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GIVE AWAY-Blue print art

November 8, 2010 By: Stephanie8 Comments

It’s my first give away!!!

Remember my Blueprint art work?

Well here is your chance to win an 8×10 copy of my blueprint.

(Frame not included)

Rules:

  • You must be a follower of my blog to win
  • The giveaway will end at midnight on Saturday 11/13.
  • You must include your email address in each comment you leave.

To enter
(each comment counts as one entry)

  • Leave a comment telling me what project on this blog has been your favorite and why
  • Leave a comment telling me you are a follower
  • Blog about this give away or share it on your Facebook page and come back to leave a comment telling me you have done so

Don’t forget to include an email address in each comment! I need a way to get in touch with you if you win.

Winners will be selected at random on Sunday, 11/14.
If I get more than 150 comments I will choose 2 winners.

Good luck!

Giveaway Directory

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The Easiest Skirt of All Time

November 8, 2010 By: Stephanie22 Comments

how to make a sweater skirt in ten minutes

If you have never even touched a sewing machine until this moment, you can do this. I promise.

Remember how I told you Anthroplogie has a line of sweater skirts out right now?

When I saw them on their website (for a minimum of $98 each, no less) I had a serious Why didn’t I think of that?! moment. Here I’ve been making all kinds of stuff out of sleeves, I have desperately needed something to do with the torsos of all my re-purposed sweaters.

It’s so easy I’m almost embarrassed to post this as a tutorial. Almost.

The important thing is to find a sweater with a band at the bottom that is similar to your waist measurement. (A little bit smaller is better because it will stretch. If it’s a little big just belt it.) This one is a men’s medium and I picked it up at Goodwill today for $4. It’s important to use a men’s sweater because it gives you more fabric for length.

I chose this one because of the way the band curved in at the bottom, the neutral color, and the fact that it had my favorite words (“machine wash, tumble dry low”) on the tag.

Are you ready? There are only 2 steps.

Step 1: Cut a scalloped shape across the chest, just under the arms.

Step 2: Zig-zag stitch along the area that you just cut. This will prevent unraveling and will also create a little ruffle as you pull the fabric through the machine.

Done. Ready to wear in 10 minutes.


(I know these pictures of me are awful, but it’s the best I can do using the automated timer on the camera by myself)

You can use the sleeves to make some of my stockings or puppets.

Let me know if you make one!

Turn an old sweater into a comfy skirt in five minutes

I’m linking to
Trash to Treasure Tuesday
Tuesday Treasures
Whatever Goes Wednesday
Transformation Thursday
Get Your Craft On Thursday
Sunday Showcase
Refashion Party

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Our Little Blog Made the News!

November 8, 2010 By: Stephanie9 Comments

Yesterday our local FOX station aired a segment about my $0 Christmas projects on the 10:00 news.

If you are new to Binkies & Briefcases, you can find all of the projects that I have completed over the past few months by clicking on the links below.

So far I have completed these children’s toys

“Colorforms”
A Felt Tool Set
A Space Play Set
Dinosaurs (Pattern available at the top of my side bar)
Stuffed Crabs (Pattern available at the top of my side bar)
Dominoes
Puffy Dollhouse
Sweater Puppets (These made the top 10 in this month’s Iron Crafter Competition)
Rag Doll

You can also find other low-cost ideas for gift-giving for older children or adults like my recent sweater sleeve stockings, homemade vanilla extract,or blueprint art.

I’d like to thank Nava & FOX 43 for featuring my story, I hope that we can inspire some other families to focus on the true meaning of Christmas without getting caught up in the commercialism.

Weekend Bloggy Reading

Photobucket

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Easy Anthro Knock-Off Skirt

November 7, 2010 By: Stephanie2 Comments

I still have sweaters in my re-purposing pile. LOTS of sweaters. And you know I love me a good knock-off project.

Anthropology Sweater Skirt Tutorial

This skirt is from Anthropologie. It retails for $98. They actually have an entire line of sweater skirts and this one is the cheapest! (Evidentally people actually pay that much for an upside-down sweater.) Um…I don’t spend $98 on one skirt…although…that does look pretty comfy…

What I wish I had was a huge (like men’s XXL) gray cable knit, because then I could have made the exact same thing by cutting it across the chest, turning it upside-down, and fitting it around my waist. But I didn’t have a men’s XXL (I might have to look for one this week at Goodwill) I had these:

These were the only 2 coordinating sweaters in my stash that both had extra-wide bands at the bottom. That means mine’s really more of a reference to the original than a knock-off, but whatever, I still got a new skirt for free.

I cut the gray-blue one across the chest just under the arms. (I might turn the arms into a shrug later) but that wasn’t enough length, so I also cut the band from a coordinating sweater to use as a waistband and add a few more inches.

I cut the purple band to my waist measurement, then I trimmed the grayish-blue sweater accordingly.

I sewed up the sides and attached the band to the top. Bonus: No need to hem because the band at the bottom is already finished.

I folded the purple band over because the super thick waistband was a bit too much on my short, curvy frame, but it turned out that the fold was a perfect place to hide a belt to ensure a good fit. 🙂

It’s so comfy! Plus it only took about 45 minutes.

It’s not weird to be getting re-dressed & taking pictures of yourself in the kitchen at 9 pm, right?

I’m linking to:

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Felt Tools

November 7, 2010 By: Stephaniecomment

I don’t really have a tutorial for this project, but don’t worry. It’s really easy. If I can do it, you can too.

I picked up this wooden tool box at Goodwill a few months ago. I thought I could use it to store craft supplies or grow a mini herb garden or something, but I never did so I decided to turn it into another no-spend Christmas gift for Nicholas.

All I did was cut tool-shapes out of craft felt, sew them together & stuff them with poly-fill. I made hammer, a saw, and a screwdriver. The yellow thing is supposed to be a ruler, but I don’t think it turned out very well. Then I wrote his name on the box with a Sharpie. I was originally going to paint it, but he’s a boy & he’s 3, I assure you he does not care one little bit what color it is so it is staying au naturel.

The only hard part was stuffing the poly-fill in the long skinny pieces like the screw driver. I used a crochet hook, but it was still a bit tricky.

Other felt tool sets can run as much as $40. I spent $0.

That means my no-spend Christmas total savings is up to $326.

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Sweater Sleeve Mini Stockings

November 5, 2010 By: Stephanie2 Comments

It’s that time of year again. Only 3 weeks until Thanksgiving and 50 days until Christmas! I’m giving a little talk to my Mom N Me group at church next week about homemade Christmas presents and I wanted to have a little homemade give away. Plus I joined the Craftaholic US Gift Exchange this year.

I didn’t want to spend a lot of money or too much time on these projects, so this is a super quick & easy project. Total time=less than 10 minutes for both. Total cost=$3.50

I bought this sweater last week at our local Goodwill. (Don’t worry, it’s been washed since then)

Our GW doesn’t have a dressing room. This is a Land’s End sweater marked medium that was in the women’s section. I assumed that meant women’s medium (my size) & I threw it in the cart. Um..it didn’t. It meant child’s medium. Oops. To the re-purposing pile it went. Good thing it was only $3.50.

I cut off the sleeves in a stocking-ish shape.

1 sweater=2 sleeves=2 stockings

Turn them inside-out and sew along the edges you cut. Leave the tops open, of course.

Sew on a loop of ribbon so that you can hang it. Fold down the cuff at the top to give it a more finished appearance.

They are a medium size, a bit too small to work on your mantel, but plenty big enough to make a nice gift.

Fill them with holiday cookies, candy canes, craft supplies (I think knitting needles would be cute since the stocking is made from a sweater. Get it?), a gift card, whatever your little heart desires.

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National Adoption Month

November 5, 2010 By: Stephanie4 Comments

In honor of National Adoption Month I’m re-posting the story of our call to adopt. If you feel like you may be called to do the same and have questions feel free to comment or send me an email at stephaniegiese@aim.com.

The Calling (originally posted July 2010)

Lately, Eddie and I have been growing a lot in our faith, which is a great thing. However, I’ve been really struggling with the issue of choosing a denomination. Our recent growth has also caused some of our friends who have known us for quite some time to question what is going on. This is our story:

How to Decide to Adopt

You see, when we were teenagers we were VERY involved with the Catholic church. We both came from Catholic families and we went to a Catholic school, we were peer ministers, we went to local and national Catholic youth conventions, we did volunteer work, etc. I also attended a Catholic leadership institute summer program and completed a special college-level theology class at St. Mary’s Seminary. It was a big part of our identity.

From there, although we were still dating, Eddie went to the University of Maryland while I obtained my bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the College of Notre Dame of Maryland, which is a very small Catholic women’s college founded by a group of nuns known as the School Sisters of Notre Dame. That meant I was in Catholic schools from elementary through graduate school. I hate to use the word indoctrinated, so let’s just say that I had and still have a very strong understanding of the teachings of this church.

That’s not to say we always followed those teachings. We both made some decisions during our teenage years regarding alcohol, sexuality, and the situations in which we allowed ourselves to be involved that were definitely not in line with any religious teachings, Catholic or otherwise.

We didn’t talk much about our personal relationships with God, but I saw Eddie’s fading fast when he went to college. I thought mine was still fairly strong, but it faded over time as well and our relationship with each other suffered at the same time. We didn’t go to church any more. This was around the same time that the scandals involving priests and sexual abuse were all over the news. Eddie decided he just could not be part of a church that didn’t punish that kind of behavior. In our own relationship there were “breaks” and fights and tears and another guy, but we loved each other deeply and I had a fierce and stubborn determination that we were going to get married and have children. I always get my way.

2006 was a ridiculously stressful time.

In May Eddie got his bachelor’s degree, I got my master’s degree, he tore his ACL and had surgery, and we settled on our first house, which was 1,000 miles away from home because we had decided to move to Florida on a whim.

In June he moved to Florida and started his job, I finished my first year of teaching in Maryland and moved to the new house in Florida a few weeks after he did.

In July & August I found a part-time job at a gym because I was struggling to find a teaching job in a new state where I didn’t have my certification. The owners were downright nasty people. I struggled dealing with their lying, harassment, and general cattiness while Eddie had no trouble making new friends and leaving me alone more often than I cared for while he joined new sports teams, frequented bars, and worked tons of over-time. I was busy filing complaints with the police and planning our wedding.

In September we went back to Baltimore, got married, and went on a fabulous trip to the Sandals resort in the Bahamas. Things started to look up. Our relationship was getting stronger because we had to lean on each other for support since we were so far from home. I found a teaching job, I was going to teach gifted students math and science. I’d be at one school in the morning and another in the afternoon.

In October I started my new job. The parents hated me with a passion. There had just been boundary changes in the county and they were not happy that their children had been sent to different schools. The gifted teacher that had been at the school had retired when she learned her position would be split between two schools, so they lost a teacher with 30 years of experience and got me, not certified by Florida, no training in gifted education, with only one year of experience, coming in after the first quarter was just about over. Parents who didn’t even know me jumped on the bandwagon. There was a three page article in a local magazine attacking me and the other gifted teacher at my afternoon school. The family who was interviewed had their picture taken and were quoted several times complaining about the gifted program and its new teacher (me). Their child wasn’t even in the gifted program! I never taught her!

In the midst of all of this I got a calling from God. I felt a strange ache in my heart and I knew I had been called to adopt a child. Do you know when you are hungry? You instinctively know that the ache in your stomach means you need to eat. It was the same thing. There was a very sudden and very strong ache in my heart and I knew exactly what it meant.

Eddie thought I was going insane. Literally. He thought the stress of everything had gotten to me and he told me to see a psychiatrist. He said that the only reason I was saying that I was being called by God was because he had no argument for that. We hadn’t been to church in years. It made no sense at all.

I was not insane, but I was obsessed. Suddenly I spent every free moment of my time researching adoption, emailing him articles and pictures of children from the Heart Gallery, and re-reading A Child Called It, the book that had originally put the adoption idea in my head years before. At first Eddie was not on board. At all. Can you blame him? He was 21 and had only been married for 6 weeks.

It took me 6 months to convince him to go to an orientation meeting with Camelot, the foster care and adoption agency we chose. I had to drag him by the teeth and I’m pretty sure he only agreed to go so that I would shut up. Six months of nagging is a long time. We went to the orientation in April of 2007. We didn’t know it yet, but our 4-week-old son was living in the Salvation Army homeless shelter at the time. I can’t even look at that sentence without crying.

The entire process took a year and a half from the time of that meeting until we stood in the courtroom and the judge pronounced us Nicholas’ adoptive parents. During that time Eddie’s heart changed. The more stories he heard, the more children he met, the more he understood why we needed to do this. It was hard for him to make the decision to leave his youth behind him and make the transition from frat boy to being somebody’s dad. Really hard. But he did it with strength and grace that he didn’t know he had and I think he started to realize where that strength and grace was coming from.

During that year we were preparing for our adopted child everything started falling into place. I got a more stable teaching position, being able to stay at one school all day. I started to make friends. I got my certifications for the state of Florida and gifted education. I became our school’s science contact (basically the department chair) and a county teacher trainer. My principal even nominated me for an award! Eddie got raise after raise and high praise at work too. Our relationship got much stronger.

In May of 2008 Nicholas moved in with us. His foster mom, Debbie, had taken care of him since he was 2 months old. We will be forever grateful to Debbie. She is an angel on earth and we’re lucky to still be able to keep in touch with her.

In July we decided to move to Pennsylvania where we could be close to family, but Eddie could continue his career in a different office but for the same company. We found a house and made an offer. They agreed not to settle until September.

In August of 2008 we discovered that I was pregnant.

In September we put our Florida house on the market and settled on the one in Pennsylvania. We had two mortgages until we could sell our Florida house.

In October we went to court and officially became Nicholas’ parents.

In November we sold the house. It was the peak of the housing crisis and Florida was the worst state hit. We lost close to $60,000. It was worth it.

In December family flew down to Florida and helped us make the 23 hour trip with our moving van. I was 5 months pregnant and Nicholas was 1 and a half. We got a flat tire at 1:00 in the morning. It was an adventure.

In January of 2009 I got a postcard advertising a mom-n-me program at a local church. I was 6 months pregnant and going stir crazy in the Pennsylvania house with a toddler who had never known a cold day in his life, trying to adjust to my new role as a stay-at-home mom. That was our first introduction to the Church of the Open Door.

Nicholas and I continued going to mom-n-me, but it wasn’t until May of 2009 that we actually attended a service. I convinced Eddie to go mostly because they offered free child care. Abby was 5 weeks old and we were exhausted. Before the service they advertised that they were having men’s volleyball that night. Eddie is an avid competitive volleyball player. He went that night, met a great friend in Josh, and was hooked.

I was not so hooked. This was a very strange role reversal. I loved the idea of bringing my children up in the church. I loved that Eddie was willing to go. I loved that we made such great friends so quickly. I did not like the idea that this was a Protestant church. COD has no denomination, but it is most definitely Protestant. (Protestant meaning not Orthodox and not Catholic)

Where were my traditions? What do you mean you don’t Baptize children? What do you mean there’s no ceremony for their First Communion? Wait a minute, Communion is symbolic and you take the Bible literally? That last one is the complete opposite of everything I ever heard in any graduate-level theology course I was ever taught by nuns who had dedicated their entire lives to educating people about God. The Catholic church believes that during Communion God performs a miracle and literally takes the bread and wine and turns it into the body and blood of Jesus. They also believe that many of the stories in the Bible, such as the Creation story, are not meant to be taken literally.

Eddie was thrilled to find a church where he fit. His faith blossomed exponentially. He has always been a good, loyal husband and father, but now he is nothing short of amazing. I love COD too. I love its people, its way of reaching out to the community, its programs, the way the Bible is used with active participation throughout the ceremony, and most especially for the man I now have for a husband. But I’m still not sure I fit.

I’m trying. We took the Welcome class where Pastor Bob explained the belief system. We’re taking the parenting class. I still go to Mom N Me and last year I served on the steering committee. But I’m really struggling with this whole Protestant thing. With calling people “saved” or “not saved.” With the fact that if we become members I will not get to see my little girl walk to the alter in her white dress to take her First Communion. With the fact that my children will have different traditions than I did. And most especially with taking the Bible literally. I know that God doesn’t care what traditions we use or whether Abby wears a white dress or a pair of jeans the first time she takes Communion, but I’m pretty sure He does care about what we believe about Him.

So I tried it. I honestly did. I picked up the Bible and I started reading with the mindset that everything I was reading was exactly what happened. I got to Genesis 1. (That’s not very far.) In Genesis 1 God created the world in 6 days. In our Welcome class Pastor Bob said that COD takes this literally. My question is this: How is it even possible to take this to mean that this was done in 6 24 hour days? The definition we’re basing our time frame on is the time it takes the earth to rotate on its axis. For the first two days all that existed were light and sky. How are you going to measure this in Earth days before the earth existed? Not to mention that God made all of the other planets too. What if He wants us to measure in Jupiter days?

Then I got to Genesis 4. This is where Cain kills Abel. If the Bible is to be taken literally then Adam and Eve and Cain and Abel are the only people on Earth. After Cain kills his brother he and his wife (Where did he get a wife? Did he marry his sister? When did he get a sister?) have a son. Then they build a city (Why are they building a city? The only people on the planet are Adam, Eve, Cain, his wife who came out of nowhere, and their baby, Enoch. Cain doesn’t live near Adam and Eve any more. Why does his tiny little family need an entire city? Did she help build it? How do two people build a city by themselves and take care of an infant? Do they mean they built the city by populating it with people or by actually building the structures? –If the Bible were a movie this is where Eddie would hiss at me, “Would you stop asking questions and just watch?!”) Then Enoch has an entire line of descendants. I am too confused to keep reading this way. Obviously these men did not spawn themselves and yet the only woman mentioned is Eve. She didn’t have her son’s baby because he had been sent away for killing his brother, yet it says he has a wife, as do all of his descendants from there on out. To me that means that the only logical conclusion is that there were other people on Earth. I can’t take the entire Bible literally. I believe its message with my entire heart, but I am really struggling to take it literally.

But at the same time I love COD for the way has it transformed our family dynamic. It was there, sitting in a service on Sunday morning, that a sudden realization washed over me. I wasn’t listening to Pastor Bob at all. Tears started running down my face and Eddie mouthed, “Are you ok?” I just nodded. At the time we were really struggling. Nicholas had been diagnosed with a very challenging behavior disorder, I was trying to sell the toy library I had just founded so I could deal with him. None of my education or experience had prepared me to raise this child with special needs. I felt like a total failure, but suddenly I just knew.

I knew I had been chosen for this task and Nicholas was my purpose in life. I had just realized, while zoning out during the sermon, that I moved to Florida on June 19, 2006. Nicholas was born in Tampa on March 16, 2007. That is almost 9 months to the day. (Eddie had moved in 2 weeks before I did.) I understood why I had faced so many challenges in Florida; it was all in preparation for this much more important task. God wouldn’t bring him into the world until I was where I needed to be, both mentally and geographically.

So that’s where I am.

P.S.

Several of the great leaders in the Bible were taken in and raised by people who were not their biological parents. Moses was taken in by the Pharaoh’s daughter, Queen Esther was adopted by Mordecai, and Jesus was raised by Joseph. Adoption is an important calling. My son will go on to do great things.

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Iron Crafter-Sweater Edition

November 1, 2010 By: Stephaniecomment

I’m honored to have made the top 10 for this month’s Iron Crafter competition! The secret ingredient was sweaters. You can vote for my sweater puppets (or any of the other cute projects) at Fireflies and Jellybeans.

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Home Made Vanilla Extract

November 1, 2010 By: Stephanie1 Comment

It’s not a meal, but I’m posting this now for Share a Meal Monday because if you do this today you can have vanilla extract in time for Thanksgiving (American Thanksgiving, anyway).

It’s fast & easy to make a homemade vanilla extract (although you do have to wait a few weeks for it to do its thing) and per unit, it is cheaper than what you pay at the store for pure extract.

Homemade Vanilla Extract

All you need is:

  • A clean jar with a lid (I used a pasta sauce jar)
  • Vanilla beans (in the spice section at the regular grocery store)
  • Vodka (you can also use rum, but it will affect the flavor)

Fill the jar about halfway with vodka and add the vanilla beans. Put the lid on tight. Leave it in a cool, dark place like a cabinet or pantry, and shake it every few days for about 4 weeks.

You can leave it in the large jar or pour it into smaller bottles. (Christmas gifts, maybe?)

It makes a HUGE difference in baked goods when you use homemade vanilla, even if you just add it to a boxed cake mix.

Looking for more kitchen hacks? This chemical-free way to clean a white farmhouse sink is my favorite hack ever!

how to clean a white sink

How to clean a white sink

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Brazilian Blowout Verdict

October 31, 2010 By: Stephanie2 Comments

Update in 2021: I now prefer to get Keratin treatments done on my hair a few times each year, which are cheaper and safer than the Brazilian Blowout. I know of two different salons that stopped using the Brazilian technique after it made their staff members very sick, so proceed with caution. 

Here is the original post: 

Yesterday I had a Brazilian Blowout treatment done on my hair. I learned about the treatment when Kristin mentioned it on her blog. I was really nervous and excited to get it done. So far, I think it’s AWESOME, but it was pretty expensive. There was only one salon in our county that did the treatment, apparently, the beautician needs a special certification. I had it done at Rumors in York, PA and Christine was really wonderful. She patiently talked to me on the phone four times before I had the treatment and told me to go ahead and do my color at home to save myself some money.

Brazilian Blowout Treatment Review

The total came to $320, which included the treatment, a hair cut, an eyebrow wax, and the special shampoo and conditioner. She gave me 2 other products for free. It took 3 and a half hours. Plus, of course, I tipped her. That’s a little more than twice what I would usually pay for highlights and a haircut.

Christine explained that the difference between this treatment and others (which can be even more expensive) is that the Brazilian basically just coats your hair with protein and doesn’t use formaldehyde or other really nasty chemicals. Unlike the Keratin treatment, with this one, you can wash your hair, work out, put your hair up, or go swimming immediately. No waiting for three days. I can also still wear my hair curly if I want to. It’s supposed to last for around three months. She also told me that she has been doing the treatment on her own hair ever since last summer.

The negatives (besides being mad expensive) were that during the treatment my eyes got pretty watery and breathing in the fumes actually singed the hairs in my nose so there were little black hairs falling out of my nose-gross! Plus I got a wicked headache later in the day.

The positives were that it seals in your hair color and makes it look pretty vibrant in person, I like still having options as far as my curl is concerned, and it blow dries completely straight.

I used to have to blow dry my hair first, which would make it SUPER frizzy and a total mess, and then have to spend another 20-30 minutes going at it with a flat iron and it still would be sort of frizzy. OK, picture time…

This is my naturally curly hair. I always feel like I look chubby when my hair is curly because I have such a round face, to begin with. Plus in order to do this, I have to shower and do my hair in the mornings, which is next to impossible when Eddie leaves so early for work and we have two toddlers.

So when I have an extra hour to devote to my hair (like never) I would blow-dry and straighten it at night and get this result

See? Still kind of frizzy and sticking out funny in the back. But usually, I just pulled it back straight out of the shower like this

which made me feel like I wasn’t putting any effort into myself. Drum-roll, please…

This is the Brazilian after ten minutes of blow-drying and no flat iron (also me with no make-up, just focus on the hair).

It also feels really different. It feels a lot like the hair on American Girl dolls. Eddie and Nicholas keep touching it. Abby couldn’t care less. I love anything that makes my life easier.

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Welcome! I’m Steph.

This is a little corner of the internet we like to fill with honesty, heart, and humor. Read More…

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Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese

Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese

Stephanie Giese is an indie author based in Florida. She writes stories about realistic problems with humor, heart, and sass. Her work has a strong focus on mental health and consent. Her North Bay small-town romance series is set for release in 2025.

Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese

3 months ago

Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese
I know it’s a small thing, but I believe small things can add up to big changes. my entire North Bay series, including Out of Left Field, Right as Rain, and Way Off Base, is free on Kindle from Jan. 30-Feb. 3. Please take the funds you might have spent on my books this week and reallocate them toward the areas in our country that need them the most. Follow creators like Dad Chats who can direct you toward practical needs local to them. I hope my quirky romcoms can bring you some comfort and joy during difficult times, and I hope together we can take small, practical steps toward big changes. ... See MoreSee Less

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Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese

3 months ago

Binkies and Briefcases with Stephanie Giese
I know there is an overall feeling of helplessness in our country right now. So many of us are at a loss for what to do beyond making phone calls and social media posts (which are still important, but can feel like not enough). I believe strongly in the power of small things adding up to big ones. As one person, I might not be able to do much, but what I CAN do is use my voice and my books to work toward the change I’d like to see. That’s why, for the next five days, from Jan. 30-Feb 3, I’m making the Kindle versions of my entire North Bay series (Out of Left Field, Right as Rain, and Way Off Base) completely free. Art has power, and I do hope these comedies can bring you some comfort and joy in difficult times, but most importantly, I also hope you’ll consider redirecting the funds you might’ve spent on my books and donating instead to one of the many charities working tirelessly in our cities right now. If you are located in an area like Minnesota or Portland, please use the space below to make people aware of the organizations in your area that need help. ... See MoreSee Less
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