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In August 2020, Kirby Guerrero, a freshman interior design major at the University of Georgia, started her own small business called Simply Good 145. Selling stationery and cards, Guerrero personally creates each printed or hand painted design while emphasizing the simplicity in life and art.
The Red & Black spoke to Guerrero about starting a small business, her creative process and balancing school and work.
The Red & Black: Youâve discussed on Simply Good 145âs Instagram originally wanting to create a stationery business when you retired. What encouraged you to start now?
Kirby Guerrero: Ever since I was little, I got letters from my grandmothers routinely. I saved them along with pretty much every other letter or note Iâve received. Since getting to college, [both of] my grandmothers had an unspoken race to see who could mail me my first piece of mail, and Iâve looked forward to a letter from one of them almost every week. Iâve always drawn and written
Fire-scarred historic Troy building to be razed
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Heavy equipment is seen at the sight of a fire that badly damaged 451 Broadway on Saturday. Troy officials said they are speaking with the owner of the building about whether the structure can be saved.Will Waldron / Times UnionShow MoreShow Less
2of6Buy PhotoA view of the building at 451 Broadway on Sunday, March 7, 2021, in Troy, N.Y. A fire heavily damaged the building. (Paul Buckowski/Times Union)Paul Buckowski/Albany Times UnionShow MoreShow Less
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Heavy equipment is seen at the sight of a fire that badly damaged 451 Broadway on Saturday. Troy officials said they are speaking with the owner of the building about whether the structure can be saved.Will Waldron / Times UnionShow MoreShow Less
Mar 13, 2021
The announcement of a second state of emergency in January drew a sigh of exasperation from workers in the affected city centers, but not in the way you probably think. It wasn’t working in a physical space many were missing, but the countless office supplies that hold such spaces together.
“I miss my desk drawer and my supply of anime-themed paper clips,” Satoko Kanzaki tells The Japan Times during an online interview.
Kanzaki is an office manager at a Tokyo-based tech company. Her firm has been working remotely since March 2020 and, like many of her colleagues, Kanzaki shifted to online meetings and working from her living room.