Sunday, December 21, 2008

Here’s My Card! - Making your own Christmas cards for a truly personal touch


By Joyce Hickey

If It weren’t for the fact that I'm not a glittery sort of person, it would be right to call me a magpie. I collect everything: scraps of paper; ribbons; boxes; bits of twine; printed cellophane from bouquets; coloured tissue; calendars; anything that I can envisage using in something else. Shelves lean under boxes labelled with their contents: matt ribbons; gold flower bits; Christmas sparkles; beads; gold paper; silver raffia. An engineer's map cabinet stores large sheets of handmade paper, each drawer named according to its contents: Light Years holds tissue paper; Auntie Estie holds blue and green (she always said they couldn't be seen, except with something in between); Firestarter is the home of yellow and gold, orange and red.

I've always made collages and as a child was usually found at the kitchen table covered with bits and scraps and stuck together with Dad's glue (I was particularly partial to Copydex). Later, I started making Christmas cards for friends who were well used to my propensity for puns - one year it was a pair of sheep under a starlit sky (Merry Christmas two ewe), the next a snowman with a parcel (Snow time - like the present?).

Then the paper fetish really started to fester and sharing a house with like-minded "make-and-do" friends led to many productive evenings in two-channel land. (One of them got married in Tasmania and imagine our delight when, arriving at the house on the eve of the wedding, we were hauled out of the camper van and presented with a box of treasures with which to make the next day's place cards.)

In the days when I didn't realise how much time I had, I used to sell my cards to colleagues, friends, shops and galleries. Now, apart from special occasion and baby cards, most of my "making and doing" is made and done by my two small sons who love their scissors, paper, glue - but know better than to venture within a ruler's length of my shelves. And while they slept I made these cards.

The first, in traditional Christmassy colours, combines matt gold paper from I don't know where with thick green, bamboo-ridged paper hauled home from India dotted with tiny blobs of gold sealing wax. Curiosity almost singed the cat, which led to the scratchy bit towards the top of the tree but adds to the handmade feel (never homemade, please, that's for cakes and jam).
The more modern card uses purple Thai paper bought in Daintree on Camden Street for our wedding invitations in 1999, as well as silver spotty paper I got in Ikea for my friend's wedding invitations in 2002, and the concertina is the last scrap of a roll of Christmas wrapping paper from the Pier. I always use these Italian-made Mediovalis cards from Daintree; I love the deckle edge and the off-white colour.

Maybe, when I have more time, normal card-making activity will resume. But in the meantime I will increase, reuse, recycle every scrap. And make sparkly reindeer with two deliciously sticky little boys.

Click Here to Discover How to Become a Craft Store Owner

By Joyce Hickey for the Irish Times

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Hearth and Soul - Decorating Your Home For Christmas


Well I have finally finished decorating the house for Christmas and can now relax with what I believe is a job well done. But it’s easy when you know how – and I can’t take all the credit – here are some top tips from interior decorator guru, Linda Fornam, for decorating your home for Christmas.

When decorating your home for Christmas, making your fireplace a focal point is the perfect way to add some traditional festive charm. "Remember, the mantelpiece is situated at eye level," says interior decorator, Linda Fornam. "It is the first place your eye will be drawn to when entering a room. It speaks volumes about you and the personality of your home, and needs to be dressed accordingly."

If you are using a real Christmas tree, Linda suggests introducing greenery to your mantelpiece to add a touch of nature to your theme. Traditional holly, real mistletoe and cuttings from any shrubs from your garden arranged into garlands across the mantelpiece always create a gorgeous Christmas look. Add a beautiful glow by intertwining the garlands with tiny white fairy lights, or by introducing some pillar candles (being careful of where you place them, of course) or lanterns.

Stockings hung on the mantelpiece, even if there are no children in the house, provide a classic yuletide look.

Click Here to Discover How to Become an Interior Decorator

Friday, December 19, 2008

Couple Lose Home Via Facebook



An attorney in Australia has used the popular networking website Facebook to notify a couple that they lost their home after defaulting on a loan.

The Australian Capital Territory Supreme Court last Friday approved lawyer Mark McCormack's application to use Facebook to serve the legally binding documents after several failed attempts to contact the couple at the house and by email.

Australian courts have given permission in the past for people to be served via email and text messages when it was not possible to serve them in person.

The lender's application to take back the house in the capital, Canberra, was approved on October 3 after the couple failed to appear in court. The lender was then required to serve the so-called default judgment on the couple before it could seize the property.

"It's somewhat novel, however we do see it as a valid method of bringing the matter to the attention of the defendant," said McCormack, who represents a mortgage lender.

Cornwell is on the case


Patricia Cornwell

In trying times, one doesn't instinctively turn to Patricia Cornwell. Optimism doesn't tend to hang out much among serial killers and murdered women.

But the multimillionaire creator of forensic pathologist Kay Scarpetta is adamant her new novel, Scarpetta, is intended to cheer everybody up. 'It's a celebratory book and it couldn't come at a better time; people are pretty gloomy these days,' she says.

'It's been nearly 20 years since Postmortem [her debut novel, published in 1990] and I owed it to Scarpetta to honour her life.'

Like many authors, Cornwell sometimes talks about her literary creation as if she is real. There's no doubt Scarpetta's stomach-turning encounters with mutilated bodies have caught the imagination of millions – an avenging angel with a scalpel devoted to fighting evil who could have come straight from George W Bush's dreams if Cornwell hadn't recently switched allegiance to the Democrats.

Tracking people through cyberspace is a massive challenge. Everyone can be a victim. This time, though, fans will be relieved to know that Scarpetta is moving on from the shock attempted rape that ended last novel Book Of The Dead and is now married to psychologist Benton Wesley. 'People have said for years that they wish she could be happy,' she says.

'Thing is, people aren't happy in crime fiction. But I had her make this commitment because I wanted this book to be all about her.' There's certainly a warmer tone to the 16th Scarpetta novel – not least since the pathologist has abandoned the morgue for the better-heated environs of a psychiatry ward where a murder suspect called Oscar Bane insists on confiding only in her.

It also tackles one of Cornwall's favourite subjects – cyber crime – as Scarpetta, newly a TV personality, becomes the target of attacks on a gossip website.
'There's no way I can write about modern crime and not talk about the net,' says Cornwell, who prides herself on bringing a documentary precision to her heavily researched subjects. 'Tracking people through cyberspace is a massive challenge. Everyone can be a victim: I've been stalked on the net. You don't know what you're dealing with.'

This new criminal twilight also brought new challenges to Cornwell the novelist: previously, her books had inhabited a moral world where good and bad are as rigidly distinguishable as black and white. Now danger and fear can lurk anywhere, inside the home and out. 'Yes!' she agrees. 'There's an increasing emphasis on spying on people in the US, for example, with the Patriot Act. People aren't sure what's real.
The net breeds this ambiguity, and this is embodied in Oscar Bane – is he a crackpot, a killer or is someone really doing something awful to him?'

Cornwell's own life is often described as being as turbulent as her fiction. A lesbian affair with a married FBI agent became headline news in 1996 when the husband was charged with the attempted murder of his wife. She also spent a fortune defending her theory that Walter Sickert was Jack the Ripper – and took out newspaper ads denying she was obsessed.

Three years ago, however, she married her girlfriend. It can be no coincidence that Scarpetta is also married: does she consider the character her alter ego? 'Not really,' Cornwell responds. 'Actually, she's created me as much as I've created her. If you spend your time following criminal investigations, then you have to ponder weighty subjects and that changes you.'

So what next for Scarpetta? 'I'm going to take things in a whole new direction,' she says. 'It got pretty stark in my last few books; even I'm tired of it.'

Scarpetta (Kay Scarpetta) is out now.

Friday, December 5, 2008

The Secret Scripture By Sebastian Barry



Faber & Faber

Sebastian Barry made the Booker shortlist for this follow-up to World War 1 saga ‘A long, Long Way’. I loved this new work which is a deeply lyrical and engaging account of 100-year-old Roseanne Clear, a patient in a Roscommon mental hospital, who puts pen to paper and recounts her eventful life in the aftermath of the Irish Civil War. Recommended.

New Nokia Home Control Centre




How about this clever little item – a new phone has been developed that allows you to use your phone to interact with equipment at home, no matter where you are. The Nokia Home Control Centre is a wireless router that allows the user to text their house and ‘tell it what to do’, such as turning on or off the lights, or remotely controlling the alarm system. The centre also allows the user to preset conditions in a house, such as adjusting the temperature or activating the air conditioning. It can also recognise a cold snap and kick start the heating.

Perfect for all you moms out and about on these cold winter nights - you can turn the heat on before you get home!

For other great phones check out Best Smart Phones for Business Review.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Face Away Buggies ‘Stressful’ For Babies


Children made to face away from their carers are more likely to end up anxious adults, the first ever study on the effects of buggies has revealed.

The away-facing babies in the research were "emotionally impoverished", laughed less, talked less and suffered more stress than those facing their parent.

Almost 3,000 parent-infant pairs were studied as part of the research by Dundee University for the Talk To Your Baby early language campaign of the National Literacy Trust.

In one experiment, 20 babies were pushed for a mile, half the journey spent in an away-facing buggy and the other in a toward-facing one.

A quarter of parents using face-to-face buggies talked to their baby - more than twice as many as those using away-facing buggies.

Babies facing towards the buggy-pusher enjoyed a reduced heart rate and were twice as likely to fall asleep.

Only one baby in the group of 20 laughed during the away-facing journey, while half laughed during the face-to-face journey.

Dr Suzanne Zeedyk, from Dundee University's School of Psychology, said: "If babies are spending significant amounts of time in a baby buggy, that undermines their ability to communicate easily with their parent.

"Our data suggests that for many babies today, life in a buggy is emotionally impoverished and possibly stressful. Stressed babies grow into anxious adults."

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Lynsey Thomas: Avoiding The Office Gossip


I was the office weirdo for not wanting to share my entire life, but now I have the freedom of privacy.

If I have discovered one thing about working from home over the last four years, it is that it is definitely easier to keep your private life private. When I was working in an office I had to use survival techniques such as loitering in a meeting room, toilet or corridor to take any personal calls. Sometimes I even went as far as the duck-under-desk-with-mobile-in-hand routine - because, as we all know, no one can hear you down there.

Personal calls in the office create disproportionate stress. Usually the caller is asking a simple question, such as "What do you want for tea?" or "Where shall we meet tonight?" but somehow we believe that the answers "steak and kidney pie" and "The Dog and Duck" will give the game away and that all our colleagues will jump to the conclusion that we have done no work for the entire day.

So, instead of swiftly answering said question, finishing the call and turning back to our PCs, we concoct ridiculous codes to convey messages to our loved ones, codes that the sharpest of minds could never crack. So, the dinnertime response becomes "That favoured product that is frequently purchased on a Thursday", while The Dog and Duck is replaced by "Our meeting shall be held at the venue which allows easiest access to all the vendors who will be in attendance". Ridiculous, I know, but true.

Reading any sort of non-work-related literature between 9am and 5pm is also definitely overstepping the mark, and don't even think about looking at your holiday snaps in your lunchbreak. A former colleague of mine used to sell cosmetics in her spare time and the women of the office used to gather in the toilet after work to study her catalogue. Quite why they had to convene in the toilet is beyond me but somehow it seemed necessary.

Other annoying office-personal life crossovers relate to extra curricular activities; have you ever tried to get changed at work before going on a night out? The natural assumption of anyone witnessing someone changing their attire at 5pm will be that they are off on a "hot date", and said individual will be subjected to 20 minutes of "friendly banter" and "harmless ribbing". If you are actually heading off on a hot date then it's safe to assume that your confidence will be shot to bits after this hungry pack have finished with you. When I was young, free and single, I distinctly remember my love life being of great amusement to everyone and it was definitely a sporting event to ply me with copious amounts of alcohol before sending me out to meet some poor unsuspecting male on a Friday night.

If you go shopping at lunchtime then you will need to show off your purchases to the entire team. Haircuts will be judged - as will your weight. Marriages, divorces, deaths and births are fair game. If you are a private person by nature then it's best to assume that you will be the office weirdo for not wanting to share the details of your entire life with what pretty much amounts to a bunch of strangers.

Nowadays, of course, I refrain from convening in toilets and getting drunk before dinner, but I also enjoy the freedom of working from home. It is much easier to phone the bank or book a doctor's appointment these days and doesn't affect my work at all. Somehow the autonomy of home working makes me believe that I really can (and do) manage my own time, and not having that office feeling of being watched over like a child also makes me a lot more confident.

In fact, I like my current circumstances so much that I rather minxingly enjoy calling my husband at work and trying to get him to tell me that he loves me. Rest assured, he "concurs with my understanding of the current arrangement".

Article by Lynsey Thomas The Guardian


Thursday, November 6, 2008

Work From Home Mom Puts Baby In The Picture



EVEN THE most organised women find themselves under pressure following the birth of their first child. Jane O'Neill's first child, Molly, was born in 2003 and immediately presents started arriving from family and friends in her home country of England. She was also overwhelmed by the generosity of her husband Shane's family.

"Presents came in for months and months. Not only did I receive gifts from friends and family, but also people whom I didn't even know. One of my mum's tennis friends knitted a beautiful cardigan, it was just amazing the kindness and generosity of people."

O'Neill worked in events management for the International Rugby Board (IRB) prior to Molly's birth. By nature an organised person, her mind immediately switched to thanking friends and family for their gifts.

In between feeds and nappy changes and trying to find time to have a shower, Jane O'Neill set about looking for personalised baby cards on which she could express her gratitude for the presents she had received.

O'Neill, who lives in Firhouse, went online trying to find a personalised baby company that would incorporate her daughter's picture into the greeting, but she found very little of note on offer.
So she and her husband Shane bought a digital camera and made the cards themselves.

"We wanted to make this card very personal to show our gratitude, and thought it would be great if we had a picture of our new little girl on the card.

"Several hours and clicks later with our newly bought digital print camera we finally had our picture. Molly was five weeks old, and we had propped her up on the sofa surrounded by teddies and a blanket. It was a lovely picture and we felt very proud of our darling daughter, as most new parents do."

O'Neill sent the card to friends and family, and the response she received from them was extremely positive.

Recipients said the picture of Molly brought the card to life and it meant that more distant relatives who might not meet her for some time in person were able to see her little face peering out of the card.

Relatives made the effort to phone O'Neill to talk about the card, and she was so amazed at the feedback that she decided to set up her own service. A new business idea was conceived and http://www.babycards.ie/ was launched in 2004.

As a new mother, O'Neill was finding time very precious so she made sure the website was quick and easy to use.

Customers create their own cards online by selecting a design from the templates provided, upload their photo and select the image print area using a cropping tool. They can then view an instant online proof of the card. Cards are then produced in Dublin and posted out.

O'Neill went to work in the business part-time after her maternity leave, and spent much of this period researching new products and developing the website.

In June 2005 O'Neill's second child, Jack, was born and the website took a back seat for a while.
O'Neill enjoyed her work and was keen to return on a part-time basis after her maternity leave on her second child. However, she set up a separate office from her husband and became a work-at-home mother to avoid the six-mile commute from Firhouse to Harold's Cross.

The mother of two says she thoroughly enjoyed working in events management at the IRB. She had come to Ireland with a sports degree and had a great time working in a relatively new field here.

However, when she had her daughter she experienced a "dramatic change in life" and felt the need for a new career. Since then she has never had a moment's regret at giving up her office life.

"While it has been busy bringing up two young children [Molly now aged 4½ and Jack nearly 3] and starting a new business, it has been very rewarding. Getting rid of the commute made life much easier.

"If Jack is sick one day I can make it up another day. You don't have to feel guilty. I enjoyed my work in events management, but time is so precious when you have children. I am so glad to be able to do this."

O'Neill says she is especially proud of having a product of her own. She also enjoys making life a little easier for new parents who are struggling to keep up with their little one's routines.
"When a parent sends out the cards, they feel organised and on top of things. It has been brilliant to produce a product that other mums and dads can benefit from. Once you take the leap, you can't go back. I never imagined I would get involved in anything like this," she says.


Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Mom of Five Turns Model at 58


Dublin woman announced as the winner of the Dove Pro Age – Face of Ireland competition with Dunnes Stores

Following a national hunt across Ireland, Dubliner Breid Morris has been chosen to be the new Face of Dove Pro Age. Breid, age 58, from Portmarnock was selected from over 1,500 entries, to front a new ad campaign by Dove Pro Age later this year.

A mother of five, Breid stood out from the rest of the entries because of her natural beauty and positive approach to aging. The panel of judges included former model and beauty journalist Laura Bermingham, model scouts from 1st Option and representatives from Unilever Ireland.
Laura Bermingham explained her choice: “Breid is a true classic beauty and she radiates confidence which is so rare in women of her age who spend their whole lives trying to look like they did in their 30s. Dove Pro Age encourages women to embrace their age as they enter the best years of their lives and for us judges; Breid was a true representation of this.”
On receiving her new title, Breid Morris said “I am truly honoured and delighted to be chosen as the new Face of Dove Pro Age. I have always dreamed of a career on stage but never imagined that now, at nearly 59, it would finally come true!”

Runners-up were Bernadette Riley, 46 from Terenure and Mary Mooney, 58 from Cobh, Co Cork. Mary was nominated by her daughter having survived breast cancer six years ago. Now back to full health, she looks and feels amazing.
In addition to appearing in the ads, Breid has also won a one year modelling contract with 1st Option Models in Dublin, one year’s supply of Dove Pro Age products and a trip to the Dove Spa in London with her friend plus spending money.

Dove believes there is something to be said about women who look great, but also look their age. Through Pro Age, Dove seeks to inspire more women who are entering what could be the most exciting stage of their lives to see the potential that lies within their skin and themselves.
Beauty has no age limit!

Breid pictured with Laura Birmingham below:

Saturday, November 1, 2008

How To Avoid The Flu



Well it's certainly a lot colder where I am, and its getting near that time again for winter colds and flu. I thought this lens on how to avoid the flu was interesting, and offered some simple practical advice on how to avoid the flu. Good luck!

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Stay At Home Mom Marsha Serlin Makes Millions From Scrap


One of my favourite millionaire mom stories concerns stay at home mom Marsha Serlin, who found herself in a very bad situation, divorced with two children to support, she was $250,000 in debt, had her electricity turned off and her home was in foreclosure. When she realised she just couldn’t seem to make enough money to get by she took a brave decision, and out of sheer desperation and with a determination to succeed she started her scrap metal company in 1978.

While in the early stages she faced ridicule in this predominately male dominated business, but her attitude never swayed and she thought, 'if a man can do this, I can do this.' Today Marsha is the owner of United Scrap Metal. Her Illinois business makes a whopping $140 million dollars annually. It took Marsha 29 years of hard work and determination, but in the end she went from a work at home mom to multimillionaire mompreneur.
A great story!

For more information see http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa5345/is_/ai_n21375395
Marsha Serlin, current CEO of United Scrap Metal, was featured February 2, 2007, in a segment on the Oprah Winfrey Show called "Moms Who Made Millions."

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Million Dollar Work At Home Mom - The Woman Who Made A Fortune Off Crocs



Sheri Schmeltzer is the woman behind Jibbitz, a Crocs accessory that started as a way of amusing her children. The ultimate work at home mom. By Hilary Rose (photo Mark Harrison).

Last summer, when my seven-year-old niece explained, in the tone of voice she reserves for particularly stupid questions, that the flowery button thingies on her Crocs were called Jibbitz, I was confused. “Gibbets?” I said. “As in hangmen? Don’t be ridiculous. They’re pointless flowery button thingies for you to waste your pocket money on.” In our different ways, we were both right: Jibbitz is indeed what they are but, pointless or not, they are a global craze created accidentally by an American housewife in her basement, and are worth $20 million (£10m). That’s a lot of pocket money.

The American housewife in question lives in Boulder, Colorado, and is an attractive 43-year-old called Sheri Schmelzer. The idea originated three years ago. The scenario was a familiar one: rainy afternoon, bored children, mum scrabbling around for ways to amuse them. Schmelzer rooted through her sewing kit, found some silk appliqué flowers and beads, and started to tie, stick and glue them into the holes of her children’s Crocs (which, as everyone knows, are some of the ugliest, but most useful, shoes on the planet – a cross between clogs and jelly shoes, with no buckles or ties, holes punched in the top; perfect for holidays). Her children – Lexie, then seven, Julian, five, and Riley, three, had multiple pairs in every colour and even wore them to school. “I was just trying to keep everybody entertained,” she remembers, “and my girls flipped out when they saw these. They were like, ‘I want the pink one! I want the red one!’ When my husband Richard came home, I said, ‘Look, honey: we’re accessorising our Crocs.’ You could see this little light bulb go on in his head.”

Next day, Richard filed for all the relevant patents, trademarks and copyrights. A successful entrepreneur, he knew the importance of patenting everything before anyone else saw it. So the children were sworn to secrecy and the Jibbitz stayed at home while they thought of a name. Richard’s nickname for her had always been “flibbertigibbet”, because, she says, she talks a lot. “I thought it was such a funny name,” she says. “So when I realised we had a business and needed to name it, I cut it in half, put a ‘z’ at the end, and we had Jibbitz!” After a discussion, the pair dipped into their savings to get the company started. Schmelzer thinks they had $300,000 (£150,000), but used less than $20,000 (£10,000), “because we became profitable almost immediately. Isn’t that crazy?”

When the children first wore them to school, they were inundated with requests from friends. Three months later, the couple launched a website, on their wedding anniversary, August 9, “because we thought it was sweet, and we were doing this together and taking a big chance, and who knew what was going to happen?” The local TV news station immediately ran a story on them, and 200 orders a day started pouring in off the fax machine in their basement. They put a cover over the pool table so Schmelzer had a surface on which to work on the designs, and her mother drove round Boulder emptying fabric stores for materials.

“I was up until 3am gluing things,” recalls Schmelzer. “Because I was at home, I had no separation between work and family. Every moment, I was in the basement gluing my fingers together. I would feed the kids, get them to bed, then go down to the basement again. After three or four months, I looked at Rich and said, ‘I can’t do this by myself.’” So through Richard’s business contacts they found a factory in China. One day, Schmelzer came home to find 25 boxes of Jibbitz on her step. She spent four months packing and shipping the orders herself, before the couple eventually rented office space and hired ten employees.

According to its website, Jibbitz “allow Crocs consumers to personalise their footwear to creatively express their individuality”, which is perhaps over-intellectualising it a bit. For those still blissfully ignorant, they are pieces of coloured rubber-like buttons, selling for around $3 (£1.50) a pop, in 1,100 different patterns. There are Harry Potter house crests and Disney characters. You can stick gingerbread houses or gemstones on your Crocs, national flags and animals (the UK’s bestsellers are the big flowers). There are Jibbitz for specific places – football ones for Europe, Hello Kitty for the Far East and American flags for, well, probably only Americans. They are sold in 86 countries (Japan is the biggest market) and Schmelzer has been on Oprah, in an edition called Million Dollar Moms.

By August 2006, the Schmelzers had sold eight million Jibbitz. A map on the website showing stockists started off with five red dots; three days later there were 20 and in less than a fortnight it was covered. Finally, in December 2006, they sold out to Crocs for $20 million. The two companies had been in touch from the very beginning, after one of the Crocs founders – who also, oddly, lived in Boulder, Colorado – saw Schmelzer’s daughter sporting her Jibbitz, gave her his business card and asked her to get her mummy to call him. Terrified at the thought of their first big business meeting, Schmelzer bought a briefcase. “I didn’t want to sell in the beginning because I wanted to prove to myself that I could do this,” she says. “I thought, ‘We’ve got something cool here; let’s try to make it really big.’ I wanted it to be just us, and we succeeded, way more than we thought we would. I had tears in my eyes when we sold it.”

Sales of Jibbitz recently passed the 100 million mark and Schmelzer thinks there is no limit. But although she admits to being surprised by the scale of the success, she denies that it’s just a craze, “because they [Crocs] are completely redefining themselves. I still design the Jibbitz, and now we’re moving into all these other products, which is what’s fun for me. People still contact me directly and say, ‘I can’t believe you don’t have a cocker spaniel.’” As for the money, Schmelzer says that although they weren’t exactly struggling before, it’s nice to have $20 million in the bank. “We know we can marry two girls, and the children can do anything they want at any school they want.” But they must have splurged on something, surely? She has a considerable stock of very white and sparkly diamonds round her neck and on her fingers but, sweetly, the main thing they bought were two huge tree houses for the children (this being America, they came with their own tree trunk).

Jibbitz is one of those things that mothers around the world kick themselves for not thinking of. The rest of us wonder how much more of the world’s pocket money can possibly be spent on pointless flowery button thingies to stick in children’s shoes. Scarily, the answer is probably a lot.


Original article http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/entrepreneur/article4331134.ece

http://www1.jibbitz.com/

Monday, October 13, 2008

Orla Kiely Supports Breast Cancer Awareness Month


Leading fashion designer, Dublin born Orla Kiely, has launched a new exclusive accessories collection in Ireland to support Fashion Targets Breast Cancer (FTBC) in aid of Action Breast Cancer, a programme of the Irish Cancer Society and Europa Donna Ireland.

Kielys designs for this new collection are inspired by the iconic FTBC bull’s eye, and feature Orla’s instantly recognisable signature style of soft, colourful muted flowers, where the centre of each flower bears the distinct target symbol. As always the bags are beautiful, classic and chic.

There will be four different styles on showcase; a classic shoulder bag (€160), a large book tote bag (€165), a zip wallet (€90) and a cosmetic bag (€85), maintaining Orla’s flair for fusing functionality and style. The range will be sold exclusively through Brown Thomas in Dublin, Cork, Limerick and Galway. All proceeds will go directly to Action Breast Cancer, (a programme of the Irish Cancer Society) to provide services for younger women diagnosed with breast cancer and to Europa Donna Ireland, a patient advocacy group which campaigns for better cancer services nationwide.

It is good to see a leading fashion designer associated with a worthy and respected cause.
For more information contact the National Breast Cancer Helpline at 1800 30 90 40 or visit www.cancer.ie/action.

About Fashion Targets Breast Cancer®
Fashion Targets Breast Cancer (FTBC) is a worldwide charitable initiative of the Council of Fashion Designers of America/CFDA Foundation. The CFDA Foundation, through FTBC, is committed to providing meaningful assistance to women with breast cancer and their families, friends and other supporters by rallying designers, models, retailers, and other creative energies within the fashion industry.The Foundation commits proceeds raised from FTBC campaigns to helping women concerned about or diagnosed with breast cancer gain access to reliable health information and quality health care, and to supporting education and outreach programs. Since its launch in 1994, Fashion Targets Breast Cancer has raised over $40 million for distribution to breast cancer charities in 13 countries.
For more information please visit http://www.fashiontargetsbreastcancer.org/

Saturday, October 11, 2008

After Cancer By Christa D'Souza


When Christa D'Souza was diagnosed with breast cancer, she worried about how she would tell her friends and family, and then how treatment would affect her looks.

At the beginning of Breast Cancer Awareness month, this self confessed ageorexic describes her experience of the disease. Read more...

Friday, October 10, 2008

Mompreneur Avril Webster of Off We Go Publishing


INTERVIEW: THEY SAY that necessity is the mother of invention, and this has certainly been the experience of Avril Webster, founder of Off We Go Publishing.

When a search for clear, simple books to help her 10-year-old son Stephen, who has a severe developmental brain disorder, cope with everyday activities proved fruitless, she decided to fill the gap herself.

With the support of Stephen's speech therapist Jeanne Dippenaar, she set about creating books at her kitchen table that would prepare him for new experiences - like a trip to the dentist or the swimming pool - which would normally cause him stress and anxiety.

She broke each event down into 12 steps with a sequence of uncluttered pictures and functional language and soon found that her little home-made books had a marked effect on Stephen's reaction to these events.

Full interview....

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Brahms' Lullaby Can Help Relieve Stress In Pregnancy



Listening to Brahms' Lullaby, Beethoven and Twinkle Twinkle Little Star can help relieve stress in pregnancy, research has suggested.
Women who listened to CDs of lullabies, classical music and sounds of nature felt more relaxed than those who did not, it found.

The music - all set to the tempo of the human heart beat - was also found to ease anxiety and depression.

Experts from Kaohsiung Medical University in Taiwan split pregnant women into two groups, with 116 given music CDs and 120 receiving normal pregnancy care and acting as controls.
The women given the music received four CDs, each containing about 30 minutes of music.
One CD featured lullabies, a second contained classical music like Beethoven and Debussy, a third featured nature sounds and a fourth was based on soothing crystal music of Chinese nursery rhymes and songs.
The tempo of the music was set at 60 to 80 beats per minute, the same as the human heart rate.
The women were told to listen to at least one disc all the way through every day for two weeks.
They could choose at which point they listened to the music but were asked to record what they were doing at the time and which one they chose.
Most of the expectant mothers listened to the music while they were resting, at bedtime or carrying out chores.

Something To Wear When Picking The Kids Up From School



A model wears a creation by French fashion designer Pierre Cardin during the presentation of his entire Spring-Summer 2009 and Autumn-Winter 2009 collections at his villa in Theoule sur Mer, southern France.


Safer Prenatal Down's Syndrome Test Found In U.S.

A prenatal blood test can be used to determine if an unborn baby has Down's syndrome without the small risk to the fetus posed by invasive testing methods such as amniocentesis, U.S. researchers said on Monday.


Researchers led by Stephen Quake of Stanford University in California created a way to look for the extra chromosomes that cause Down's and similar birth detects in the tiny amounts of fetal DNA that circulate in the mother's blood. Read more....

Recession in the US Will be ‘deep and long’


Even with the agreed $700bn in government help, the US economy appears to be headed for deep recession and it may be next summer before the gloom begins to lift.
And it isn’t only the United States that has witnessed the largest bankruptcy and the largest bank failure in its history. Read more....

Watch Out! Protect Yourself From Identity Fraud



Did you know that it is widely estimated that eight out of ten people are routinely leaving themselves open to identity theft by binning personal information? And even though the vast majority of us fear we might be at risk from the fraud, less than half of us know how to protect ourselves against it.

Here are some points and extra precautions to help protect yourself from identity fraud.

What is Identity Fraud?

  • Identity theft occurs when an individual or a company's personal information is obtained in order to assume their identity.
  • Fraudsters are getting their hands on personal information by rifling through rubbish bins, intercepting mail and sending out fraudulent emails.
  • Fraudsters are also increasingly using the internet to obtain personal information with online shopping and social networking considered high-risk activities.

People need to be more vigilant and follow the simple steps needed to help safeguard their identities:

  • Check your mail for unusual transactions.
  • Report missing post immediately.
  • Never give out information to people unless absolutely sure and, importantly, shred anything you wouldn't want in the hands of a stranger.
  • Report the loss of documents such as a driver’s license or passport straight away.
  • Get into the habit of checking bills against receipts.
  • Always remember that your identity is the most important thing you have, never be complacent with your identity, and help join the fight against identity fraud.

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Catch the latest Saturday Night Live Sarah Palin skit by the super talented Tina Fey.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

World Financial Meltdown: $700 Billion Rescue Plan For US Banks Rejected



What a day yesterday was, with the world facing financial meltdown, after a $700 Billion rescue plan for US banks was thrown out.

Stock markets were braced for another grim day ahead, after Congress rejected the plans to buy bad debts in what would have been the greatest bailout since the Great Depression of 1929.

This surprise decision sent the Dow Jones Index tumbling by 7 percent which was its biggest one day fall in history.

Last week the US President George Bush talked of a long and painful future if the plan was not backed. But Republicans in Congress rejected the plan, which would have cost the taxpayers an incredible €1600 each.

So looks like its back to the drawing-board for a new plan or to renegotiate.

Study Reveals That Wearing MBT Footwear Can Decrease Your Balance


Who would have thought it but wearing Masai Barefoot Technology (MBT) footwear can result in decreased postural stability, according to a pilot study carried out at the School of Physiotherapy in the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI).

The MBT shoe is widely worn across Europe and North America, with over one million pairs being sold across Europe last year. Designed to mimic the natural conditions of standing and walking barefoot on natural terrain, the shoe manufacturers claim these shoes force us to balance and straighten up. (In Ireland, the shoes retail for €200).

Lead researcher Louise Smith said “MBT footwear is increasing in popularity. However, there is little research investigating the effects of MBT footwear on postural sway.”

The study surveyed the postural sway of ten females who owned and regularly wore MBT footwear. Each participant wore MBT footwear, flat-bottom runners and went barefoot. The study revealed significant increase in postural sway when comparing the MBT to flat-bottomed runners and barefoot conditions. No significant differences in postural sway were found when comparing the flat-bottomed runner and barefoot.

Louise said “The MBT shoe significantly increased postural sway, suggesting that the inherently unstable nature of the MBT compromises one’s ability to maintain an upright stance. Poor postural stability, indicated by increased sway is one of the major risk factors for falling.”

How The Wrong Bra Can Damage Your Breasts

A UK research team of experts on breast biomechanics say that some women could be damaging their breasts by wearing the wrong bra, either because they don't realize it, or because they are too embarrassed to wear the right bra for their size and shape. The research led by Dr Joanna Scurr, a breast biomechanics expert, was announced on the website of the University of Portsmouth.

Indeed wearing the wrong bra can irreparably stretch fragile ligaments and damage the breast, said the researchers from the University's Department of Sport and Exercise Science. The research team tested about 50 types of bra on hundreds of women over the last three years, and they found that breasts move up to 21 cm during exercise, and they move not only up and down but also from side to side, yet most bras are only designed to limit vertical movement.

One of the researchers, Wendy Hedger, said that "Many women have strong preferences for certain styles of bra and won't buy anything else. They won't even look at anything that doesn't look like the sort of bra they are used to wearing."

One example of this is the way women choose sports bras. There is a tendency not to have the same type of bra that they normally wear every day, the type that fastens at the back, because they think it should be the type that pulls over the head, like a crop top. However, Hedger said this is wrong: many sports bras fasten at the back like a traditional bra, and they are very good at supporting the breasts."Some women cause breast pain or discomfort by not buying the right sized bra," said Hedger, explaining that there appears to be a social stigma about certain sizes:"Many women don't want to be seen as too small or too big and buy a bra that doesn't fit well in order to be what they consider to be a normal size."Hedger said many women are not aware that they are wearing a bra that does not fit properly, and many are routinely sold ill-fitting bras. Also, "some women forget that their shape and size change and they might have to go through several changes in bra size over their lifetime especially after breastfeeding and the menopause," said Hedger.

Hedger, Scurr and colleagues have helped to design a new style of sports bra for high impact sports. Scurr is also helping a New Zealand manufacturer overhaul the design of their current high impact bra.

The New Zealand maker went to the Portsmouth team for advice on how to change their bra design so it offered more protection during high impact sports. The researchers tested the current design by measuring breast movement while the bra was being worn, and by asking women how they felt about the fit, shape, and design of the strap, under-band, and other parts.

Hedger said they were very excited about seeing the new design:"It's the first chance we have had to be involved in the design process of a new bra, though we have tested many over the past few years."" We started breast biomechanics research just testing bras but we want to do more research that benefits women," she added.

The new design is soon to go on sale in Europe, said the researchers in a press statement.

Source Ref: University of Portsmouth.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Irish Students Up For €10K Google Prize

Here’s a cute item. Parents in Ireland are sharpening up their green pencils for their young artistic kiddies, as Google announced yesterday the launch of an Irish national competition for primary and secondary school pupils to design a St Patrick's Day homepage for Google, and the winning design will be seen across the world wide web.

The doodle, to be designed under the theme My Ireland around Google's famous logo, will feature on its Home Page in Ireland, UK, Canada and the US on March 17, 2009. The star pupil's school will also be awarded a €10,000 technology grant.

Adele Cooper, of Google Ireland, said the event was a fantastic opportunity for students of all ages to let their imagination run wild.
"Google has run this competition in the UK and USA, but this is the first time the winning design will be seen outside the winner's country," she said.
"The theme My Ireland can be interpreted in many ways so we can't wait to see how it will be represented in the doodles submitted by students in Ireland."

Each primary and secondary school in the Republic of Ireland can submit a maximum of six pieces of art to Google, which employs 1,500 people in Dublin.
A panel of judges will pick the best 104 designs which will go on-line in age and county categories. Google users will then vote for their favorite, with the top four going head to head in the national final. Google Webmaster Dennis Hwang will select the best doodle in Dublin.
Since 2000, the 29-year-old has been creating designs doodles for the web page. "Integrating technology into our schooling is central to our success as a knowledge economy and we are delighted that we can make this significant contribution to a school in Ireland," Ms Cooper said.
Schools must register for Doodle 4 Google by November 7 and submit entries by December 12.

Cancer Risk Is Cut By Breastfeeding By 5%

Mothers who breastfeed for a year over their lifetime, are five per cent less likely to develop breast cancer.


A study found that after breastfeeding, the body cuts the levels of some cancer-related hormones in the mother's body, and cells in the breast with damaged DNA, which reduces the risk of the disease.


Dr Rachel Thompson, of the World Cancer Research Fund, said: "It is something positive women can do to cut their risk of breast cancer."


World Cancer Research Fund

Happy 10th Birthday Google!




One day this month will mark Google's official 10th birthday, but which day is it exactly? Congratulations Google, Many Happy Returns And Many More!


This month will mark Google’s official 10th birthday, and on September 27th no doubt we will see another clever, special Google birthday logo, but the team at www.HomeBasedMums.com thought we would get our tribute out just a little earlier.


But did you know that just a little snooping can reveal quite another type of web altogether? If you are to go by their corporate history page, then Google is actually nearly 13-years-old. But the domain name Google.com was registered on September 15 1997, so that makes them 11 years old next week.But hey what does it matter anyway – it’s a Birthday celebration! Keep up the great work guys, and don’t stay up too late!


Monday, September 29, 2008

Artistic Mum's Selling Handmade Crafts Online


Attention all you artistic mums out there. Are you looking for a proper, successful, dedicated place to sell your beautiful handmade crafts? Look no further – http://www.etsy.com/ is just the place. This giant virtual art, craft and design fair, is a great place to help sell you crafts online. Set up in June 2005, by a small firm called Iospace, and led by Robert Kalin of Brooklyn, etsy.com is a very large community with some amazing crafters and artists. Very user friendly, and has forums and communication tools and virtual labs where you can watch tutorials on how to make different things. They charge a listings fee, and a sales percentage when you sell, but for this you get your own cool shopfront and talent showcases. It’s a cool site. Check it out. Juliette

Orla Kiely: Pure Poetry. And Eco-Friendly too, hmmm....??


I know, I know! At $623 this is not an everyday splurge. But my God I would love this bag! This absolutely georgeous handstitched leather holdall with zip to close. Leather handles. Front and back open pockets. Inside details include cotton stem print lining, small zip and mobile pockets and key chain. I LOVE it. And autumn is coming….??? And don’t for get its been made from natural leather, tanned using only vegetable extracts, in an environmentally friendly manner! Its an ecobag! Could it be argued that Im doing my bit….? Hmmm

Joseph O'Neill and Family Life at Manhattan's Chelsea Hotel




When we think of Manhattan’s infamous Chelsea Hotel on West 23rd Street most people immediately think of its glamorous old days when it was home to the bohemian and notorious, to some of our greatest great poets, painters and punks. It was of course home to William S. Burroughs, Janis Joplin and Sid Vicious.

But would it surprise you to know that nowadays it is a haven of family life, and the family home of increasingly popular and extremely talented Irish novelist and lawyer Joseph O’Neill and his equally talented wife Sally Singer, the fashion news editor at Vogue magazine, and their three charming sons. Living on the eighth-floor their family suite is a lovely skillful and tasteful mix of glamour and domesticity.

What a seriously cool place to live and raise a family. For the three boys who are aged from 2 to 5, photos show them racing their little bikes down the hallway of not forgotten elegance.

"The whole place is magical," O'Neill says of it now. "It's a whole kind of story unto itself. You're in this village; you have a village life in the middle of the city, and the villagers are friendly and fascinating."

And often, of course, famous; while the O'Neills have lived there, Didi Ramone, Debbie Harry and Ethan Hawke have been among their co-residents. Not that O'Neill was on morning coffee terms with any of them; his favourite Chelsea story centres around the time he and baby Malachy were invited over for a cuppa by the late playwright Arnold Weinstein, who lived across the hall, and ended up spending the evening with Arthur Miller and friends.

But the Chelsea is "just a really basic, authentic place" for O'Neill and his family, he says; it's just home.

Read more in the NYT.....

Too Busy To Visit A Museum?



No problem. When you are too busy to visit a museum in person, or fancy visiting a museum in another country even, this handy website http://vlmp.museophile.com/ is a great place to start to find museums online. Enjoy!