Let them know how special they are with a Names Stories® art print. There’s a world of meaning and inspiration hidden in our names and Name Stories® artwork is a gift of affirmation to those who matter most. A person's name can shape how they perceive themselves; names also contribute to the formation of a person's identity. Kade’s narrative is a unique story full of hidden treasures that can instill a sense of pride in the past, belonging in the present, and purpose for the future. Names Stories® is not only a timeless keepsake of Kade’s name, but a thoughtful reminder of who Kade is: today, tomorrow, and always. Made-to-order in California, Florida and Oregon.
South Korea-based artist Seung-Hwan Oh creates some truly unusual portraits by unleashing little microbes and letting them eat away at his medium for
Debate on Television Advantages and Disadvantages: Let’s agree that ever since the development of television, the television has decided its way into our abode rooms and has become a piece of our lives. Searching for a house without a TV resembles searching for a difficult-to-find little item. Because of its notoriety, electronic gatherings are finding […]
It's National Johnny Appleseed Day! Let's start the day off right with a Little Golden Book about Johnny Appleseed. Help your little one dream big with a
“Just Eat Real Food.” Sounds simple enough, right? This mantra proudly repeated by many a “real foodie” these days is intended to highlight what the real food movement is all about—real food is good food. Healthy food. The only food you need. But, I think it also speaks to a problem I’ve encountered along...Read More »
Frances Fox Piven and Richard Cloward give a detailed account and analysis of the militant movement of unemployed American workers during the Great Depression, how it developed and how it was recuperated by the government through its own leaders.
Here at Sugru, we believe that we can change things through fixing. If we can double the life of our stuff, we’ll halve what goes to landfill. Listen up.
Let me guess! You are in your 20s. You were born somewhere in the 1990s. You lived in one of the small towns in India. Your pocket money while you were growing up was less than Rs. 10 per week. Well if I am right about all those points up there, I know a little more about you. Let us go back to our childhood and reminisce about the heavenly taste of our favorite sweets back then.
Let's talk about doge, but first let's talk about the late great David Foster Wallace, who thirteen years ago wrote a classic essay about modern English* entitled "Tense Present," which, realistically, is better than anything I will ever write, so I should maybe just point you at it and end this post here. But I won't. Not least because I strongly suspect that if DFW had not taken his own life five years ago, he would already have updated "Tense Present" for the modern era. He almost would have had to. It is instructive that his essay includes the phrase You don't (despite withering cultural pressure), have to use a computer, but you can't escape language. That may have been true, just, in 2001, but it is not true today. You cannot escape computers any more -- and that fact has affected language in a way which is, if you ask me, nothing short of revolutionary.
Sue Patterson shares what's wrong with hanging onto a little curriculum - when you'd like to full benefit of unschooling!