Sunday, July 31, 2011

I'm The Jewelry Lady


Please visit me at The Jewelry Lady or email csimiriglia@gmail.com.

Obviously, I love fashion.  I love knits and accessories and jewelry and playing with texture and color.  Having a jewelry business is the natural extension of my love of fashion.  I'm located in and serve South Jersey as well as the Philadelphia metropolitan area including the surrounding PA counties and Delaware.


HOME SHOWS

Have a Premier show at your home and on shows $100 and over, earn 30% of your total sales in FREE JEWELRY!!!! Plus up to $100 additional FREE JEWELRY by earning bonuses! There's more! Earn 4-8 half price items!

BONUSES:
-$25 for holding a show on the original booking date
-$25 for having 10 guests or more (18 years of age and over)
-$25 for having $100 in advanced catalog orders
-$25 for 3 future bookings from your guests

CATALOG SHOWS

If you don't want to have a Home Show, how about a Catalog Sale? Earn 20% of the total sales ($100+) in FREE JEWELRY plus receive 1 half price item! All you have to do is show my catalog to friends and start shopping for your FREE JEWELRY!!

FUNDRAISERS!!

Need funding for your school, organization, church or function?! Contact me about a fundraiser!

BECOME A JEWELER!

As a jeweler, Premier Designs pays you HALF of total home show sales! Last month I made over $1,500 in six short evenings.   Ask me how you can too!!!

The Best Use of Yarn Ever - Peace

The Benefits of Knitting Circles



Written by Lisa Akers 

I was reading Stephen Covey's The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People and was struck by something very powerful. He said that our growing fear and insecurity about work, finances, the future, and the vulnerability that comes with that fear is really paralyzing our society. Our response to fear is to focus inward - to focus on our own performance and our own concerns with the hope that we will be ok. That was a real scary thought for me, as I see more and more of that in myself and others. Can you imagine what happens to society if we all become hermits? 

It is essential to depend on others to succeed to the fullest. It is only with the assistance of others that we can become the whole person that we could be. It is through others that we can develop all aspects of our personality. Our dealings with other people shape our personality and develop our interpersonal skills. No one ever achieved anything great by themselves, and if we continue to hide behind the "I'll take care of just me" facade, we'll never achieve anything great either. 

So what does that have to do with knitting circles? Knitting circles have for centuries brought women together to share their experiences, to ask advice, and to encourage one another. It's a fun environment and a learning environment all at the same time. It provides a place where women can go to find community. Most importantly, it is a place where that community does not stand in judgment. 

This kind of community is a large part of what is missing in our society today. By "nesting" and staying home, we have abandoned community. Nesting is a phenomena punctuated by the growing number of telecommuters, work at homers, and internet chat. We're avoiding people and choosing to stay at home where we feel safe. The internet brings us chat rooms, but we can't hold a conversation in person. Nesting is keeping us from achieving all we can achieve. So, enter knitting circles! Knitting circles are a way to connect with the people who can help you achieve something great. 

You must get out of your house to have a circle (or at least invite people over to your house). You will be able to share the common interest of knitting with people who bring varied experiences. You will have the chance to talk to people and share in their wisdom. 

You may not solve the great mysteries of the world, and your achievements may never be chronicled in encyclopedias for generations to revere, but imagine the pride of knowing you've changed one person for the better. Imagine knowing that what you had to offer was exactly what someone needed to make a dramatic change for the better. Wow! You might raise a child, coach a business owner, write a book, offer your expertise to assist another, or even just listen and ask understanding questions. When was the last time someone truly listened to what you said? See what I mean? 

This is the value of community and the value of knitting circles. Knitting circles bring women together in an environment where it is comfortable to share and ask questions. It is safe to learn something new. It appeals to women of all walks of life and all generations. Find a circle near you, come to one of my Knit One, Share Two events, or start one of your own. You'll be creating a life-changing group that will encourage each to become more than they already are. 

Article by: 

Lisa Akers is the president of Be Still & Knit. Her company teaches women how to find peace and stillness in their lives through handwork. By discovering knit and crochet, women develop a new way to take time for themselves and share the love they have as warm clothing! Find out more about Lisa at www.bestillandknit.com or listen to her podcast at www.peacefulknitter.com.

Knitting Neighbors:

Harvard neighbors group shows knitting is not just for grandma anymore

By Beth Potier, Harvard University Gazette Staff

From National Public Radio to pierced teenagers in the yarn store, everyone knows that knitting is suddenly cool. It's the "new yoga," says one magazine article; it's part of a post-Sept. 11 trend toward cocooning, say psychologists.

In the basement of Harvard's Loeb House, seven women surrounded by plump skeins of yarn and half-finished sweaters shake their heads in disbelief. "I'm amazed to find myself part of something that's hot," says Diana Stewart, who recently returned to knitting after a 60-year hiatus.

Stewart, former co-master of Lowell House, and her fellow knitters are members of Harvard Neighbors' newly formed knitting group. While no one admits that they were drawn to the group by knitting's newfound hipness, they're not surprised that the centuries-old craft is gaining in popularity.

"Other people take Prozac, then there are those of us who just knit," says Jennifer Kotilaine, associate secretary to the University and leader of the knitting group. Between bites of her lunch, Kotilaine surveys a bear-sized pullover she's knitting for her husband. He's so tall, she says, that she needs to purchase more heathery gray wool to lengthen the sweater's arms.

At the other end of the spectrum, Lillian DeBacker and Carolina Carbó show off small yellow squares; both are new knitters practicing their stitches before graduating to a real project. Ina Luch pieces together a tiny cardigan she knit from yarn scraps donated to the group; in turn, she plans to give the sweater away, possibly to a local children's hospital.

From teaching newcomers to sharing yarn and swapping patterns, a spirit of generosity runs through knitters. The group plans to take on a charitable project - perhaps knitting newborn hats for a hospital - once all members master the basics of knit and purl.

Stewart witnessed knitters' generosity firsthand when a group she was involved with, the Women's Commission on Refugee Women and Children, collected 32 tons of yarn from knitters around the country for women in the former Yugoslavia several years ago. The yarn was needed not so much so women could create garments to sell, says Stewart, but because trauma experts found that knitting encouraged women to talk to each other about the horror of war, thus healing their emotional scars.

On the peaceful edge of Harvard Yard, Harvard Neighbors' knitting group similarly connects its members with conversation and camaraderie. For Luch and Carbó, from Germany and Argentina, respectively, it's a low-key way to brush up their English skills. They, along with DeBacker, are all wives of recently transplanted researchers; the casual gossip and friendly chatter of the knitter's group helps them find their way in the Harvard community.
New friends, English lessons, handmade sweaters ... try getting all that from yoga class.

Monday, July 4, 2011