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Dr. Desmond Barrett, of the Ashland Community Kitchen, and United Way s Jerri Compton, right, display a United Way sign. Submitted United Way in Ashland has been part of the area for 85 years, and Executive Director Jerri Compton of United Way of Northeast Kentucky said many members of the community instantly recognize the organizationâs logo, but they might not realize that each United Way is focused on serving the needs of its community. Each individual United Way partners with local government agencies and civic organizations to ensure that residents of the community receive needed services in the most effective way possible. ....
Are you looking for something to catch the sunlight and brighten your home? Stirrups & Stitches Designs, LLC featuring original art appliques is just the ticket. The home-based business is a family affair. It was started by the familyâs matriarch, Claire Webber. It combines her inspiration with the ingenuity and talent of her daughter and husband, Krystal and Scott Hayes, and the coupleâs daughter Taylor Hayes. An award-winning quilter from Billings, Claire started sewing in 4-H when she was 8 years old. She has sewn all her life, owning her own business for 21 years making wedding gowns and bridesmaids dresses. In 2001, after she moved from Ryegate to Billings, she was bitten by the quilting bug, and the wedding gown business went by the wayside. She has been designing a lot of her own quilts for several years. Her âsilhouette techniqueâ came about when making Christmas gifts for her daughters. When working on the second one, she hung the first one in ....
By Monica Kass Rogers Looking out from the garden at his home in Raleigh, North Carolina, photographer Charles Harris calls it green. “Green, green, green, as far as the eye can see,” says Harris, describing the 700 rambling acres of forested land across the way. But as we talk via laptops on this bright afternoon in May, the visual landscape shifts to make dramatic global leaps on our screens: A little boy kicks a ball across a red clay pitch in Rwanda. An old boxer, sweaty back flexed and gloved hands held high, shelters from the rainy evening in a dark Havana gym. Kigali villagers, baskets balanced on dhuku-wrapped heads, walk to work in Rwandan tea fields as clouds gather overhead. A Kuna fisherman perches in the bow of his dugout canoe as he heads out to sea off the coast of Panama. And then, we are back in the States, perched with a surfer on rocky Californian coast, having cut a coast-to-coast swath through Harris’s creative landscapes. ....