modern American history? New freedoms for LGBT families and dozens of potential new state bills to roll them back? Barack Obama on the cover of Out and three GOP presidential hopefuls speaking at a “Kill the Gays” rally?
In One Year Out, we’re looking at the lives of LGBT people in 2016. We’re looking at gay newlyweds, gay parents, gay couples who have no interest in getting married. At people in the Black Lives Matter and Mormon communities. In the world of hip-hop, where use of the word faggot is still rampant. In stand-up comedy, in sports, and in weddings in all fifty states.
The struggle isn’t over. Culture never evolves in a straight line. A lot will happen in the years to come. But visibility is the key to victory. We win when we show our faces and tell our stories.
So this is where we stand, together, today. One year out.