Showing posts with label Hallmark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hallmark. Show all posts

Sunday, August 29, 2010

A dollar a day (#7)

I keep all of my receipts. Usually in a shoebox. Or a basket. And I have a lot of receipts. I like to shop. I like to go out to eat. I get coffee. A lot.


Normally I just throw my receipts in my purse, then into a basket I keep in my bedroom. Where they sit, and grow, and look a little like a pile of snow (its been awhile since I've seen real snow). But, now I have something even better to hold my receipts:


Though I'm still not sure what I'm saving them for--a rainy day?! Sometimes I think I'm going to sit down and do all those little surveys on the bottom of the receipts. But, I never do.

Sometimes I think I'm going to get some kind of super-savings-return on my taxes because I've kept all my receipts. (Doubtful.)

But, if I'm honest, I eventually would like to track my spending categories a bit closer than my online banking system does. Because I secretly suspect that my spending habits regularly fall into three general categories:
  • coffee
  • cards (as in my BFF Hallmark)
  • Chipotle/Culvers
It's coincidence, I'm sure, that they all start with the letter "c"...

The accordion file I picked up for $2.99, on sale, at Office Max (I also picked up some extras for future years/projects), and I went through my basket o'receipts while watching TV one evening. Not bad for a nights' work. So I've marked #7 as partially complete (yea for more organizing!).

Friday, March 5, 2010

A century of caring...

Christmas came early this year. Look what just arrived in the mail...

Yes, that is indeed a beautiful coffee-table book, published in honor of Hallmark's 100th anniversary. I first saw this book about a month ago when I was browsing in a Hallmark store in north Phoenix. I eventually ordered a copy from my favorite online retailer and justified it by the fact that 1) I LOVE Hallmark and have been wanting to know more about the history of the company (and if this book isn't for people like me--who's it for?!), and 2) I had a crazy month with work/classes and decided I needed a treat (plus, I've been better about checking books out from the library, rather than buying every book I want!). And, the seal to the deal was that the book comes with a DVD that includes, appropriately, one of my favorite Hallmark Hall of Fame movies, as well as the story of the Hallmark Hall of Fame. I also found this blog post from the Hallmark site talking about the inception of the book (originally planned solely as a gift for Hallmark employees!).

I've only just scratched the surface of the book which is divided like a timeline. But the forward, by Maya Angelou (who has a line of cards with Hallmark), is especially touching and I wanted to quote a portion of it here:
My mother left California to visit me in North Carolina. I invited her into my office, and there, my mail had been separated into piles of letters and piles of greeting cards. As I sat with my secretary dictating responses to the letters I received, my mother looked at the large basket filled with greeting cards. She interrupted my dictation, asking in a very sweet voice, "Baby, are you saving these cards for later?"
I said, "Yes."
She asked, "Why?"
I said, "Because people who really wanted answers had sat down and written letters, so I respond to them immediately. These cards have simply been bought and the sender did not have to think of what their messages were. They bought them, signed them, and sent them to me, and I will get around to answering them."
My mother's voice became very quiet. She asked me, "Do you realize the pains it takes to send off a card? First the sender must want to communicate with you, but may find it impossible to say what needs to be said in an elegant and direct way. So, the sender goes into a card store in comfortable shoes, because the selection may take half-hour or longer. The sender reads through thirty or forty cards before finding the one which fits the occasion. The sender pays for the card, signs the card and addresses the envelope, goes to the Post Office, puts a stamp on it and sends it off. Don't you think that is enough to warrant your attention?"

This is why I love sending cards--sometimes I just don't have the right words to say, or know the right things to do, but I want to demonstrate that I care--and what folks do with the card after they receive it doesn't really matter. For me, it's a situation where the gift, and personal blessing, is in the giving.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Happy Valentine's Day!

I can't believe I'm posting this on my blog, but it made me laugh. Out loud. And anything that does that is worth sharing with others, right?

This is actually a real Hallmark Valentine from the 1920s that I came across on the Hallmark 100 Years celebration site...over 90 years old, but still appropriate for today (or maybe just appropriate for me?)...

Contrary to public belief, I actually don't mind being single on V-day...I love having another opportunity to tell those close to me how much I love them and this year I even made homemade valentines. They weren't as cool as this one from the 1920s, but they came from the heart and were made with love! Happy Valentine's Day everyone!!

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

When you care enough...

I'm sure this is just the first, of what will be many, blog posts about one of my favorite institutions...I love Hallmark for oh so many reasons, but this past weekend I was reminded of one. It was Saturday night and my mom texted me with a note saying there was a Hallmark Hall of Fame movie on CBS and was I watching? To which I texted her back that no, I wasn't watching because it was a repeat (one I'd already seen, good, but not one I watch over and over). My mom knows how much I love those HHF movies and was looking out for me--thanks mom!

If you've never seen a HHF movie, I'd highly recommend you check them out--at your local library, on the Hallmark Channel (if you have cable!), through Netflix, or watch for them to be broadcast on network TV, etc. What I love about the HHF movies is that they are family-friendly, often educational (ie, about a specific time in history, a significant individual, or a subset of humanity), and almost always have a happy ending. Though they first started broadcasting back in 1950, it wasn't until the 1990s that I remember seeing my first HHF flick, Sarah, Plain and Tall, starring Glenn Close. That's the other crazy thing about HHF movies--they have all these MAJOR celebs starring in them...and I don't think that Hallmark is paying them big bucks. Everyone from Rosie O'Donnell to Alicia Silverstone, Jennifer Garner, Faye Dunaway, Nathan Lane, Anna Paquin, Dean Cain, Gary Sinise, Diane Lane, Ving Rhames, Kyra Sedgwick, Kathy Bates, Anne Heche, Aidan Quinn, James Garner, Jeff Daniels, John Lithgow, Clive Owen, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Christopher Walken, Tate Donovan, Alfre Woodard, Matthew Modine--the list goes on and on! I think these actors work with Hallmark because they know it's a good product--it's not about the money, it's about enriching the lives of the audience and making something of substance.

Two of MY favorite Hallmark Hall of Fame movies (and ones that I actually own and would be happy to lend to anyone interested!) are The Magic of Ordinary Days (2005) and Loving Leah (2009). The Magic of Ordinary Days stars Keri Russel (of Felicity fame) and Skeet Ulrich. And yes, it's a love story, but it's so sweet! The time period is WWII, in rural Colorado. Keri is a city gal and relocating to a farm, for a variety of reasons, is not her idea of fun. (Side note: letters and a library play small supporting characters in this flick!) I still remember watching this for the first time (on TV) with my friend Mel--good memories!

Loving Leah is a more recent flick and a total love story involving mostly actors I'd never heard of before and an interesting story line involving ancient Jewish traditions, a young doctor, a woman who wants to go to college, an overpowering mother, and Ricki Lake as a reformed rabbi. Yea, so totally not-believable, but I love the fairytale!

And, ok, so I need to come clean here. It's not just the movies I love...it's the Hallmark commercials that are shown (when a Hallmark Hall of Fame movie is broadcast on network TV). They re-broadcast many of the same commercials (and I have some favorites) and they still touch my heart every time!!

And I just saw that Hallmark is turning 100 this year--wow! Happy Birthday my friend (from your biggest fan)!!!