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What to Do With Those Vacation Snaps or Your Kids’ Artwork?

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What to Do With Those Vacation Snaps or Your Kids’ Artwork?

Family photos, children’s artwork and other mementos can be an interior design challenge. We want to display them proudly, but kindergarten art projects and snapshots of relatives don’t always harmonize with the rest of the décor.

What to do? It all comes down to the presentation.

“Everything in a home should have meaning,” said Lauren Robbins, an interior designer in Augusta, Ga. “So taking pieces with history — whether it’s an heirloom piece of furniture or something as simple as children’s art — and incorporating them with a modern twist is really important.”

Displayed well, Ms. Robbins continued, that painting made in preschool can look as impressive as anything else in your home — and it can bring more joy.

She and other interior designers shared some advice.

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Putting family photos or children’s artwork in frames immediately elevates their appearance. If you plan to hang multiple pieces together, try mounting them in matching frames for visual unity, even if the photos or paintings don’t look that similar, said Caitlin Kah, an interior designer in Palm Beach, Fla.

The streamlined framing aesthetic is especially useful “when you’re dealing with a mix of black-and-white photos and color photos,” said Ms. Kah, who once used bamboo frames to display disparate family photos on a grasscloth-covered wall.

Black or white frames are a good, simple option, but colorful frames can also work well for hanging art by children, said Meg Lonergan, an interior designer in Houston.

“It’s fun to play up the childlike qualities of the art you’re framing,” said Ms. Lonergan, who has mounted paintings by her son in red frames. “Instead of trying to make it serious or formal feeling, lean into the nature of the work and frame it in something super eye-catching, cheerful and happy.”

Once the pieces are framed, don’t just hang them in random spots. Create an organized gallery wall for a bigger statement.

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Devon Wegman, the founder and design director of Devon Grace Interiors, a Chicago firm, is a fan of large-scale gallery walls with numerous family photos grouped together. “We usually try to create one moment where everything is compiled, like in an epic gallery wall,” Ms. Wegman said.

In the loft she shares with her husband and business partner, Michael Wegman, dozens of photos in black frames of various sizes run up an open staircase. To ensure the composition would have a sense of order — and that it would fill the entire wall — the couple modeled it with 3-D design software. For their clients, they have used the same process to create grids of evenly spaced family photos and free-form arrangements that look considered.

Ms. Kah has used Framebridge’s gallery wall service to achieve a similar effect with less effort: The company takes uploaded digital family photos and designs a gallery wall, then produces framed pieces along with a full-size template for mounting them on a wall.

If you worry that a tightly designed gallery wall won’t allow you to add more over time — or if you simply don’t want to put so many holes in the wall — consider a shallow picture shelf or ledge, where framed pieces can be leaned against the wall.

“I love a picture ledge, because you can change things out really quickly, and it doesn’t have to be perfect,” said Ms. Kah, who installed picture shelves above the kitchen banquette in her home in Palm Beach, Fla. “You can layer things on top of each other. Compared to a gallery wall, it’s a little more low maintenance and can grow with your family.”

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Beyond the kitchen, a long hallway is another good place for a picture shelf, Ms. Kah said. Ms. Wegman once used a picture shelf at a client’s home to hold family photos above the TV in the living room.

If you want to change the art and photos on display frequently, or don’t want to go to the trouble of framing things, try a wire-based hanging system.

Ms. Lonergan and Ms. Wegman like stringing wires across walls with clips for suspending art. “That’s where things from my kids’ school would come home and get clipped up,” said Ms. Lonergan, who used a curtain wire from Ikea. “I would just cycle things out every couple of weeks. It’s a nice, informal way to display kids’ art that costs almost nothing.”

A bulletin board, or pinboard, offers similar advantages. Ms. Robbins installed a fabric-covered one above a desk in the mudroom of her home in Georgia to hold her children’s artwork. But rather than choosing a plain fabric that would blend into the wall, she made it a feature by covering it in a patterned fabric printed with colorful illustrations.

“Because that whole wall was white, it really needed something to make that pinboard pop,” Ms. Robbins said. “It provides this fun background for the art we get from our children.”

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The paintings and drawings on display change with the seasons, which helps keep things fresh. “That’s the beauty of a pinboard,” she said. “You can constantly change things out with whatever art you want to put on the wall.”

If you’re more interested in celebrating one or two special pieces than displaying a large collection, there are other options.

Sarabeth Arima, an Atlanta-based artist, specializes in elevating family portraits by creating one-of-a-kind works around a favorite photograph. “It’s multimedia collage. I use paper, paint, pencil, you name it,” Ms. Arima said.

“It was something I started doing for friends, but then I had more and more people asking me to do it professionally,” she continued, noting that about a third of her commissions now come from interior designers. She described the pieces as “love letters to a family story.”

If you have a piece that already transcends the everyday, you could also make it the center of attention in a room. Ms. Robbins hung a painting by her three children above her living room sofa, and based the color scheme of the room around it.

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The painting came together when her father, an abstract painter named Michael Patterson, put a canvas on the floor of his studio and invited the children to get messy. As they got to work, “I looked at my dad and said, ‘This is actually really good,’” Ms. Robbins said. When the adults provided some direction, it got even better.

Now framed and mounted above her sofa, “it’s such a conversation piece,” Ms. Robbins said. “People walk in and are like, ‘Oh, my gosh, where did you get that piece?’ And I’m like, ‘Oh, my kids did it.’”

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How this Girl Scout troop offers community to migrant children : Consider This from NPR

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How this Girl Scout troop offers community to migrant children : Consider This from NPR

The girls excitedly raise their hands during an activity at Girl Scout Troop 6000’s weekly meeting at the Row Hotel on Wednesday evening.

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The girls excitedly raise their hands during an activity at Girl Scout Troop 6000’s weekly meeting at the Row Hotel on Wednesday evening.

Lexi Parra/NPR

Run in partnership with New York City Health and Hospitals, Girl Scout Troop 6000 serves families living in temporary housing in the city’s shelter system.

One of the chapters is made up entirely of children who recently arrived in the U.S. All are from Latin America, ages kindergarten through 12, and their families are seeking asylum.

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Many of the scouts in this chapter just made the dangerous journey to the U.S., with some fleeing violence in their home countries.

Juliana Alvarez, is one of the volunteers leading the group. “If it’s difficult for adults,” she said, “imagine how hard it is for a child to understand why they’re here.”

Alvarez knows exactly how these kids feel – she and her two daughters lived in the same shelter for about a year. She left her native Colombia when a local gang threatened her family. “I was scared,” she said. “I heard that on the journey to the U.S. you get raped or killed.”

NPR’s Jasmine Garsd visited the shelter, where she met 10-year-old Tahanne from Ecuador. When asked what she wants to do when she grows up, Tahanne responded: “Do you know what the sternocleidomastoid is?” (Tahanne dreams of becoming a doctor.)

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Support and community

At the chapter’s regular meetings, the classic Girl Scouts activities are repurposed to provide the girls tools to navigate the U.S., and New York City.

Selling cookies, for example, becomes an exercise in math and learning American currency. They earn badges, go on field trips and learn to traverse the subway system.

Shereen Zaid, senior director of logistics for New York City Health and Hospitals, said the meetings offer the consistency needed to positively impact the lives of the scouts.

“If we could have some of the girls meet twice or three times a week and just color together, or sing together or talk about community development together, that is such a win,” Zaid said. “They come here with a suitcase or one backpack, and so we are trying to help them live an actual fulfilling life.”

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The group also has two master of social work candidates who attend every meeting to monitor the children for signs of anxiety and depression.

“Outside of these doors, it is trauma,” said Meredith Mascara, CEO of Girl Scouts of Greater New York.

A moment of normalcy

Troop 6000 expanded its program as the city saw an influx in immigrant families. Now, the program is a refuge for asylum seekers.

“This is probably the only sense of stability they have right now,” said Giselle Burgess, founder and senior director of Troop 6000. Burgess got the idea for the troop over a decade ago, when she and her daughters were living in a shelter in Queens.

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The city has implemented a 60-day rule for migrant families’ shelter stays. When NPR visited the group, Tahanne, the hopeful doctor, had run out of time. She was scheduled to leave the shelter the next day. According to Documented, at least 40 families have been evicted from the shelter since January.

When scouts leave the shelter, they have the option to continue participating remotely via Zoom. But at the time, Tahanne frowned at the prospect.

“We share everything here,” she said. “We come here to be friends. These are my sisters now.”

Visit the shelter and hear the scout’s stories by tapping the play button at the top of the page.

This episode was reported by Jasmine Garsd, and produced by Kathryn Fink and Mia Venkat. It was edited by Alfredo Carbajal, Jeanette Woods and Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.

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Rebar caltrops found on I-20 in East Texas again

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Rebar caltrops found on I-20 in East Texas again
VAN ZANDT COUNTY, Texas (KETK) – TxDOT is warning drivers of puncturing spikes found on I-20 again. Rebar caltrops have been found on I-20 since last year, with the most recent discovery on May 6 in Van Zandt County. They are usually four-pronged, heavy gauge steel puncturing spikes that can be thrown or linked together […]
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Fallout continues from the Miss USA resignations as a runner-up declines the crown

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Fallout continues from the Miss USA resignations as a runner-up declines the crown

Noelia Voigt (L) and UmaSofia Srivastava (R) attend a charity event in New York City on May 8, the week that they stepped down as Miss USA and Miss Teen USA.

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Noelia Voigt (L) and UmaSofia Srivastava (R) attend a charity event in New York City on May 8, the week that they stepped down as Miss USA and Miss Teen USA.

Rob Kim/Getty Images for Smile Train

Days after a pair of resignations rocked the pageant world, organizers have found a successor for Miss USA but appear to be struggling to do the same for Miss Teen USA.

Miss USA Noelia Voigt and Miss Teen USA UmaSofia Srivastava, who were both crowned in 2023, announced their early departures two days apart last week.

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Srivastava said her “personal values no longer fully align with the direction of the organization,” while Voigt cited mental health reasons in a statement whose first letters of every sentence spelled “I AM SILENCED.”

A longer resignation letter from Voigt, obtained by the New York Times and NBC News, accuses the Miss USA Organization of “a toxic work environment … that, at best, is poor management and, at worst, is bullying and harassment.”

Social media director Claudia Michelle also resigned right before the two, disavowing “workplace toxicity and bullying” in a public statement of her own, in which she noted she was not bound by an non-disclosure agreement.

Miss Colorado Arianna Lemus resigned in solidarity on Friday, writing that Voigt and Srivastava’s “voices have been stifled by the constraints of a contract that undermines their rights and dignity,” and calling for urgent reform within Miss USA.

The slew of departures and criticisms have refocused a spotlight on the organization, raising questions about its treatment of its two biggest titleholders and practices in general.

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The organization wished Voigt and Srivastava well in public Instagram posts, but has not responded to NPR’s requests for comment even as the fallout from their resignations has continued.

In the latest twist, the runner-up from last year’s Miss Teen USA competition says she has turned down the offer to succeed Srivastava.

Miss New York Teen USA Stephanie Skinner, a student at UPenn, wrote on Instagram this week that she had already committed to living in Thailand this summer for a “global research career opportunity.”

The 19-year-old acknowledged that declining the national title was a tough decision, especially since she’d been working towards it since the age of 12. But she also said she believes it is the right move, alluding to the circumstances that led to it.

“Although I do not know exactly what Noelia and Uma went through to led [sic] them to resign, I am sending them immense love and support,” she wrote. “What I do know is that my core values are integrity, honor, kindness, and most importantly I will always stand for female empowerment. I believe we all deserve the power to use our voices.”

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Skinner, whose tenure ends in late June, doubled down in an interview with People on Tuesday: “I believe one thing I will never give up is my character.”

The new Miss USA will be crowned on Wednesday

Meanwhile, organizers are preparing to inaugurate the new Miss USA 2023, Miss Hawaii Savannah Gankiewicz.

They announced on Friday that Gankiewicz, last year’s runner-up, will be crowned in a ceremony in her home state on Wednesday.

“Her dedication to empowering women through self-love and confidence is inspiring, and we look forward to her impactful reign as Miss USA,” Laylah Rose, Miss USA Organization CEO and president, said in a statement.

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Gankiewicz — who is of Filipina, Polish and Vietnamese descent — is a model, entrepreneur and program director for What Makes You Feel Beautiful, a nonprofit dedicated to empowering women and girls based in Maui, where she was born and raised.

In an Instagram post responding to the news, Gankiewicz said she hopes to use her short time as Miss USA to “bring attention and focus onto the rebuilding of Lahaina on my island of Maui,” which was devastated by a series of wildfires last August.

She said her decision to accept the crown was not made lightly.

“I stand with Noelia and admire her strength to step down and prioritize her mental health,” she wrote. “Noelia, it was the honor of a lifetime to share the stage with you during your crowning moment and I wish you all the best in your next chapter.”

Questions remain about the August pageant

Many Miss USA 2023 state titleholders, including the now-former Miss Colorado, have expressed public support for Voigt by sharing an Instagram statement that asks the organization to release her from the confidentiality clause of her contract “so that she is free to speak on her experiences and time as Miss USA.”

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The statement, which says it has the support of the majority of members of the 2023 class, also asks for “full transparency for contestants in the class of 2024 and beyond.”

Gankiewicz — who did not share that statement on her Instagram page — addressed her “fellow Miss USA sisters” in a separate statement, writing, “I believe it’s crucial for us to stand united for the future of the organization and the incoming class of 2024 and beyond.”

States have already begun crowning their respective 2024 titleholders, a process that is slated to continue through early July.

The winners from all 50 states and Washington, D.C., will compete at the Miss USA pageant in Los Angeles from July 27 through August 4. The Miss Teen USA pageant will be held on August 1.

The Miss USA competition is slated to be broadcast live on the CW Network, which announced in late April that it had entered into an “exclusive multi-year broadcast partnership” with both the adult and teen versions of the pageant for the next three years.

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It also said the 2023 Miss USA broadcast was the network’s #1 new special of the year, with more than 1.1 million total viewers to see Voigt win the crown.

But the future of the partnership, touted by executives just weeks ago, is suddenly unclear.

“In light of the events of last week, The CW Network is evaluating its relationship with both pageants,” the network told USA Today in a statement on Monday. NPR has reached out to the CW for more information.

Miss USA did nod to the controversy in its statement announcing Gankiewicz last week, as backlash within and beyond the organization continued to grow.

It said “it’s important to remember that every individual connected to such high-profile events is navigating their own personal journey.”

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“We are committed to fostering a healthy, communicative and supportive environment for all contestants, state titleholders, national titleholders and staff involved with the Miss USA organization, it’s our mission,” it continued. “We ask for community, empathy and kindness to be restored.”

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