Elephant Heart is celebrating the Holiday Season by offering FREE SHIPPING to our customers on all items on the Elephant Heart website.
This offer is good for the entire month of December, so don’t miss your chance to save!

Elephant Heart is celebrating the Holiday Season by offering FREE SHIPPING to our customers on all items on the Elephant Heart website.
This offer is good for the entire month of December, so don’t miss your chance to save!

Like it or not, the Holidays have arrived!
I’m excited to announce that Elephant Heart has just launched a new collection of jewelry for the holidays on our site, including a special SALE section featuring 10% OFF 10 of Elephant Heart’s most popular bracelets.
To show our holiday cheer and our appreciation for our customers, Elephant Heart is offering FREE SHIPPING on all items for the entire month of December.

Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday. In addition to being a day of gathering friends and family around a festive table, Thanksgiving is a day the entire country comes together in gratitude for how fortunate we are to be Americans.
There is a tradition in my family that I would like to uphold. Before we commence with our Thanksgiving feast, we go around the table and say aloud what each of us is thankful for. Some years we are distracted from this tradition by hunger and excitement, but I always take the time on Thanksgiving Day to think about what I have been most thankful for in the past year. Every year my thoughts first turn to my health and that of my family, but this year, after moving myself and Elephant Heart to a new studio, I feel most thankful for the roof over my head and the freedom afforded to me–by living in this country–to create my own business.
This holiday I also thought about the roof over the heads of another family. Several weeks ago I got together with a group of alums from my elementary school, The Center for Early Education, to do a Habitat for Humanity project.
We all met one Saturday morning–early–to put the finishing touches on a home being built for the Monroy family. The Monroys are a family of three children and a single mother who have always dreamed of having a home of their own. The two Monroy boys are autistic and require a lot of extra attention from their mother who is already stretched to provide for her family.
My job that Saturday was to clear and level the yard in preparation for landscaping. The Monroys are particularly exited to have a yard so the children may play safely outside.
As I sat around the Thanksgiving table with my own family, I thought about the Monroys, who for the first time would be sitting around their Thanksgiving table under the shelter of their own roof.
This past Friday I had the great pleasure of being a guest at the Oak Knoll Kinderhaus, a Montessori school in Pasadena, CA.
The Montessori method is a style of child-centered education where the students are encouraged to follow their own interests. Several children from the class had become interested in gemstones. They organized a field trip to the Natural History Museum, where they gathered information on various stones, made sketches, and practiced identifying rock samples they had collected.
When I arrived on Friday, the students were excited to share the discoveries they had made and to pick my brain about the stones that had interested them the most. I was more than impressed with their enthusiasm as well as their ability to retain new information and ideas. It was so exciting to work with students motivated by their own interests–I haven’t encountered that outside of a university.
I showed the students examples of the different gemstones I work with in my jewelry. We talked about ways to classify a stone and how to identify it based on qualities such as hardness and opacity. When we discussed the difference between transparency and translucency, the children were quick to tell me that one could use this information to determine the authenticity of a diamond. A true diamond is translucent; whereas as an impostor is transparent.
I had a wonderful visit and am looking forward to returning to work with the students again. The image below shows the children opening an amethyst geode for me. I think I learned as much from them as they did from me!
