Hee.
Buffy ,'Beneath You'
Natter 76: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Foaminess
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I have two full size scentsy burners and two small plug in ones in the bathrooms. I am currently in love with this one, but no other bathroom, so no need. [link]
esse, you can drop your ballot in the 24 book drop of at least some of the Multnomah libraries; the county's ballot dropsite page has a list. I really appreciate the fact that Oregon makes it easy to vote!
I am currently in love with this one
I'm shocked. Shocked!
you can drop your ballot in the 24 book drop of at least some of the Multnomah libraries
Whaaaaat! Excellent. Thanks for the tip.
Do they not have pink glitter, msbelle? :)
I need some advice: I've been sewing masks, and I started doing them to donate, and I've made some for friends and just charged them for the materials plus shipping, because it feels weird to charge for something that's for health and safety.
I made a kid-sized one for the daughter of one of my friends -- I was experimenting a bit with the sizing, but it seems like it worked out well -- and she posted a photo on Facebook, and one of her friends asked if I'm selling them. I know that, if I say yes, then a bunch of her other friends will ask, too. And I'm happy to make them, and I know that mine are better fitting than a lot of the others I've seen on Etsy and stuff like that, and there aren't too many kid-sized masks anyway. My friend said that they're talking about requiring the kids to wear masks when they go back to school in the fall.
So, my dilemma: do I charge for them? And if so, how much? Materials are no more than $2-3. Charging a bit for them would help defray my fabric costs a bit, especially for the ones that I'm donating. But it still feels kind of wrong to charge for something to protect public health. My friend (and most of her friends) are in the Orthodox community in NJ, so they're surrounded by a lot of infected people, and they have a lot more kids than most people. (Like, six or seven per family isn't unusual at all.) And I just got a bunch of animal print fabrics that I ordered like a month ago, so I can do kid-friendly ones. Anyone have advice?
Cost of goods. $5 per mask. Anything left over when this is over or monthly, you can donate. Or three for $10 for a family discount.
Hil - I've seen people charge like 10 bucks per to cover materials and shipping and then say that they're donating any profit to their charity of choice. That might be an option.
Or what Cass said.