French Fries Day — July 13

 

Whether you call them “chips”, as in the UK, “pommes frites” in France, or “patatas fritas” in Spain — it all means the same thing: French fries, that glorious comfort food that can be eaten in many forms: waffled, Cajun-style, or curly, just to name a few.

Belgium and France both claim that French fries originated in their countries. Wherever they come from, French fries are popular, with Americans eating an average of 30 lbs each year.

American president Thomas Jefferson is credited with introducing French fries to America when he served them at a White House dinner in 1802.

While Americans typically each their fries with ketchup, people around the world have a different take on French fries.

The British use salt and malt vinegar

Mayonnaise is a accompaniment of choice in Belgium. Belgians sometimes crack a raw egg over the fries as they’re taken from the fryer.

In Vietnam they serve their fries with soft butter and a bit of sugar

A popular dish in Canada is poutine, French fries topped with gravy and cheese curds.

In Israel, fries are sometimes accompanied by hummus

Australians sprinkle chicken salt on their fries.

In India, fries are given a bit of a kick with turmeric and chili powder

The Japanese eat their fries with furikake, a mix of seaweed, dried bonito flakes, sesame seeds, and other seasonings

How do you like your French fries?

Greeting Card Universe French Fries Day cards

Greeting Card Universe French Fry Frenzy Pinterest Board

Save

Save

Save

Take Your Webmaster to Lunch Day

 

A webmaster — also referred to as a web developer/architect, website administrator, or website publisher, among other titles —   is responsible for the development and maintenance of your website. July 6 is the day designated to show your appreciation to your webmaster by taking them to lunch. What would you do without their magic coding fingers, their dedication to developing and keeping your website up and working, and the long hours they work? Your webmaster is a key player on your team, is available 24/7 in case of a website emergency, and is required to keep up with a constantly-changing industry.

 

How can you celebrate Take Your Webmaster to Lunch Day, other than the obvious lunch? Any of the following gifts would be appreciated by your web master.

 

  •  Start the day early, with an assortment of gourmet coffees and pastries when they arrive at the office.
  • A gift certificate to a spa, with lunch included, for them and a friend.
  • A gift basket with fine coffee, chocolate, a character figurine related to their favorite show, and a gift certificate to their favorite tech store.
  • If your webmaster isn’t onsite, a gift certificate will be appreciated.
  • An assortment of craft beer.

Anyway your choose to recognize your webmaster’s dedication and skill will be appreciated. A webmaster is an oft-forgotten team member, toiling in the background. When they do their job well, it’s easy to forget them.

Greeting Card Universe Take Your Webmaster to Lunch Day

Greeting Card Universe Take Your Webmaster to Lunch Day Pinterest board

 

Save

Fourth of July

 

Fireworks, roasted marshmallows, family get-togethers … no holiday is more all-American than the Fourth of July.

 

A commemoration of our adoption of the Declaration of Independence, Independence Day is celebrated in big towns and small towns all across America with parades, barbeques,  red, white, and blue decorations, political speeches, and a patriotic feeling shared by all.

 

The Declaration of Independence is the document that spells out the thirteen American colonies’ freedom from British rule. Voted on by Congress on July 2 and ratified on July 4, this important document contains, in its second sentence, what is widely regarded as the most meaningful statement on human rights:

 

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.

 

The Fourth of July allows Americans the opportunity to be grateful for our freedom and recognize the richness of our history — all in the company of good friends and family.

While most of us are content with the traditional Fourth of July menu of hot dogs, hamburgers, and potato salad, there are those who enjoy participating in hot dog eating contests. The most famous hot dog eating contest is sponsored by Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog on Coney Island, New York. Held since 1916, the contest pits 20 contestants against each other in a race to see how many hot dogs they can each eat in 12 minutes. The record holder is Joey Chestnut with 69 hot dogs in 2013.

 

Kid-Safe Activities for Fourth of July

 

  • Neighborhood or family bike parade — Kids can decorate their bikes with red, white, and blue streamers, pinwheels, construction paper, or balloons and then have a short parade up and down the block.
  • Declaration of Independence in kids-friendly words https://quatr.us/northamerica/after1500/government/declaration.htm Help children understand the significance of this important document.
  • Water balloon dodge ball — Using red, white, and blue balloons (of course!) filled with water, divide the children into two equal groups.  The children throw balloons at each other and each child who gets hit is out of the game. A nice game to play to cool down!
  • Instead of the egg in the Easter Egg game, substitute an ice cube. First child to reach the finish line with the ice cube on the spoon is the winner.
  • The tried and true watermelon seed spitting contest! Permission to spit — What child doesn’t think this game is the coolest?

 

The Fourth of July allows Americans the opportunity to be grateful for our freedom and recognize the richness of our history — all in the company of good friends and family.

General Fourth of July cards

Fourth of July Across the Miles

First Fourth of July

Save

Save

Father’s Day

 

Father’s Day, celebrated this year June 19, is a day to celebrate the man who tells dad jokes, sings along to the radio when your friends are in the car with you, gives threatening looks to your dates — and dries your tears when the boy you like doesn’t give you a second look, surprises you by picking you up after school to bring you for ice cream “just because”, and is the man with whom you compare all other men.

Father’s Day was first celebrate in 1910. Sonora Smart Dodd, after hearing the sermon for Mother’s Day the year before, wanted a day to recognize the importance of fathers. Ms Dodd was aware of how important fathers are in the lives of their children because her father single handedly raised 6 children.

 

What do you get the man who means so much to you? Most dads would want you to know that they don’t need another tie. But wouldn’t they love a gift from the heart? How about a day with you and dad participating in his favorite hobby, like fishing or gardening? Or a lunch with just you and dad? Make arrangements to pay the waitress beforehand so that dad doesn’t grab the check. And any dad would like a card with your heartfelt thoughts on what he means to you and how much you appreciate how much he’s done for you. Greeting Card Universe allows you to write your own verse on the inside of the card as well as no charge to add a special photo of you and your dad to the inside.

Remember all the father‘s in your life, not just your own dad. Greeting Card Universe has you covered for all relationships.

For Godfather

For Both my Dads/Fathers

For Birth Father

For Estranged Dad/Father

General Father’s Day

Greeting Card Universe Father’s Day Pinterest board

Betsy Bush — GCU May Challenge Winner

GCU May 2016 Challenge Winning Card by Betsy Bush

GCU May 2016 Challenge Winning Card by Betsy Bush

 

Visit Betsy Bush’s store Dragonfire Graphics

Please add the URLs of your 3 favorite cards in your storefront.

Please list any of your professional social media sites:
I have a few social media sites but must confess I don’t pay attention to them the way I should.

What was your inspiration for your winning card?  Please walk us through the process of how this card went from an idea to a greeting card.

I browsed all of the available June International/National days and 2 jumped out at me, National Nature Photography Day and National Cancer Survivors Day. I wrote them both down and had them in front of me for a couple of weeks before I began designing. I did a Nature Photography Day design because I had tons of photographs I had taken over the years to use. That one was ultimately declined for a few photography issues and I am so glad as I initially wanted to address the Cancer Survivors Day because I feel that the people that have been through such a battle deserve to be recognized. I didn’t tackle that one first as I was in the process of planning my daughter’s wedding shower, it was getting very close and I just didn’t feel as if I could do the subject justice at the time. I dove in anyway.

I wanted to create a card that was suitable for men or women to receive, so I chose a pale grey as the background. I went through my graphic design resources to find imagery to convey what I thought would be inspirational and also modern. I love the trendy watercolor look and when I came across the feathers I knew they were going to be the main focus of the design.

When it came time for the words I was brought back to the time spent with a very close friend who sadly lost his battle with cancer. His strength during his illness, his sense of humor and kindness that never faded stuck with me. He was my inspiration.

You’ve won many GCU’s Design Challenges, what advice would you give to other artists who are hesitant to enter?

I would love to see every artist on GCU enter the challenges! It is such a wonderful way to learn new things due to the research you may have to do to address the subject of the challenge. I love seeing the other designers take on the subject of the month. And not to mention, of the 14 design challenges I have entered, I have had sales of 11 of those designs! Designs that would have never seen the light of day had the GCU Design Challenge not spurred me to create them!

What sparked your interest in art? Did you start as a young child?

This is an easy question to answer! When I was a little girl my mom went to a weekly craft night with friends and always took me along! I loved it so much. I know this is what made me want to create art. My favorite time of day in school was art class. I still remember the first drawing I ever did that wowed my family. I was 7 and did a drawing of Donald Duck from a Walt Disney magazine.

Do you have formal training or are you self-taught?

I never had formal training. I started to take a cartooning class in junior high school, but the teacher was not even remotely interested in the subject

matter, I don’t even remember him teaching anything that related to drawing! After 3 classes I gave it up. As for the digital art I discovered 6 years ago, I am entirely self-taught. I can’t say how many YouTube videos I have watched over the years trying to learn Gimp, Photoshop, and other programs.

Is your work done by hand and then scanned or do you work entirely on the computer?

I work entirely on the computer. In the beginning of this adventure I used all of my own digital art, photographs, and some doodles scanned.

Now, I love to scour the design sites for the wonderful offerings I can purchase or even get for free to create with. I always loved jigsaw puzzles and to me finding a way to use these resources to create something new is like putting a puzzle together!

Have you ever/do you currently have a job other than as an artist?

I have two other jobs besides my greeting card and design work. I have been a waitress since I graduated high school 37 years ago and I am also a lunch lady at our local intermediate school. I have been doing that for the past 18 years. My dream is to retire from waitressing and focus more on designing. Maybe one day!

What GCU artist(s) do you admire?

Of course I love Corrie Kuiper‘s fun take on the world with her fabulous illustrations. Doreen Erhardt‘s elegant and classy designs are always a favorite. Other artists I admire are Micklyn Le Feuvre for her amazing mandalas, Sharon Fernleaf for her adorable animals, and Sue Nollmeyer for her spectacular sentiments.

What would we be surprised to learn about you?

I don’t feel very surprising, but a few facts about me are, I have been married for 35 years, have 2 wonderful daughters (29 and 27), have lived in 5 states (NJ, NY, PA, CA, CO), have horribly frizzy hair, went to school with Jason Alexander (George Constanza on Seinfeld), (disclaimer: we were not closely acquainted), fell out of a moving pickup truck (at only 5 miles an hour fortunately) when I was 20, (never lean on your car door!), and when I was a chambermaid in Aspen, CO in 1986, I cleaned the rooms of Hunter S. Thompson and the whole entourage of the Prince of Saudi Arabia.

 

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

National Best Friend Day June 8

 

A best friend laughs with you (and at you, when you deserve it), shares your moments of sorrow and pain, brings you chocolate when you need it, and doesn’t let you forget how wonderful you are. A best friend can help you handle anxiety, makes you more optimistic, and gives you emotional and physical strength.

If you need to talk to your best friend right away, she’ll drop everything to be with you. If you need someone to serve as a sounding board, your best friend will give you feedback. And, of course, if you need someone to give you unconditional love and support, your best friend is your go-to person.  It doesn’t matter whether you’ve known your best friend since childhood or only for few years, one thing is clear: A best friend is essential.

On June 8, we celebrate our best friends, the person who brings balance and sanity to our life. How can we best show our appreciation to our best friend?

Spend some time together at lunch or other activity that allows you to catch up.

Send a card, with your thoughtful words of appreciation.

Give them a small but considerate gift, like a photo of the two of you.

A gift that shows you know them. Is your friend always running out of power on their cell phone? Then they need a portable phone charger. Are they stressed? A day at the spa for the two of you would relax them. Are they a bit bored? Pay for an adult education class for the both of us and learn to paint, use the computer, work with stain glass, or any of the other many offerings.

Greeting Card Universe National Best Friend Day cards

Greeting Card Universe Friends & Friendship Pinterest board

Memorial Day

Memorial Day, formerly known as Decoration Day, is a day to commemorate the men and women who have died in the military service of the United States.

Observed on the last Monday in May, it is traditional to fly the flag at half-staff from dawn until noon on Memorial Day. Many families visit cemeteries and place flags on the graves of loved ones who died in the service of their country.

Other typical Memorial Day observances include a parade with the American Legion color guard, veterans and their families, local politicians, and local community members.

Memorial Day is recognized as a federal holiday, and all non-essential government offices are closed.

How can you and your family observe Memorial Day?

Send a care package to an active duty serve member. Instructions on what to include in the package and where to send it can be found at anysoldier.com

Participate in the National Moment of Remembrance beginning at 3 PM local time, a moment of national unity. Established in 2000, it is a chance for Americans young and old to show gratitude and respect for those who died in the service of our country.

Make and display the American flag. Children can make the flag with construction paper and straws.

Attend a Memorial Day observance in your town. If your town doesn’t hold one, speak to elected officials about planning one.

Speak to your children about the meaning of Memorial Day and the sacrifice that service members and their families make for our safety. Many people see this as a day off from school or work, and the beginning of the summer season, and not a day of remembrance of those who gave their lives for the country’s safety and freedom.

Greeting Card Universe Memorial Day cards

Greeting Card Universe Memorial Day Pinterest board

International Tiara Day — May 24

 

Every woman deserves a tiara. It reminds those around us that we are special, empowered, and intelligent, and we are to be treated accordingly. Bowing to us isn’t always necessary, but a “Yes, of course, your Majesty” occasionally would be nice!

International Tiara Day is celebrated May 24, Queen Victoria’s birthday. You can celebrate International Tiara Day by, certainly, wearing a tiara, and maybe having a tea for friends and family. A tea dress isn’t necessary, but it would be fun to dress up a little bit. And you and your friends will, of course, want to wear your tiaras to your tea.

Tea is served between lunch and dinner, which in Victorian days was traditionally served at 9 PM. In 1840, Anna Marie Stanhope, one of Queen Victoria’s ladies in waiting, was too hungry to wait for dinner. She had a light meal, consisting of  cakes, bread and butter, and tea, delivered to her rooms. She began inviting her friends to these teas, and once the Queen heard of them, she took up the habit. Today, the evening meal is often referred to as “tea”.

What food is appropriate to serve for tea? Queen Victoria loved chocolate, so a chocolate cake would be appropriate. In addition, scones, savory sandwiches, and pastries could be served. And, of course, tea, with a choice of milk (never cream), or lemon.

Whether you celebrate International Tiara Day by having tea or not, be sure to let your inner princess out for the day!

International Tiara Day Facebook page

Greeting Card Universe International Tiara Day cards

Greeting Card Universe International Tiara Day Pinterest board

Barbara Schreiber — April Challenge Winner

Happy Golden Anniversary, Celebrating 50 Years of Love, Gold Champagne card

Barbara Schreiber, Greeting Card Universe April Challenge winner

What awards or contests have you won outside of GCU?

I’ve never entered anything anywhere outside of GCU as I never had the time or the ambition and am too lazy ….

What are your 3 favorite cards in your storefront?

My favorite design is always the one I’m currently working on.

Happy Wedding Anniversary, Cats card

Happy 1st Wedding Anniversary, Two Vintage Birds, card

Happy Birthday, Illustration, grinning Cat in a Bag card

Please list any of your professional social media sites:

I’ve got two blogs, but never find the time to post something.

https://barbara-schreiber.blogspot.de/

https://etoilesandfernweh.blogspot.de/

What was your inspiration for your winning card?  Please walk us through the process of how this card went from an idea to a greeting card.

I pondered on the design challenge subject “GOLD” for some time. (I thought about “you have a heart of gold” friendship card – rejected it) and then decided to do a Golden Anniversary design.

I wanted the gold to be subtly prominent (not as a gold background) and a design that would be elegant (as befits the gold) and more neutral, mainstream, as befits the age group. I did not want an overly romantic card. (That would be better suited for a younger age group).

Two hearts or love birds in gold did not appeal to me as this card is for a more mature age group. As it is a celebration, I chose two champagne glasses instead (more neutral) and I could fill the glasses with “golden” champagne. Besides being the “gold” element, champagne glasses do say: It’s celebration time!

As I’m not a good photographer, I wanted to do illustrations.

I needed a lot of space for two text blocks – one on the top and one on the left of the card – so I placed the glasses and flowers to the right, using a composition form that resembles a J, to give it a more dynamic shape, as I did not want an overly fussy, cluttered design. I wanted the “gold” to pop, so I chose a neutral gray background, keeping in mind that a couple who has been married for 50 years would prefer something romantic, but not overly romantic … (just my thoughts 🙂 and the design would be more classical and fresh, so I did not chose red (color symbolizing love) as a background. I knew the flowers would be pink (did not want the standard red) and I love the combination of gray and pink.

To counterbalance the strict gray background and in order to give it a more playful appearance, I added a big white frame around the gray and more “gold” in the form of circles – the fizzy champagne bubbles, and also so that there would be a bit more of “gold” somewhere else in the design, not only in the glasses.

Since celebrations go together with flowers (and I did want something romantic included, as befits a wedding anniversary), I added some watercolor roses and hearts, as watercolor florals are very trendy at the moment.

I put all the bits and pieces together in Photoshop and played around with positioning and overall look. Thanks to the help of a nice reviewer, I changed the text “golden” in “golden anniversary”, so that it looks nicer and is better readable.

You’ve won many GCU’s Design Challenges What advice would you give to other artists who are hesitant to enter?

Don’t be hesitant. Just do it. It’s learning by doing. Don’t let fear hold you back. You have nothing to lose and a lot to gain. A lot of platitudes, I know, but true never the less. The design challenges make you leave your comfort zone, try out new things, techniques, colors, subjects, categories  … Even if you don’t win, you have tried out something new, which is great! I always enter the challenge because  it takes me into directions I otherwise would not have taken. I often make mistakes and not every painting or image turns out well, but in the process, I’ve learnt a lot.

 

What sparked your interest in art? Did you start as a young child?

Yes, I started as a child. In our family, we had two professional ballet dancers, one artist,and one opera singer. I didn’t inherit the musical traits, but I did inherit the love for creating and art.

I love flowers, nature, animals, so those were the main subjects I did as a child. I experimented a lot and tried drawing with candle wax drippings on a paper (burnt my fingers quite a few times) and rubbing burnt newspaper ash over the image and scratching away the bits of wax that did not look nice. This was done all in black and white and had a sort of dreamlike feeling to it, due to the scratched out parts. That was one of the first paintings I sold – an image of a dove with outspread wings done in that manner.

I started with pencils, charcoal, and over the years moved on to acrylic, silk painting, pottery, pastel chalks, watercolors, mixed media, oil paint and lately digital art.

Do you have formal training or are you self-taught?

I went to art school for one year. The rest is self-taught, especially Photoshop. Before I started creating for a POD site, I just painted and sold my paintings or hung them up on my walls. When there was no more empty space on my walls I started eying the ceilings and thinking about hanging up paintings there and the technical difficulties of doing so, I decided it was time to move on and I discovered GCU. I soon found out that designing a painting is something completely different than designing a card.

I used free photo editors in the beginning (did not even know what pixels, resolution, dpi and layers etc meant in those days), slowly moving on till one day I bought my first Photoshop software. It took me quite some time to learn the ins and outs, and am still learning something new every day. I now use Photoshop CS6. I have a huge library of books on all sorts of art techniques or anything that has to do with art. Every new technique or style fascinates me.

Is your work done by hand and then scanned or do you work entirely on the computer?

Most of it is done by hand and then scanned (the illustrations and paintings). I love using my fingers to rub the paint around. I’ve got Adobe Illustrator, but never really took to it, as I like the smell of paint, the feel of actual paint and for watercolor paintings, I need the real thing as I love the way different colors flow together, mingle, create blooms and granulate.

The collages (vintage elements/photos and other things) are done on the computer. But regardless of which work I do, I give it a make-over in Photoshop, adjusting all possible things, using filters. I just love to fiddle around in Photoshop, try things out, see where it takes me.

Have you ever/do you currently have a job other than as an artist?

I used to be a hostess on two ships (one in the Mediterranean Sea, the other on the Rhine). I worked for travel agencies, then as a foreign language correspondent for several companies, mostly translating or doing secretarial work. I worked in the Netherlands, Monaco, Cyprus and in Germany. I stopped working full time after I got my kids due to health reasons. I taught watercolor and pottery classes. I now teach senior citizens, but only work part time, two half-days a week.

What GCU artist(s) do you admire?

Frankly, there are so many GCU artists I admire – I often look at the “Just sold” carousel and sigh: I wish I had made that card … what a clever idea, color combo, technical skills, imagery, touching text, humor, wit  …  I do want to say a big Thank You to Doreen Erhardt and Corrie Kuipers for sharing valuable tips and information, and to the Reviewers, who are so helpful and whose advice has always made a card/design better!

What would we be surprised to learn about you?

I’m a lousy housekeeper but like to cook (Indonesian, Vietnamese, French, Italian, Chinese). I love to read. History fascinates me and I wanted to study archeology, but unfortunately couldn’t because of financial reasons. I wish I had a time travel machine, so I could go back and forth. I’m very curious what things will be like in 300 years also. I like surreal and quirky things/images. I procrastinate a lot. I spent sixteen years of my childhood in Africa and India and traveled extensively in past days. I love making my own jewelry (wire wrapping, preferably copper, ethno/boho style and when I will have the time, I want to try out metal clay). I often have artist’s block and a white canvas can still scare me.

National Limerick Day

National Limerick Day is observed on May 12, the birthday of English author and poet

Edward Lear, who popularized limericks in his book “Book of Nonsense”, published in 1846. Lear’s book https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=982 is available as a free download from Project Gutenberg.

A limerick is a 5-line poem with a rhyming pattern of AABBA, with the first, second, and fifth lines having 7-9 syllables, and the third and fourth lines having 5-7.

Limericks were originally written as nursery rhymes and then moved into the pubs and became a more adult, bawdy form of entertainment. Whether intended for children or adults, though, all limericks are nonsense and humorous.

Of unknown origins is this limerick:

The limerick packs laughs anatomical

Into space that is quite economical.

But the good ones I’ve seen

So seldom are clean

And the clean ones so seldom are comical.

We asked Greeting Card Universe artist Pat Rapple to try her hand at writing a limerick. Her offering illustrates Greeting Card Universe’s commitment to having “any card imaginable”.

There’s always a reason, it’s true,

For sending one card, or a few!

Silly “National Days,”

Or a card from the heart.

We even can mail it for you!

So, on May 12, celebrate National Limerick Day by seeing who among your family and friends can write the silliest limerick!

Greeting Card Universe National Limerick Day cards