From Kitchen Table to National Brand: Lillian Vernon’s Journey

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Lillian Vernon was a pioneer of the mail-order catalog industry and a trailblazer for women in business. She founded her company in 1951 with just $2,000 and a simple idea: sell personalized products through the mail. At a time when few women ran national businesses—and even fewer did so from their kitchen tables—Vernon built a brand that became a household name, mailing millions of catalogs and redefining direct-to-consumer retail long before e-commerce existed.

What made Lillian Vernon remarkable wasn’t just her business success, but her visibility. She put her own name—and face—on the company, signaling confidence, accountability, and ambition. She proved that a woman could scale a business nationally, balance creativity with operations, and lead with both warmth and discipline.

As a child, I admired her deeply. I remember flipping through mail-order catalogs and imagining what it must be like to create something that could travel into people’s homes and spark a moment of delight. Lillian Vernon made that dream feel real and attainable. She planted the idea that I, too, could build my own mail-order business—an idea rooted in independence, creativity, and the belief that big things can start small. Today, that early inspiration has come full circle as I work toward creating my own online art business, carrying forward the same spirit of entrepreneurship and possibility that Lillian Vernon embodied.

Lillian Vernon’s legacy lives on not just in the business she built, but in the generations she inspired to imagine bigger futures. Her story reminds me that entrepreneurship begins with curiosity and courage—and that the dreams we form early can quietly shape the work we’re meant to do.

Thank you so much for stopping by—I hope your day is filled with creativity and inspiration.

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For more information about Lillian Vernon, or to take a peek at her iconic mail-order catalog, visit:

Behind the Scenes of My New Etsy Photography Shop

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Lately, I’ve been spending a lot of time behind the scenes, quietly building and reshaping my creative space. I’m in the process of setting up my new Etsy Shop, Flowing Waters Photo, and it’s been both exciting and thoughtful work. This shop will be dedicated solely to my photography—real moments, captured through my own lens. With so much changing in the creative world, it felt important to create a clear home for my photographic work. As new images find their place in the photo shop, I’m moving them out of my original Flowing Waters Art Shop so each space can shine in its own way.

While there’s been plenty of organizing, uploading, and decision-making, I’ve also been sneaking in some much-needed studio time. Those moments—brush in hand, paint flowing—have been a refreshing pause from the technical side of things. I’ve been experimenting with watercolor abstract ideas, letting myself explore without a set outcome in mind. Some pieces surprise me, others challenge me, and a few remind me that not everything needs to be perfect to be meaningful.

I love sharing this part of the journey with you—the in-between moments, the experiments, the small steps that often go unseen. Creativity isn’t just about the finished piece; it’s about the process, the curiosity, and the joy of trying something new. I hope you’ll continue to peek behind the scenes with me as Flowing Waters grows and evolves.

Thanks so much for being here. Have a wonderful day!

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Thoughtful Thursday The Sweet Beginnings of Pepperidge Farm

Margaret Rudkin

The story of Pepperidge Farm began in 1937, thanks to a determined woman named Margaret Rudkin. Margaret was a Connecticut homemaker who found herself on a mission to create healthy, wholesome bread for her young son, who had severe allergies and couldn’t eat most store-bought bread. With no formal training in baking, Margaret started experimenting in her kitchen, using simple, natural ingredients. After many trials (and errors), she finally created a loaf that was not only safe for her son but also delicious.

Word spread quickly about Margaret’s bread, and soon, local grocers began asking to sell it in their stores. With increasing demand, Margaret named her bakery after her family’s farm, Pepperidge Farm, and started baking on a larger scale.

As her business grew, Margaret continued to innovate. In 1955, she traveled to Europe and discovered delicious, crisp cookies that were unlike anything available in the U.S. She brought the idea back home, and that’s how the famous Pepperidge Farm cookies, like Milano and Chessmen, were born.

Pepperidge Farm grew from a small home kitchen operation to a beloved brand known for its high-quality baked goods, including bread, cookies, and crackers. Margaret Rudkin’s passion for wholesome food and her entrepreneurial spirit turned a simple loaf of bread into a household name, creating a legacy that still thrives today.

Hope you enjoyed this history post, thanks for stopping by!!

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Margaret Rudkin, Pepperidge Farm