Charitable Gift Giving

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New Designs from Moleskine

December 6th, 2011 · Arts

It’s that time of year again to run out and get your 2012 Moleskine Planner or Journal. In the past few years, Moleskines have gotten extremely popular. For those who don’t know the history of the Moleskine, it was a popular type of notebook made by a small French bookbinder who supplied all of the stationery shops in Paris by the late 1800s. The original notebooks were a simple black rectangle with rounded corners, an elastic page holder, and an internal expandable pocket. Pretty soon, luminaries such as Vincent Van Gogh, Ernest Hemmingway, Pablo Picasso, and just about anyone else who  passed through Paris.

Despite their popularity, by the 1980s the notebooks had all but disappeared. But in 1997, a small publisher in Italy started to make them again, and it picked up where it left off as a favorite among artists and travellers. Today, it seems that you can’t walk into any bookstore, stationery, or airport gift store without seeing a big display of Moleskine planners and journals.

The original Moleskine design is still available in the form of journals, notebooks, and sketchbooks. Recently, they also started to introduce neat licensed designs such as this Pac-Man design.

I recently had the pleasure of trying out a new set of Moleskine Ruled Journals.

moleskine

These are a little different from Moleskine’s traditional design. They’re 8 1/2″ x 11″ notebooks with thin lined paper inside, perfect for writing long travel journals.

Moleskine has had a feature on its Web site since 2009 where artists can submit artwork they’ve made in their Moleskine notebooks.  In the last two years, over 2400 images, drawings, and paintings have been submitted. This year, in celebration of this creativity Moleskine created a new collection called The Cover Art collection which consists of three Journals and four Diaries/Planners. Moleskine decided to select a handful of artists whose work to feature, and for each piece of artwork chosen, Moleskine makes a donation to a charity of the artist’s choice. Here’s a video explaining the concept:

The artists of these notebooks is Paul Wang, and the charity he chose is Urban Sketchers, an art organization devoted to the craft of location drawing. When you fold out the cover of each notebook, you see a beautifully drawn sketch.

This one is called “Old Oil Shop”. It’s a depiction of a grocery shop in Hong Kong with all kinds of cooking oils and preserved vegetables which evokes life in old-time China.

hong kong scene

This one is called “Wet Market”, and depicts a grocery stall in a district in Hong Kong called Shum Shio Po best known for its street markets.

hong kong market

(If you’d like to purchase these for yourself, they’re available on Amazon).

All are handmade and are even numbered with a quality control number. Overall, these notebooks were beautiful and in a funny way the quality and craftsmanship of these notebooks adds a bit of prestige and class to whatever you’ll write or draw in it. Whether you’re writing deeply personal words in a journal or the next great literary masterpiece, why write it in a cheap spiral notebook from a cheap office discount store, when you can write in a beautiful notebook that’s helped inspire great artists around the world?

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A New Charity Shopping Web site: Buy4.com

December 5th, 2011 · Uncategorized

On this blog we like to identify gifts where a percentage is donated to a great cause. But wouldn’t it be great if ANY gift you bought could go towards a great cause? There are a few sites out there like this, and the newest one is Buy4.com.

buy4 homepage

Buy4 works on an affiliate model, meaning that when you “click” through to a participating merchant’s Web site from Buy4.com and purchase an item, the merchant will pay a percentage of that transaction to them, and they in turn will donate that money to a charity which you designate.

It doesn’t cost you any extra money–the price you pay when you check out of the merchant’s account is exactly the same whether you clicked through from Buy4.com or not.

Buy4.com has done a few things that I haven’t seen other similar sites do. First, they have connected to a database that lists over 1.5 million registered 501(c)(3) charities, so you can choose literally any charity you like. I was able to pull up the little church I used to attend back in New Jersey.

Second, they have over 1,700 online retailers you can click through to, big names like 1-800-Flowers, Target, Amazon.com, and Macy’s. In other words, places you’ll be shopping anyway. In many cases, click through to these companies not only allow you to donate a portion of proceeds, they’ll also get you some good deals along the way, like free shipping or a dollar or percentage savings.

Third, they keep great track of how much you’ve earned for your charity through their online dashboard.

Fourth,  they have a partnership page which any charity can use for free to encourage fundraising simply by encouraging members or fans to shop through.

As I said, ideas like this have been done already, but this is probably one of the more clean and professional executions of it. I wish them the best of luck as they launch.

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Statue of Liberty 2011 Christmas Ornament

December 4th, 2011 · Arts

Statue of Liberty Ornament

October 28th of this year marked the 125th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty. In the last year we’ve seen demonstrations by the Tea Party, and on the other side of the political spectrum we’ve seen demonstrations by Occupy Movement. As much as you might agree or disagree with these movements, one thing is for sure–we can be thankful we live in a country where people are free to speak their mind.

When I was in China in 1999, my sister and I were in Tienanmen Square in Beijing visiting as tourists. We saw a small group of about 10 old Chinese women gather together. One of the women started to take out what appeared to be a banner of some kind, probably related to the falun gong movement. Literally within 20 seconds, a nondescript bus drove up to them. A few policeman swept them up quietly and within the minute, all of them were gone. The people in the square hardly took notice, they just went about their daily business. So many years later, things haven’t changed much over there.

We take it for granted, but this is how governments have conducted themselves for thousands of years. In the late 1800’s, the gift of the statue to the US was their way of telling us–never forget how special the gift of liberty is.

One very interesting fact about the Statue of Liberty is that it almost never happened. While the people of France funded the building of the statue, it was agreed that the funding and building of the pedestal fell on the people of the United States. Problem is, in the midst of an economic crisis in the decade of the 1870s, it became difficult to justify the project. The New York Times said in an editorial on September 29, 1876, that “no true patriot can countenance any such expenditures for bronze females in the present state of our finances.” In 1884, governor of New York Grover Cleveland vetoed a bill that would have provided $50,000 for the project (about $1 million in today’s money). When the US Congress the next year tried to pass a bill to provide $100,000 to the project (about $2.3 million today), the bill was defeated.

It was Joseph Pulitzer, publisher of The New York World, who started a drive to collect $100,000. New Yorkers started donating money, most of it in amounts under a dollar. Pulitzer published the names and stories of donors in his paper. By August 1885, 120,000 donors had contributed $102,000.

In many ways it’s the same today. In 1982, as the 100th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty was approaching, the statue had fallen under disrepair. I still remember driving by in New Jersey and seeing the statue discolored and rusty.

The National Park Service and Congress just couldn’t, or wouldn’t, be able to fund any meaningful restoration with tax dollars. In May 1982, President Reagan asked Chrysler chairman Lee Iococca to head a private sector effort to raise money. The result was what we call the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, which completely restored the Statue by her 100th birthday in 1986, and continues its important work to this day, both with the Statue of Liberty and with Ellis Island. If you haven’t visited either yet, make sure you do so the next time you’re in the New York / New Jersey area.

The Foundation continues to rely on private donations to this day. By buying the beautiful Christmas ornament you see pictured above or any number of other great gifts sold by the Foundation, in the spirit of those New Yorkers 125 years ago who gave the few cents and dollars at a time, you too can keep the Statue open and new as a fresh reminder of this country’s freedom.

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A Truly Unique Gift: Celebrity Ties for Christmas 2011

December 3rd, 2011 · Poverty

Let’s face it, the tie has been a little bit overdone as a gift over the years. Men get them for Father’s Day, their birthday, Christmas, and any other occasion in between. There was a time when having 100 ties in a tie drawer was a useful thing, but that was back when everyone wore ties to work. But unless he’s a lawyer or an executive in a big company, chances are your recipient will smile and not think about your gift for a while.

There is one exception to this rule, and that’s when you give him a tie signed by a superstar. Imagine giving him a Georgio Armani tie signed by Carmelo Anthony.

Carmelo Anthony Tie

Or a Gucci tie signed by Dwayne Wayde.

Dwayne Wade Tie

These two celebrities, along with Kevin Spacey, Derrick Rose, Kevin Bacon, Fergie, Jay Leno, Isiah Whitlock Jr., Matt Dillon, Tyreke Evans, David Duchovny, Peter Facinelli, Kenneth Faried, Xavier Henry, David Tutera, Al Horford, Gordon Ramsay, Al Roker, George Kotsiopolous, Tom and Ray Magliozzi, Russell Westbrook, Tim Gunn, Zach Galifinakis, and Rainn Wilson have all donated signed ties to a CharityBuzz auction that has been going on since November 15 and WILL be ending in three days, on Tuesday December 6 at 3:21 PM Eastern Time.

The proceeds of this auction will go to CareerGear, a fantastic charity that started in 1999 with a very unique goal: to help ensure that men who couldn’t afford something as essential as a suit could be given a suit to go to interviews with. This very simple thing could disrupt the cycle of hopelessness and low self esteem and change the course of a man’s life to one that with a trajectory of growth and success.

In the years since, they’ve added programs to help mentor people in their jobs, help with interview preparation, and help coach them in financial, parenting, and other skills. They’ve helped give thousands of men a chance.

It’s a great cause, but they need your donations. If you have a gently-used suit, they’ll accept it as a donation. And be sure to visit the auction before it ends Tuesday Afternoon! 

 

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What's that new song on the radio? Find out with Shazam RED only $1.99

December 2nd, 2011 · (PRODUCT) Red, AIDS

find unknown song lyrics and names with shazam

How many times have you heard a song on the radio, only to miss what the name of the song is?

If you haven’t heard of it yet, Shazam is an amazing piece of software for the iPhone or iPad where you can hold your phone or tablet up to the song that’s playing. A few seconds and *shazam*, it’ll tell you the name of the song, the artist, and even give you a link to buy it. It’s a great tool to have and to pull out at any time, especially when you’re getting on in years and forgetting stuff.

I’ve used Shazam countless times. It’s not perfect–the song has to be in Shazam’s database, which has almost every popular song imaginable, but is hit-or-miss on classical music. Still, I’ve found it to be hit more than miss. It’s a great tool to have and to pull out at any time, especially when you’re getting on in years and forgetting stuff.

There’s a special edition of Shazam where 20% of the purchase price will go to fighting the scourge of AIDS as part of the (PRODUCT) RED program. In honor of World AIDS Day (which was yesterday), Shazam will be selling (Shazam) RED all this week (until the 7th) at the reduced price of $1.99. And 100% of the proceeds for this week will be going to (PRODUCT) RED.

In addition, when people add a pledge of action to the (2015)QUILT, an online effort to bring the number of babies born with AIDS to zero, they’ll receive a choice of one of the six (RED) songs by The Killers for free as a thank you. and are invited to buy the other singles or the entire (RED) Christmas EP, with proceeds going to fight AIDS.

It’s a great tool to have and to pull out at any time, especially when you’re getting on in years and forgetting stuff. 🙂

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9 Great Gifts that donate 100% to Charity, courtesy of The High Low

December 1st, 2011 · Breast Cancer, Developing Areas, Kohls

We recently got an email from the publisher of The High Low, who just published their own list of gifts that give 100% of proceeds to charity. You can view their list here.  Here are some of our favorites:

vera wang bag

These handsome Vera Wang Cosmetic Bags are available exclusively at Kohls. It comes in one of three beautiful colors, and 100% of proceeds are donated to fighting breast cancer. Each bag features zippered pockets, study nylon lining, and a canvas body, and are machine-washable.

At  $10 it’s a great and affordable Christmas gift, made even more special when you consider that $10 of those $10 goes straight to charity.

shark fin soap

LUSH Cosmetics is selling  Shark Fin Soap, these adorable bars of soap with a serious message: preventing the cruel practice of harvesting shark fins which leaves 95% of the animal intact but unable to swim. 100% of proceeds will go to Shark Savers, an organization devoted to protecting sharks.

cute mittenscute scarf

These cute mittens and scarf from Kate Spade are kind of pricey, but when you consider that they were crafted in partnership with women in countries like Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and that 100% of proceeds will go to lift up lives in those struggling areas, the price is worth it.

For more great gift ideas, visit The High Low.

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Village Wisdom – A Remarkable Book by Carrie Wagner

November 25th, 2011 · Developing Areas

village wisdom bookIt’s somewhat fitting that my last post was about reading and how it can educate you, inspire you, and open new horizons, as I recently came across a book that does all three of those.

Carrie Wagner did something a lot of us say we want to do, but very few of us have the time, the courage, or the spirit of sacrifice to. She and her husband left her home for three years and lived in a village in Western Uganda, helping the villagers there build houses as a worker for Habitat for Humanity International. 15 years later, she returned with her husband and two children. This book is the account of that remarkable journey.

Most of us in the United States live in a bubble. We live in comfortable homes with air conditioning and flat screen TVs. We fill ourselves so full of food that we need to exercise to remove some of the excess–and we call that “suffering”.

But Carrie’s remarkable photographs and accounts, from letters to journal entries to prose, all open a window for us to see what everyday life is really like for those who aren’t as materially blessed as we are. Note that I don’t use the phrase “for those who are less fortunate than us”. Because one of the amazing things that Carrie finds is that while the residents of her little village in Uganda don’t have much physically, spiritually and communally they are the rich ones, and we are the poor ones. So while she was working to transform their lives, all the while it was her life that was undergoing the transformation.

Her book is filled with amazing photography that go beyond letting you see what life was life in Uganda. You really experience it. They are beautiful images of the simplicity of life. The smiles you see are genuine. Carrie wrote a poignant piece about one of her transformations, of how she started her travels snapping pictures, but realizing that in her subjects’ culture, being photographed was like taking a part of their soul away. And so as she developed relationships with her new friends, she became respectful of this. When she finally did take photographs of them, it was only when they consented to being photographed, in essence “giving a part of their soul” to her. And looking into their eyes, you can see into their souls.

We hear a lot of celebrities who do charity work and call them “role models”. But her book spends a good deal of time talking about a man who was a real role model: a man by the name of Job. This was a man who was always on the edge of poverty himself, and yet he cared for Carrie and her husband throughout their trip. He also cared deeply for his village, finding ways to advance them technologically by making bricks and even spearheading a campaign to build bridges over raging river waters where people died trying to cross. The bridge he built was a poignant symbol for the bridges that he built with Carrie and her husband.

Another poignant part of the book is the end, where she describes her and her husband’s return to the same village in Uganda fifteen years later, this time with her two boys. I was really touched how she allowed her children to experience all that she had, and even encouraged them to write journals of their own. And there’s a section of the book that has photographs of people she met 15 years ago juxtaposed with photos of the same people today.

I really appreciate the last few pages of Carrie’s book. She concludes by saying that one of the purposes of her book is to encourage those who want to serve, whether in Africa or in their own backyard. This part of the book was especially poignant for me. I’m sort of at a point in my own life where I need to ask myself what my purpose here on Earth is. I recently left a company in New York City where I made a decent paycheck, but at the end of the day I would go home and feel drained; I just didn’t want to deal with the backstabbing politics and the singular focus of everyone on making as much money as possible. I’ve always felt that the good Lord has a purpose for me somewhere, but I just haven’t found it yet. But in her encouragement, Carrie lays out a number of questions that spoke right to me of things to ask yourself when trying to find “your place”. I haven’t found it yet, but I really appreciate that her story has given me new hope to keep looking.

After reading the book, I really felt like I experienced some of what Carrie went through, if only in a vicarious way. Not everyone can go to Africa, and even fewer people can spend three years of their lives there. I really appreciate that Carrie has shared her story with us so we can. She doesn’t pull any punches–she is authentic and honest in describing the highs and lows of her journey, from the camaraderie and laughter she shared with her adopted community to the realities of poverty and corruption that are far too common. But at the end of the day, you marvel at her transformation and can’t help but be touched by it yourself.

I definitely recommend it for anyone who is interested in charity work, or in encouraging others to do something a little more meaningful than ruin their health by making as much money as they can. We live in a world today where many live in material excess, and many who don’t live in excess take to the streets demanding that they get “their share” of some of that excess. But there are those on the narrow road who know that fulfillment in life doesn’t come by getting more “stuff”, but by giving it.

On her Web site, you can purchase a copy of her book as well as an accompanying Educational Kit, which is perfect whether you’re a public school teacher, a homeschool teacher, or a Sunday school teacher. And as an extra bonus, for every book sold through her Website $5 will go directly to Job’s village in Uganda.

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Gifts for Book Lovers at GoneReading.com

November 20th, 2011 · Developing Areas, Literacy, Uncategorized

When talking with my sister at dinner a few weeks ago, the subject turned to reading. As kids, we were voracious readers. When the Scholastic Book Club newsletter came to us in our grade schools, we’d circle all the books we could, great books like Encyclopedia Brown, The Cricket in Times Square, The Phantom Tollbooth were our best friends growing up. She bought a whole set of beloved children’s books for our nieces, but sadly when she asked if they’d read the books, they told her that just didn’t have the time. Sadly, I’ve even heard stories that the Book Clubs themselves have devolved into a catalog of toys and junk for kids.

It seems like an epidemic. Kids don’t seem to read anymore. We live in a world where more than three paragraphs of text on a Web page are called too much. We’re too busy to write complete sentences, so we write things like “LOL”, “LMAO”, and “BFF”. That’s just sad. Because a great book can inspire you, can lift you up, and can broaden your world. If you look at the most successful people in the world, most of them can rattle off a list of their favorite books.

I recently got a nice email from Brad, the founder of Gone Reading International, LLC. His is an amazing organzation that fund new libraries and literacy projects around the developing world. It’s no coincidence that literacy rate is one of the statistics by which people judge whether a country is successful. There’s a cause-and-effect relationship there. It’s not that once people get rich, they can afford books. It’s quite the opposite. It’s when people fill themselves with knowledge and inspiration from authors of the past that they can build upon the things they read and achieve greater things themselves. That’s why tyrants as recent as the Nazis in the 1930s or the Communists in China’s Cultural Revolution of the 1960s destroyed books. Allowing the masses to have knowledge was just too dangerous to their grip on power.

What organizations like Gone Reading International do is the opposite. By partnering with organizations like READ Global and Ethipoia Reads, they don’t just give people in developing areas a handout. They equip them with one of the most powerful gifts of all: the gift of reading. And in doing this they can stop the cycle of despair and hopelessness and help change their world for the better.

GoneReading.Com has a large assortment of high quality gifts that you can send to the avid reader in your life (or to something who has a budding interest in reading which you’d like to encourage). Brad was kind enough to send me some products to review.

My favorite product is this apron that says “Jane Austen for President”. I really like this idea–surely the woman who brought together Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy could figure out how to solve the debt crisis and the conflict in the Middle East!

jane austen apron

It’s funny, but recently on Brad’s blog he wrote a series called “A Dude Reads Jane Austen”. It’s been years since I picked up Pride and Prejudice, but reading his thoughts just made me want to pick it up again.

I also got a chance to look at some of GoneReading.com’s mugs:

gone reading mugs

There’s a Jane Austen for President mug and a cute mug showing GoneReading.com’s logo with an alien pointing a ray gun at you and saying “Take Me To Your Reader”. These mugs were actually really, really high quality…very sturdy and taller than your traditional mug.

There’s a whole range of gifts for book lovers at GoneReading.com, ranging from T-Shirts to Tote Bags to baby onesies to mugs and aprons. You’re sure to find something great for the book lover in your life.

I want to thank Brand for reaching out, and encourage you to support this fantastic organization!

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Never Give Up: How to Find Hope and Purpose in Adversity by Ruthe Rosen

November 15th, 2011 · Children's Charities

Occasionally I’ll be contacted by a publisher who’ll ask me to read a book where proceeds go to a charity. It has been a while, though, since I’ve read a book that’s hit me as personally as Never Give Up by Ruthe Rosen.

Ruthe’s daughter Karla was what most would describe as a typical teenage girl growing up in Southern California. She had blond hair, blue eyes, a gaggle of great friends, was a straight-A student, played on her school’s soccer team, and participated in her school’s competitive dance team. Then one day out of the blue Karla started having terrible headaches. The diagnosis: Karla had brainstem glioma, a tumor located at the base of the skull.

It’s the kind of diagnosis that is devastating for a patient and a family to hear. And yet, what follows is the story of how Karla faces it with faith and strength beyond her years. And how her strength and courage impacted her mom, her family, her friends, and her community.

What I found amazing about Rosen’s writing is how completely honest it is, as only a Mom who went through what she did could write. She goes into every detail of the ups and downs over the next year. She talks straightforwardly about her family and what it was like having both Karla’s biological father and stepfather in the picture. She talks candidly about the typical mother-teenager stuff she and Karla faced at times. She talks about the highs and the lows of the various medical episodes, of how Karla’s friends dealt with her illness, and what I found most inspirational, of how those times that her little girl ended up making her stronger as opposed to the other way around.

As you read the book, you can’t help but be drawn into the events and the emotions that Karla and her mom went through each step of the way. It’s a painful journey, but somehow at the end you’re not filled with sadness or despair. Strangely, you’re filled with appreciation and joy for what Karla was able to do in her short life and how she was able to touch so many lives (including through this book). Throughout the book, Karla and her family are praying for a miracle. By the end of the book, you realize that a miracle did happen, but just not in the way that you originally thought it would.

One of the things that struck me was one part of the book where Ruthe talks about a brief period of time where things “went back to normal”, and how she cherished those times. Never Give Up is a poignant reminder that every moment and every breath that we have on this earth, especially with our loved ones, is a gift from God to be cherished and held on to. It’s an amazing reminder that no matter what troubles we face in this work-a-day world, that it’s not what’s outside of us that matters but what’s inside.

If you’re someone who is tempted to take life for granted or let life get you down, I can’t think of a better book for you to read. You can order it at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or your local bookstore. A portion of proceeds will go directly to the Let It Be Foundation, the organization founded by Rosen that helps the families of children stricken by life-threatening diseases.

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Nancy Tillman children's books and stuffed animals from Kohls

November 12th, 2011 · Children's Charities, Kohls

If you need some great Christmas presents for children or parents of young children, Kohl’s has the answer once again. This year they have exclusive hardcover editions of four Nancy Tillman books for just $5 each. You can also get a coordinated stuffed animal featuring the main character of the book for another $5. And amazingly, 100 percent of the net profit is donated to children’s health and education initiatives nationwide.

The books are filled with beautiful illustrations and carry Tillman’s signature message to children – “You are loved!”. Here are the details of each book and stuffed animal.
 

“Wherever You Are” tells of a parent’s deep and endless love for their child. It comes paired with a plush dolphin.

It’s Time to Sleep, My Love” is an enchanting sleepytime lullaby. The story follows a child’s dreams of sleeping throughout the seasons and around the world and is paired with a plush panda bear.

The Spirit of Christmas” is a sweet retelling of the excitement and magical moments during the holidays. This story by Nancy Tillman shows that the most touching part of the Christmas season is spending time with those we love and is paired with a lion plush.

On the Night You Were Born” recounts what happened on the day your child was born. It tells how geese flew home, polar bears danced and the whole world came together to celebrate his or her unique wonder on that day and is paired with a plush polar bear.

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