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Through
our presentations Victoria and I have met wonderful people
with wonderful stories to share about family, friends and
keepsakes. That is how this sharing stories page evolved.
Since this is our inaugural page I am going to share one of
my own stories with you. Hopefully, it will give some insight
into how Family Jewels came to be.
Though
my background is broadcast communications and marketing I
have always loved history, whether that of a nation, a family
or even a piece of furniture. But when it gets personal it
means even more.
My
husband
had lost his mother ten years before I met him. I didn't think
her loss would really affect me. I knew it made me sad that
I would never know her, that there weren't many pictures of
her and no one had great details to give me about her. I figured
that was that.
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First
Edition!

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Porter-Cable BN18125 18-Gauge 1-1/4 inches Brad Nails
Then
we had children and suddenly her loss had a huge impact on me and
to the people that meant the most to me in the world, my children.
They would never hear stories about their father in a way that only
a mother could tell, no one could even tell them at what time of
day their father was born, something my kids find very interesting.
To make matters worse she had never got around to putting all those
family pictures into albums (just like most people, we all think
we will have time). I am sure she didn't expect to die at forty
eight years old. She had put all the pictures in an old shoe box
-- I mean a real shoe box -- not an acid-free archival shoe box.
After her death no one was aware of the contents of the shoe box
and it was misplaced and after a few moves it simply disappeared.
My
husband's earliest photo is his grade one class picture, so when
everyone asked who the kids looked like, I had many baby pictures
and he had none. This made him adamant that we find the safest and
best way to preserve our own children's journey through life. That
meant the best albums and containers for our children's mementos.
I
searched high and low and could never find what I wanted. When I
met Victoria and found out that she was an archivist I was hopeful
that finally someone would be able to show me the right way to preserve
my children's journey through life. For example, one thing that
I did have of my husbands was a scrapbook of his junior hockey career,
which his mother had started to put together for him. Through my
and Victoria's research I now have a personalized beautiful leather
album that will preserve his junior hockey career and the time and
effort his mother had put into his scrapbook (which was quickly
deteriorating). Now, my children have something of their father's
past that I know will stand the test of time, giving my children
and theirs the most precious gift of family history.
My
children have a wonderful Nana and a very special Nonna. However,
they still have questions about their paternal grandmother, for
example our treasured recipe album came to be because of my daughter
and a recipe she found (in her grandmother's handwriting). But that
is another story for another day. I hope to share many stories with
you through this sharing stories page and hope you feel free to
share your stories as well. Please enter your family stories in
our guest book so that we can share them with others.
Vittoria
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QUOTE
OF THE MONTH:
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Noted
financial advisor Suze Orman asks readers in the incredible
February issue of "O" The Oprah Magazine to try an experiment:
She
writes "Try this experiment: Pretend
your house is about to burn to the ground. You have ten minutes
to save the few things that mean the most important to you.
Mentally run through your house and grab those items. What
did you grab? I'll bet you did not take the linens, the und
boxes, the stuff. I suspect you grabbed the family pictures,
the irreplaceable letters, the gifts of love that matter only
to you. These are the things that tell who you are, not your
clothes, jewelry, linens and knickknacks…" (C.
2001 O, The Oprah Magazine)
Our
point exactly!
From
the moment we started Family Jewels, we have been telling
out customers that if they absolutely do nothing with their
photos and family treasures at least have their negatives
in a negative storage
box, kept in a safe place either out of your home or right
by the front door .. in case of the necessity to do the "grab
and run!" If you put your photos in an archival
photo shoe box, no one will mistake it for "just an old
shoe box!" Suze's words help put into perspective the necessity
of thinking about what is really important to us before we
waste money on "things".
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