![]() ![]() I’d listen for the sound of the door opening or wait for him to shout “hello” to anyone who was listening. That’s when I remembered being a little girl, waiting at the top of the stairs for my grandfather Morris to arrive. For adventure dogs I have a different buckle that sand and water can easily go through.” The left side of the collar (is) easy to personalize. “All of the hardware (is) YKK buckles in silver, rose gold or black. “I release 15-20 new collars each month and take customer requests,” said Goldsby. K and M Collars is so much more than a hobby. I probably get the most compliments on them at markets.” “I want to be different from everybody else, so if I see another dog shop that has that fabric, I won’t use it. “They get a commission when I buy their fabric,” she said. “We have a creek in our yard, so they really try to wear and tear them out.”Ī particularly cool point of difference with K and M Collars is that Goldsby hand picks fabrics designed by other small artists. “A lot of people ask if they have many collars, but they usually stay in the same collar as part of the testing process,” she said. ![]() In April 2021, Goldsby turned her side hustle into her full-time career, and since then business has only boomed.Īt markets, pets can try on bandanas and collars to see what suits their coat best, but at home Midas and Kona – a husky mix rescue – are Goldsby’s models. The library, in conjunction with Legacy Parks Foundation, opened a Storybook Trail in Collier Preserve, adjacent to the library branch in Powell. That’s why the director of marketing, development and communications for the Knox County Public Library was so thrilled in mid-October. POWELL Storybook Trail added at Collier PreserveĬombine outdoors with reading and Mary Pom Claiborne has just found her happy place. “One of our motivating factors in the UT sculpture program is to see more opportunities and partnerships with local organizations so they have more professional connections before they graduate.”Ī year from now, Brown said, the project will be more of a community art class where the UT students will get to work side by side with Dogwood’s students to make artwork in a more collaborative manner. “This is a way to learn about the professional opportunities connected to art,” added Brown. Other artwork showcased was created by Courtney McGreevy, Catie Bringle, Amanda McDonald and Kenzie Sink. I mean kids hugging large scale plush carrots … what’s not to love?” They asked a ton of questions and got to touch and interact with some of the pieces. “Yesterday, the artists got to share their work with some of our first-grade students,” said Kara Strouse, regional supervisor for Kno圎d’s Community Schools initiative. University of Tennessee art students have collaborated on an outdoor sculpture project at Dogwood Elementary School that both enhances the outdoor classrooms and gives the larger community exposure to the arts. SOUTH KNOXVILLE UT art students bring outdoor sculptures to South Knoxville trail Hats off to this busy young woman we’ll check in with her in another five years. Summer Hatmaker hasn’t even graduated from college yet and she’s already helping to change the world. It’s a Department of Energy-funded project.” “We’re a company that creates carbon nano tubes – they reverse climate change on a small scale. Hatmaker also works as a lab technician for SkyNano. ![]()
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