Posts tagged “Atlanta

Atlantan Lindsey Kerr

Lindsey Kerr

Location: Lindsey Kerr’s home office

Date taken: July 10, 2012

Her two older brothers collected and traded baseball cards. But as a child, Lindsey Kerr collected things that were a little more unique – Band-Aids, pencils and stationery. She loved things with patterns and prints, especially pretty pieces of paper. The stationery store at the mall in her hometown of Lake Jackson, Texas, was a frequent shopping destination for Lindsey and her friends. They would spend their allowances on individual sheets of paper and envelopes − then trade them. Lindsey kept her collection in three-ring binders, where she could flip through the sheets and admire them often (sometimes for hours at a time).

A few decades later, as she was ordering invitations for a friend’s wedding shower, the inefficiency of the process led Lindsey to an epiphany. She thought, “I could do this better.” So, Lindsey started handling invitations for a few friends, and slowly she began to build her own business of pretty pieces of paper − Linvites. She researched stationery lines, bought printers, started an e-commerce site, taught herself Adobe Creative Suite and created her own designs. Although being a small business owner presents some tough challenges, Lindsey says, “I can’t imagine giving this up.”

Linvites is a stationery design studio and boutique based in Atlanta that features invitations, personalized stationary and unique gifts. Recently, Linvites has started offering items for businesses and corporations, including employee recognition gifts. Contact Lindsey at www.linvites.com.


Explore art in the park

Seat

Location: Seat at Freedom Park

Date taken: July 4, 2012

I’ve often wondered why there aren’t more benches in Freedom Park. And now, at least through September 22, there are 300 additional seats. You may have passed by the SEAT structure while driving/walking/riding down Moreland Avenue. Up close, the art installation provides lots of interesting views and a few seats you can actually sit on.


Leave a book, take a book

Little Free Library

Location: Little Free Library

Date taken: July 5, 2012

I’ll admit that e-readers have their conveniences. They’ll fit easily in your bag or purse. You can carry multiple books in one slim little case. But with electronic books, you can’t do one of my favorite things – pass good books along to someone else. If, like me, you still read paper books and frequently have a stack of completed books on your shelf, check out the map of Little Free Library and keep an eye out for one of its book boxes (which I first mistook for a giant mailbox) near you. It’s an easy way to pass books along to your neighbor — and pick up a new book for yourself.


Discover a new view of the city

Eternal flame

Location: Eternal flame at The King Center

Date taken: June 26, 2012


Atlantan Marcus Rosentrater

Marcus Rosentrater

The year was 1997.  The name of the film was “A Hamster’s Tale.” The shooting location was Marcus Rosentrater’s cousin’s house in nearby Littleton, Colorado, where 12 hamsters resided. The film starred Marcus and his cousins, who, at the time, all dreamed of growing up to become movie stuntmen. The film’s action-oriented plot allowed the actors to show off their skills – fighting, wrestling, jumping off the roof, jumping off the trampoline and jumping over furniture. Marcus was the film’s editor, using his family’s video camera, VCR and a CD Walkman to create the final product. When the 10-minute film was complete, the  young actors and producer showed it to anyone who would watch and then started planning their next action flick.

From his first movies featuring Legos and Micro Machines to ones like “A Hamster’s Tale” to the videos he turned in for school assignments in high school, Marcus’ passion for film has been constant. When he moved to Atlanta in 2004, his first stop off the plane was to fill out a job application at Movies Worth Seeing, where he would eventually work for five years. “Pretty much everything good in my life in Atlanta has stemmed from that place,” he said.

This includes co-producing with co-worker Gideon Kennedy. So far, they’ve collaborated on three short films, including Clandestine, which has been shown at more than 30 film festivals, and are working on their first feature-length film. When Marcus  realized there weren’t many venues in Atlanta for a film like Clandestine, which was made from archival footage, he decided to create a micro cinema and provide similiar films with a platform to be seen and shared. And that’s how Contraband Cinema, which hosted nine events in its first two seasons this past year, was born.

Contraband Cinema is a micro cinema safe house that brings the best local and international experimental films to Atlanta audiences.


Discover a new view of the city

City view

Location: View of downtown from Oakland Cemetery


Do it yourself with supplies from a neighborhood hardware store

Vickery Hardware

Location: Vickery Hardware store

Date taken: June 30, 2012

In 2009, Vickery Hardware store was named best hardware store by Atlanta Magazine. And, it’s no wonder. In addition to the standard hardware supplies, the store offers all the following services on site — keys copied, screens cut, glass cut, knives sharpened, lamps fixed, watch batteries replaced, dog tags printed and propane tanks filled.  If you are in the neighborhood, stop by this family-owned and operated store (since 1950) and shop for what you need and what you forgot you needed (I bought a bell for my bike).  You can also buy a watermelon from the fruit stand in the parking lot, walk next door to Ebony & Ivory BBQ and grab a book from the Little Free Library.