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		<copyright>Copyright 2010, No Author</copyright>
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			<title>Bracelets for a Cause</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry091217-155830</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<img src="images/Susan_bracelets.jpg" width="281" height="187" border="0" alt="" /><br /><br /><br />Since November 2008, Susan Cannarella has made beautiful bracelets and earrings using Paper to Pearls beads.  The sale of her work raises money to support the Kiwoko Hospital, a rural bush hospital in central Uganda that is supported by the ISIS Foundation.  To date she has raised over $6,800 for ISIS and Kiwoko.<br /><br />We learned of Susan&#039;s story recently when she placed an order for additional bags of beads.  Inspired by what she is doing, we asked her to tell us more.<br /><br />Susan works for Aspen Re America, a company that believes strongly in global corporate and social responsibility and commits to donating annually to the ISIS Foundation&#039;s work in Nepal and Uganda.  In September 2008 she had the opportunity to visit Kiwoko Hospital and witness the great work being done there to help the children and families of the region. &quot;It was a lifelong dream of mine fulfilled.&quot;  <br /><br />Susan also explained how she began working with paper beads. &quot;One day a week a craft group meets at the hospital.  This group is comprised of women who are HIV positive.  These women make items to be sold at the hospital craft shop to support their families.  One of the crafts I saw them making were rolled paper beads using recycled paper.  This inspired me to make jewelry incorporating these beautiful and unusual beads.&quot;<br /><br />We salute and celebrate Susan&#039;s wonderful work, and how she is not only supporting ISIS&#039;s project at the Kiwoko Hospital but the Paper to Pearls&#039; beaders as well.<br />]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Thu, 17 Dec 2009 20:58:30 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=09&amp;m=12&amp;entry=entry091217-155830</comments>
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			<title>Market Days</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry091129-180936</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<img src="images/Under_the_trees.jpg" width="327" height="245" border="0" alt="" /><br /><br />When it comes time for market days, the women put the finishing touches on their necklaces and prepare for a visit from the local P2P staff. Each co-operative gathers on a designated day with their completed products and the printed order that was distributed at the beginning of the month.<br /><br />Our group of child mothers is particularly enthusiastic; they are always sitting joyfully under a large mango tree with their necklaces displayed when we arrive. When they see us arrive we are greeted with shouts of welcome ‘Apwoyoba!’.  We first greet all the women individually, as is custom in Uganda, before settling down on bamboo mats to look through their proudly displayed necklaces. Comparing the products to the order from the United States, we go through the necklaces one by one identifying mistakes that can be corrected on the spot and documenting each necklace that is to be purchased. Each beader is considered a separate ‘seller’, is paid independently and signs off on the purchase. During the last set of market days several of the women in this group were so amazed at their success that they cheered and sang when they added their signature to our books.<br /><br />One of the women in our Women of Ester co-operative was so excited with the amount she earned that she exclaimed ‘I am going to eat CHICKEN tonight!’  Due to the conflict over the past two decades, there is a lack of livestock in the North and chicken has become a prized meal. Her family was able to eat like kings, with enough to spare for school fees and some medication.<br /><br />As we gear up for another set of market days, the women assure me at every meeting that P2P will be so pleased with their products. I see them swelling with pride as their work continues to improve and gain attention from the international community.<br /><br />Meghan Ryan<br />P2P Project Supervisor<br />Gulu, Uganda<br /><br /><br />]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Sun, 29 Nov 2009 23:09:36 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=09&amp;m=11&amp;entry=entry091129-180936</comments>
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			<title>Dancing in the Land of the Sand</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry091123-184232</link>
			<description><![CDATA[Fiona Fitzgerald, our newest Personal Representative, signs her emails, &quot;From the land of the sand.&quot;  She lives in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, half a world away from her native Australia.  Fiona read about Paper to Pearls in a local magazine and immediately felt a connection to the project.  &quot;It sounded like such a wonderful cause, and when I went to the website I was convinced this was something I wanted to do.  Many Western women are in the UAE because of husbands who are doing contracting work and we have a lot of free time while our children are in school.  Raising money to help the women in northern Uganda is a perfect way to be busy and feel I&#039;m doing something meaningful.  And everyone absolutely loves the jewelry and the story.&quot;  <br /> <br />Although P2P Personal Representatives generally operate as small retail businesses—buying wholesale and then selling retail and retaining the profits—Fiona has generously decided to return the majority of the money she makes to P2P.  &quot;The pleasure of this project is knowing the good it is doing for women in poverty, helping them to move from a state of need to one of possibility and opportunity.  That&#039;s all the payment I need...and besides, this is fun!&quot;<br /> <br />Fiona sent us pictures from one of her events.  I particularly love the dancing figures from her sales table; they make me of think of the dancing spirit in all women and how my beaders have reason to dance again because of the open hearts of women like Fiona Fitzgerald.<br /> <br /><img src="images/Dancing_figures_2.jpg" width="225" height="231" border="0" alt="" />]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 23:42:32 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=09&amp;m=11&amp;entry=entry091123-184232</comments>
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			<title>Paper to Pearls in Milan</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry090920-172324</link>
			<description><![CDATA[ <img src="images/Display_photo_for_blog.jpg" width="225" height="194" border="0" alt="" /> <br /><br />Four colorful necklaces draped over a white folded stand, one display among 60 in a handsome exhibit of &quot;Paper Jewellery&quot;, a new show at Milan’s Triennale Design Museum.  The work of peasant women in northern Uganda thus placed side by side with that of the finest jewelry artists in the world.  As I walked the exhibit, I thought yet again of the evolution of our beaders’ work from simple to exceptional and how it came be chosen by the curators of &quot;Paper Jewellery&quot; for inclusion in this amazing show.<br /><br />During the afternoon press conference, I listened to the Triennale’s Vice-President exhort the “women of Milan” to think about paper in a new way, to consider how this humble medium can be reworked by skilled hands and become fashionable art.  “Ladies, will you wear paper jewelry?” he challenged the women in the room and beyond. “Can you accept that it can be stylish, beautiful and fun, and that it creates its own fashion statement?”<br /><br />From the beginning, the reaction to our beaders’ work has always been, “I can’t believe it’s made of paper.”  At the crowded opening of the exhibit, this was a consistent reaction to many of the items on display.  Fanciful cutouts, layered cardboard, paper bent, twisted and pleated into dramatic shapes.  Our paper beads were not the most creative or stylish in the room, but they fit in perfectly; and among all the stunning, often startling pieces, they are probably the most unique: necklaces that take paper into the realm of fashion while taking women and their families out of poverty.  Paper as pearls, paper as beauty, paper transformed and transforming.  Northern Uganda―poor and marginalized, torn apart by war and displacement―now has another story to tell.<br /><br />&quot;Paper Jewellery&quot; will be in Milan until October 25th.  It will then travel internationally, returning to Italy in July 2010, where it will be on display at the Paper Museum of Fabriano in Umbria throughout the summer.<br />]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Sun, 20 Sep 2009 21:23:24 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=09&amp;m=09&amp;entry=entry090920-172324</comments>
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			<title>Fashionable Beads</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry090906-180702</link>
			<description><![CDATA[ <img src="images/Photo_for_blog.jpg" width="225" height="225" border="0" alt="" /> <br /><br />This week is Fashion Week in New York, and I find myself thinking about the fashion aspect of Paper to Pearls.  When I started this initiative, I didn&#039;t think of this at all.  The jewelry, although attractive and interesting was initially too basic, too simple to be a fashion statement.  What everyone found compelling was the story...of women in refugee camps beading their way out of poverty and transforming their lives in the process.<br /><br />Three and a half years later, however, we have a product that is indeed fashionable. The skill of our beaders has increased exponentially both in execution and styling.  We have worked hard to teach them what quality means, and the results...well, what better testament to the evolution of their work than its inclusion in the upcoming Milan Paper Jewelry exhibit.  (The accompanying photo is one of our necklaces included in the show.)  The work of farming women from northern Uganda will be featured side by side with that of some of the major jewelry designers in the world.  And in Milan, perhaps the fashion capital of the world!<br /><br />Our beaders are still beading to improve their lives and the lives of their families.  We still are still passionate about supporting them and telling their story as an example of what is possible in one of the most marginalized regions in the world.  Meanwhile, we represent a product that is &quot;green&quot; and fair trade and, increasingly, a fashion statement, and that is worth celebrating.  It&#039;s also interesting to note that the Ethical Fashion Preview will debut this year during New York Fashion Week.  This event will spotlight fashion designers who create collections using environmentally friendly materials and processes, and manufacture their collections respecting fair trade and fair wage principles.  Clearly, we fit right in!<br />]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Sun, 06 Sep 2009 22:07:02 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=09&amp;m=09&amp;entry=entry090906-180702</comments>
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			<title>Bead Sisters</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry090813-161136</link>
			<description><![CDATA[ <br />My friend Ann recently returned from East Africa, full of stories about her adventure:  wonderful animal safaris in both Kenya and Tanzania, and fascinating encounters with local people particularly in rural areas.  Among the highlights were meeting and interacting with members of the Samburu tribe of Kenya and the Maasai of neighboring Tanzania, both well known for their colorful beaded necklaces, earrings and bracelets.  Ann wore her Paper to Pearls necklaces frequently during her trip and in doing so caught the attention of women from both tribes who wanted to know what the beads were and where they were from.  &quot;Uganda&quot;, Ann repeated several times in response.  The women fingered the necklaces and apparently discussed them in their language.  Ann and I are certain that whatever they said was complementary!  Here&#039;s Ann with a Maasai woman, both wearing their unique necklaces. <br /><br /><img src="images/Anne_with_the_Massai_2.jpg" width="327" height="306" border="0" alt="" /> ]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Thu, 13 Aug 2009 20:11:36 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=09&amp;m=08&amp;entry=entry090813-161136</comments>
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			<title>A Papers to Pearls Smile</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry090812-194600</link>
			<description><![CDATA[ <br />Our littlest model is four years old with a magnetic smile and the name of Aber.   Aimee Oberndorfer, a great friend of Paper to Pearls, took Aber&#039;s picture when she was in Gulu in June doing evaluations for the project.  How could I resist posting this picture, especially since Aber is wearing one of P2P&#039;s newest necklace styles.  Of course we hope that wearing a P2P necklace brings a smile to everyone&#039;s face!<br /><br /><br /><img src="images/P2P_New_Model_Aber2.jpg" width="200" height="267" border="0" alt="" /> ]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Wed, 12 Aug 2009 23:46:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=09&amp;m=08&amp;entry=entry090812-194600</comments>
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			<title>Paper to Pearls is now 100% &quot;Green&quot;</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry090424-214735</link>
			<description><![CDATA[There&#039;s always excitement in the Paper to Pearls office when a new shipment arrives, but especially so two weeks ago. That shipment represented a defining moment for us--the first necklaces with our new acrylic finish.  This means no solvents in traditional varnishes to worry about, no odor and airing out of the necklaces, and the ability to say that our project is 100% &quot;green&quot;.  I&#039;m thrilled.   <br /> <br />We worked with a chemist in Uganda to come up with the finish.  Mr. Kamau did a wonderful job.  The finish he came up with is based on the one first developed by BeadforLife.  It is lightweight, even when two or three coats are applied, and provides the same great sheen and durability as the varnish the women have been using.  <br /> <br />Not only that, but the shipment was the first to be completely made with our new silver clasps.  Now, instead of the plastic twist clasps, we have a product that has that final element of quality and class.  Meg, my assistant, has just finished adding the new arrivals to the web store, and more will be coming in another week.  <br /> <br /> <img src="images/Clasp_photo.jpg" width="200" height="150" border="0" alt="" /> <br /> <br />I continue to be impressed by how creative our beaders can be.  It&#039;s as if their innovation and creativity have been released after having been bottled up for so long.  Am already anticipating the new necklace styles, the category in my order I call &quot;Surprise Me&quot;.  We&#039;ll have to put photos of Meg modeling them in an upcoming blog!   ]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Sat, 25 Apr 2009 01:47:35 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=09&amp;m=04&amp;entry=entry090424-214735</comments>
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			<title>DC Green Festival</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry081023-122411</link>
			<description><![CDATA[Paper to Pearls will be back at the DC Green Festival this year on November 8th and 9th at the Washington, DC Convention Center.  This is a great community event that profiles a multitude of environmental initiatives the DC metro area, as well as the opportunity to become familiar with the innovations of 350 green businesses (look for us at booth # 627), while enjoying great how-to workshops, green films, a Fair Trade pavilion, yoga classes, delicious organic cuisine and live music.  More than 125 renowned speakers will address the major &quot;green&quot; issues of the day.  We hope to see you there!  Learn more at  <a href="http://www.greenfestivals.org/washington-dc-2008/" target="_blank" >http://www.greenfestivals.org/washington-dc-2008/</a> ]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2008 16:24:11 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=08&amp;m=10&amp;entry=entry081023-122411</comments>
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			<title>Beautiful Beads for All Ages</title>
			<link>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/index.php?entry=entry080928-115526</link>
			<description><![CDATA[Well, we didn&#039;t win the Impact Award, after all.  That honor went to Sister&#039;s Camelot a local organization in the Minneapolis area that does a variety of outreach activities in the community.  They were uniquely able to mobilize local area My Space voters to vote on a daily basis, which was how the winner was selected.  We&#039;re disappointed to be sure, but feel the exposure was ultimately very beneficial for our mission.  Congratulations to Sister&#039;s Camelot.  The award will provide meaningful support to their valuable efforts.<br /><br />The sun just came out after several days of rain in the DC area.  Perfect for a photo shoot today with some lovely ladies who have volunteered to model our necklaces.  Feel we need to put photos on the website of &quot;real people&quot; wearing the necklaces, so that the visitor can realize on beautiful these necklaces look on people of all ages.  (I have to say &quot;people&quot; since young men also buy beads for themselves, as &quot;surfer&quot; beads and also just as part of the jewelry than men increasingly wear.)<br /><br />The Photo Gallery will be part of a number of new changes to the site, including this blog!  (Am including two previous My Space blogs, in case you missed the chicken!)  One of the changes will be to make it easier for visitors to understand the value of donations, in addition to purchasing necklaces.  Necklace sales, although essential, provide only a portion of the funds we need to support our beaders.<br />]]></description>
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			<author>No Author</author>
			<pubDate>Sun, 28 Sep 2008 15:55:26 GMT</pubDate>
			<comments>http://www.papertopearls.org/blog/comments.php?y=08&amp;m=09&amp;entry=entry080928-115526</comments>
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