"Wild Feminine" 2023 Fine Art Ornaments
A new collection of hand-painted ornaments
“Wild Feminine”
2023 Ornament Collection
This year, I found myself craving more freedom in my ornament design.
2023 has brought a lot of changes for our family and now we are readying ourselves (and our home) for even more changes as we prepare for a new baby coming in the spring! While I normally love working on large-scale paintings and the space they afford me to express myself, my life, at this time, is full to the brim (in the sweetest way), and so the space that my creative work occupies is adjusting to reflect these changes.
As the scale of my paintings have sized down, I've embraced the challenge of bringing the same intensity and feelings of freedom of my largest paintings onto a smaller surface.
This year, I wanted to challenge myself to do the same with my ornaments. I wanted to bring the same freedom, play, joy, courage, and boldness of my large-scale paintings and marry it with the delicate features of the ceramic and hand-dyed velvet ribbon.
And what came through is a celebration of femininity and freedom, play and expression, and I could not be more pleased with them!
Say “hello” to the “Wild Feminine” Ornament Collection!
The 2023 “Wild Feminine” ornaments will be available exclusively to Collectors Club Members on Friday, November 17th. They will then become publicly available on Saturday, November 18th.
Collectors Club Members will be getting exclusive access to the ornaments on Friday, November 18th on my website. You can join the Collectors Club here to get early access. Otherwise, they will become publicly available on Saturday, November 19th!
"What Has Been Brought From the Garden?" Coming May 19th!
A new collection of large-scale paintings inspired by my 2020 poem and painting, “My Rage is Like a Flower Garden”.
What Has Been Brought From the Garden?
"What Has Been Brought From the Garden" is my latest collection of artwork. This collection of paintings is inspired by my painting and poem, "My Rage is Like a Flower Garden", that I wrote in the heat of the locked-down summer of 2020.
The focus of this collection was to explore the theme of feminine rage, creating work that was floral and feminine in color palette, but rage-filled in expression and intensity. This collection consists of large, attention-grabbing paintings that cannot be ignored because of their size.
In reflecting on my 2020 painting and poem, I wondered, "if my rage is like a flower garden, what have I harvested from it?" The paintings and accompanying writings are the answer to that question.
“My Rage is Like a Flower Garden”
My rage is like a flower garden
That is generous in its blooms.
It is hot and sticky like blood and summer-
But in the south where it tends to linger.
My rage is like a flower garden
Tangled with knots of vines-
The start of one and the end of another-
Just webs of stories woven together.
My rage is like a flower garden
Full of thorns like teeth,
That bite, and tear, and leave their marks,
Protecting the roots that are buried deep.
My rage is like a flower garden
Smoking with steam from a heavy rain.
So much so, it makes it hard to swallow,
So I carry it in my mouth-
Boiling,
Shaking,
And spilling it as I go.
Several years of my life were spent concealing and denying my anger, and I gained nothing. A lot of this was because, as a woman in the south, I was taught to be polite, to be a “yes girl”, to be what Gillian Flynn describes as a “cool girl” in her book Gone Girl.
But I learned something the day that I painted “My Rage is Like a Flower Garden”. I listened to the rhythms of my anger, I studied its substance, and I found the information and energy it contained.
In the time since, I have worked to know the strengths and limitations of my anger and how it is presented.
And now I use painting to express my anger and that is where I have found growth.
If you want to stay up to date on the progress of this collection and be part of the private viewing when it happens, you can join the Collectors Club here!
New Collection: Coming Soon
A new collection of large-scale paintings
NEW Collection
Inspired by my 2020 poem, My Rage is Like a Flower Garden.
There is a new body of work in development in the studio that I am really excited to share about.
This collection is inspired by my poem, My Rage is Like a Flower Garden”, and the painting I created of the same title back in 2020 as part of my There are No Bad Emotions collection. Read on to read the poem!
When I was creating the There are No Bad Emotions collection, My Rage is Like a Flower Garden was the second painting to come in the collection. I can remember the day that I was creating it in my studio/living room. The walls of my house were shaking while I was rage-painting. The poem of the same title that accompanied the painting was written during the painting process. I would paint, then stop to write, then paint more, then write more, and back and forth I went.
In my mind I had the image of a wild, overgrown rose garden that was full of tangled vines of thorns and the idea that even something as delicate as a rose is capable of drawing blood.
As I continue to develop my voice and vision as an artist, and mature into my rage, this is an image that continues to stick with me - which is why I have wanted to revisit this poem and the concept.
This new collection of work features all large-body paintings done in vibrant, floral, and feminine colors, but with violent and rage-filled intensity of a caged animal.
While I would love to release this collection in the spring, and I might still, I already have a desire to sit with the paintings that have come forward longer and enjoy their presence in my home.
So, for now, I will leave you with my original poem!
“My Rage is Like a Flower Garden”
My rage is like a flower garden
That is generous in its blooms.
It is hot and sticky like blood and summer-
But in the south where it tends to linger.
My rage is like a flower garden
Tangled with knots of vines-
The start of one and the end of another-
Just webs of stories woven together.
My rage is like a flower garden
Full of thorns like teeth,
That bite, and tear, and leave their marks,
Protecting the roots that are buried deep.
My rage is like a flower garden
Smoking with steam from a heavy rain.
So much so, it makes it hard to swallow,
So I carry it in my mouth-
Boiling,
Shaking,
And spilling it as I go.
If you want to stay up to date on the progress of this collection and be part of the private viewing when it happens, you can join the Collectors Club here!
Lion Heart Ornaments
A new collection of hand-painted ornaments
Lion Heart
2022 Ornament Collection
Inspired by the individuals who choose not to hide from their emotions.
Remember when I said I couldn't choose between my color palettes for my ornaments this year?
Say hello to the Lion Heart ornaments! The fourth collection (so far) of 2022 ornaments!
I have a deep love for the color pairing of hot pink and burnt orange. This bold color combination signals to me confidence and courage, but with a playfulness and sweetness - which are exactly the qualities of a Lion Hearted person!
Lion Hearts are individuals who manage to keep a soft heart in a hard world - the individuals who brave the depths that many are too scared to explore (any Brene Brown fans out there? She is definitely a Lion Heart!) . The Lion Heart ornament collection is dedicated to the people who aren’t scared to have the hard conversations, and manage to maintain empathy, compassion, and kindness throughout.
I grew up in a household that taught the belief that emotions were a sign of weakness and when it came to having hard discussions, they were best handled by not having them at all. For someone like myself, with a soft heart, big emotions, and who struggles with perfectionism, this was really challenging because anytime I couldn’t manage to suppress my feelings, I felt like a failure.
Shame around my emotions was a struggle for a long time, but I have since come to recognize the strength that is being a deep-feeler and the courage it takes to sit with the discomfort of hard feelings.
The Lion Heart ornament collection is dedicated to the people who aren’t scared to have the hard conversations, and manage to maintain empathy, compassion, and kindness throughout. The Collection is inspired by the individuals who can hold in both hands the cruelty of the world along with the beauty and wonderment.
Collectors Club Members will be getting exclusive access to the ornaments on Friday, November 18th on my website. You can join the Collectors Club here to get early access. Otherwise, they will become publicly available on Saturday, November 19th!
Fighting Spirit Ornaments
A new collection of hand-painted ornaments
Fighting Spirit
2022 Ornament Collection
Dedicated to the individuals who choose action when confronted by the disparity between the world they imagine and the world they see.
In 2019, I started organizing an art festival to take place in my hometown in Bristol, TN/VA.
The festival is called Bristol in Bloom (you can check it out here!) and was originally supposed to take place on Mother’s Day weekend in May of 2020 when the Dogwood trees would have been blooming.
But, as we all well know, 2020 happened and it ended up not taking place until the fall of October 2021 when the leaves were blooming instead!
Event planning is something I had zero previous experience with, but after watching so many of my friends leave the area over the years because there wasn’t a strong art community and very few artist opportunities here, I felt like I needed to do something. I loved this region and the landscape too much to leave it again, so I decided to start Bristol in Bloom to create the arts community that I longed to have in my hometown.
I now have two years under my belt organizing Bristol in Bloom. There have been so many moments where I have been ready to quit, where I have questioned why I do this, debated giving up and walking away from the event all together…
…But then I see the changes this event is making in the community, the people it brings together, the way people are connecting with art and artists, the artists deepening their roots in the community, and I know without question that the stress, the sleepless nights, the worry, the fear, and ALL of the tears, are all worth it in the end.
For a long time, I longed to leave my hometown (and I did for a short while) because I didn’t believe the community here would ever be one that reflected myself or the people I love and admire within it. Since creating the festival, though, I have met several artists who I would now consider to be some of my closest friends and deepened my love for this region. While there is still so much I hope to see change in my community, I know now more than ever that leaving the area will only ensure that nothing changes and I love this area too much to give up the fight.
The Fighting Spirit ornament collection is dedicated to the change-makers in the world, the stubborn individuals who don’t give up when the going gets tough and choose action for the better. This is a limited edition ornament collection with only a few available to the public. The ornaments are colorful, layered, and highly textured, reflecting the battle-tested energy of the fighting spirit.
Collectors Club Members will be getting exclusive access to the ornaments on Friday, November 18th on my website. You can join the Collectors Club here to get early access. Otherwise, they will become publicly available on Saturday, November 19th!
Rabbit Heart Ornaments
A new collection of hand-painted ornaments
Rabbit Heart
2022 Ornament Collection
Inspired by the thoughtful and curious individuals who ask questions rather than make assumptions.
Fun Fact: I am the kind of person that when faced with a choice between two (or more) things that I love, I will most likely choose all of them.
Which is exactly what happened with my ornaments this year!
I could not choose between the palettes I had picked out - I just loved them all so much! Rather than forcing myself to make a hard choice, I problematically avoided the discomfort (I am picturing Chidi from The Good Place getting a stomach ache when faced with a choice between any two things) and chose all of them, ha!
With that said, I am excited to share the Rabbit Heart Ornament Collection coming on November 18th to Collectors Club Members!
The Rabbit Heart ornament collection is in large part inspired by Alice from Alice in Wonderland.
For those who don’t know, I love literature (fun fact: my Bachelor’s Degree is in English Literature - not visual arts!), and I often find inspiration through writing. Alice in Wonderland is a book I have loved for as long as I can remember (another fun fact: my tattoo sleeve on my left arm is in the theme of Alice in Wonderland).
ICYMI: Alice in Wonderland begins with a young girl named Alice sitting by a river bank who spies a white rabbit checking a pocket watch and complaining about being late. When the white rabbit runs off and down a rabbit hole, Alice chooses to follow and the rest of the story is following her journey, and her transformation, through Wonderland.
One of my favorite quotes from Alice in Wonderland (also tattooed on my arm) is, “I knew who I was this morning, but I’ve changed a few times since then.”
The Rabbit Heart ornament collection is inspired by Alice, her wild curiosity, and the transformation she goes through during her adventures through Wonderland. Throughout the book, Alice is reflective, thoughtful, and introspective - and while rabbits are often associated with fear, Alice demonstrates bravery and courage over and over again, especially in her pursuit of all that makes her wonder. The Rabbit Heart ornament collection speaks to the courage it takes to explore the answers to big questions and live in a state of wonder.
Collectors Club Members will be getting exclusive access to the ornaments on Friday, November 18th on my website. You can join the Collectors Club here to get early access. Otherwise, they will become publicly available on Saturday, November 19th!
Rebel Spirit Ornaments
A new collection of hand-painted ornaments
Rebel Spirit Ornaments
Inspired by the people living authentically
I am so excited to offer a new set of inspired holiday ornaments in my shop this year.
This is only the second year of creating ornaments, but it has easily become my new favorite holiday tradition, a fun way for me to get into the holiday spirit.
Time is such a funny thing after living through (still living through?) a pandemic. In preparing to release my new ornaments into the world, I caught myself thinking, “November, already?! Where has the time gone?” 2022 has both flown by in the blink of an eye while also feeling like it has been stretched out over a period of 3 years.
Events that happened this past spring, like back in April when I participated in the ArtFields competition in Lake City, South Carolina, feel years away from where I am today. What was a moment of great significance at the time, now just a date marked off in my calendar.
While I do think that is the nature of time and aging, I also think that speaks to the growth I have experienced as an artist over the course of this year.
This year I hit multiple, significant milestones in my art career that, on the surface, indicate the progress I have made as an artist, but those milestones are only a reflection of the internal growth I have experienced. The true measure of growth is in the confidence I have found in expressing myself authentically through my art.
Each year I hope to push the boundaries in the expression of my feelings of freedom, boldness, and femininity in my work and to use color, gesture, and mark-making to communicate those feelings as truly and authentically as they come through me - no matter how messy and wild they may appear to others. This year, with the release of my newest collection, “HerStory: a Survivor’s Journey”, I feel like I am the closest I have ever come to authentically communicating those themes and finding my voice as an artist.
Not coincidentally, the closer I come to aligning with my artistic voice, the more secure I become in my relationship to my work and its place in the world.
The confidence and security that comes from living authentically and without shame is exactly what the “Rebel Spirit” Ornament Collection is inspired by. This collection of ornaments is dedicated to the rebels out there bravely choosing to not hide who they are by allowing their vulnerability to be witnessed by others. Each ornament is hand-painted and completely unique (just like you), so no two are exactly alike. I painted them intending for them to be incorporated into long-held family traditions and, like the good traditions that endure, be passed down as precious heirlooms for generations to come.
Collectors Club Members will be getting exclusive access to the ornaments on Friday, November 18th on my website. You can join the Collectors Club here to get early access. Otherwise, they will become publicly available on Saturday, November 19th!
"Those Who Wander" Ornament Collection
A small collection of Hand-Painted Ornaments inspired by those who are “living deliberately”.
“Those Who Wander” Ornament Collection
Dedicated to the folks out there who are “living deliberately”.
Some of you may not know this about me, but I am not a classically trained artist. My Bachelor's degree is actually in English Literature! I am what is commonly referred to as a “Self Taught” artist, but I prefer to call myself an “informally trained” artist because I have learned from other artists, and still do, but I have not been trained in the classical, academic setting.
Making art was my first love, but creative writing and literature were my second.
This batch of ornaments is born from my love for the Romantic Movement of the 19th Century - a literary and artistic movement that came in contrast to the 18th Century Enlightenment Period.
The writers, artists, and thinkers of the 18th Century Enlightenment Period emphasized reason and the scientific rationalization of nature. Everything in this time period was viewed through the lens of reason.
But not all things can be explained with reason, right? Like the feeling you get when walking through the woods in the fall when everything is quiet and the colorful leaves are falling to the ground soundlessly like snow. Or the way you feel when the morning light is shining through the windows of your home and making the shadows of the blinds twinkle and dance. There’s not much to reason about those experiences.
And that is where the Romantics (with a capital ‘R’) come in.
The leading writers, thinkers, and artists of the 19th Century Romanticism Movement saw nature as a living, breathing thing and would often personify it in their works with feelings and emotion - something the scientists of the Enlightenment Movement could not reason to be possible. The Romantic Movement was a celebration of nature, intuition, emotion, and artistic freedom.
One of the leading and most commonly recognized writers of the American Romantic Movement was Henry David Thoreau (we’ll call him HDT for short) and his book, “Walden”.
Here’s a quick summary about Walden:
HDT gets tired of living in the city so he decides to go live in the woods near Walden Pond in Massachusetts taking with him nothing but an axe! He spent the next two years there in a little cabin he built for himself writing the book, “Walden”, which details what he learned from the experience.
One passage I always come back to when I remember this book is when he says, “I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.”
These ornaments are dedicated to the individuals that HDT would describe to be “living deliberately” - the individuals that are confronting what is in front of them, choosing their life “on purpose”, and living with intention.
These ornaments will be available at the Mill Spring Makers Holiday Makers Faire in Jonesborough this Saturday, December the 4th from 10 AM - 4 PM! If you can’t make it to the market, they will become available on my website on Sunday, December 5th! You can shop them here.
Call Me Crazy
In fact, / I’d dare anyone to call me crazy / Without having taken / A single breath / Feeling in this world / With a heart like mine. / Go ahead, / Call me crazy.
Call Me Crazy
8’ x 4’ Original house paint, acrylic, oil pastel, and graphite on plywood panel
Call Me Crazy is my largest abstract painting to date. It is an 8 foot tall and 4 foot wide plywood panel painted with house paint, oil pastel, and graphite.
I created this painting for the first, annual Bristol in Bloom Art Festival, which is an art festival I put together to happen in my hometown in Bristol, Tennessee.
As I continue to grow and progress as an artist, I find that I am always trying to explore the boundary of what is “too much”, “too messy”, and/or “too crazy” in my own work. I am always trying to push my comfort zone within those definitions and challenging my own perceptions around what it means to go “too far” in hopes of finding a greater sense of freedom. Each year I try to find that edge of “too far” and each year I find more freedom in my movement and expression, but I still have yet to meet the edge.
I loved every bit of the experience of creating this painting. This painting absolutely poured out of me on a sunny afternoon in late September. The panel was too big to fit into my house, so I had to paint it outside on the side porch. Being able to paint outside opened up a lot more freedom for me because there wasn’t a fear or concern about keeping paint off of the hardwood floors of the living room. Painting on plywood panel also opened up more freedom because it was sturdy enough and secure enough that I didn’t fear it falling over, so I could really be rough in the paint application. So much energy went into painting this piece. I was jumping to reach the top edges, throwing paint at the panel, and blaring some of my favorite Florence and the Machine and Amythyst Kiah songs all at the same time. Painting on my porch meant that all of my neighbors could see the entire process unfolding.
There were moments where I thought, “They must think I am crazy,” but for the most part, I was so absorbed in the process of painting, I didn’t care. This painting, for me, was a moment where I felt so free to be myself and express myself fully. In fact, at the time, I thought “If this is what people call crazy, then I stand proudly by that.”
Afterwards, I reflected on other times in my life when I was called crazy and I started thinking about how often we mis-label people and things to be “crazy”. I started paying attention to how often I call an event or experience “crazy” (more than I’d like to admit) and have been actively trying to choose better descriptor words that more accurately describe an experience. In that process, I wrote this poem to accompany this painting.
“Call Me Crazy”
“Crazy,” he said,
“A train wreck.”
Crazy?
Call me crazy, but
This world is a little
Crazy-making
And I’d call her anything-
Angry
Lonely
Traumatized
Sad-
Before I’d call her crazy
In fact,
Crazy is an easy word
Much easier than words like
Complicit, or
Accountability, and
Introspection.
In fact,
It drives me a little crazy
To hear a person called crazy.
Why don’t we use words instead like
Compassion, and
Patience, and
Mental-Emotional Support?
In fact,
I’d dare anyone to call me crazy
Without having taken
A single breath
Feeling in this world
With a heart like mine.
Go ahead,
Call me crazy.
Collectors Club Members will get exclusive access to this original painting on Friday, November the 19th. The painting will then become publicly available on November 20th. To make sure you don’t miss out on collecting your ornament, join the Collectors Club here!
Memories through the Lens of Grief
Grief, to me, has an amorphous quality like fog. It is formless and shapeless, but it has density to it that makes it feel cumbersome to carry. Sometimes you’ll be moving through grief without even noticing it until you're in the thick of it, surrounded on all sides, and uncertain of where you are or how you got there.
Memories Through the Lens of Grief
40”x30” Original Mixed Media on Gallery Wrapped Canvas
Grief, to me, has an amorphous quality like fog. It is formless and shapeless, but it has density to it that makes it feel cumbersome to carry. Sometimes you’ll be moving through grief without even noticing it until you're in the thick of it, surrounded on all sides, and uncertain of where you are or how you got there.
I created this painting in late October, early November of 2020 after my father passed away. My father was an alcoholic and was mostly absent from my life. The relationship we did have was strained, but it improved when I started seeing a therapist and came to accept the person he was and our relationship for what it was.
Early into the 2020 year my father was put on hospice care for advanced COPD and Emphysema from years and years of smoking. It was around this same time, in a session with my therapist, that I realized I was full of so much grief that I had never acknowledged around my father, the absence of my father, and the relationship we never had. At the time, my belief was that grief was reserved for death and loss, but I now understand that this is not the case.
Before he passed away, I grieved the father I didn’t have and the father I wished I could have had. Grieving my father’s absence felt like moving through the thick fog of a rainy fall morning that is dense and lingers late into the early afternoon before the sun can burn it off. It felt like I was moving through it for weeks, sometimes unsure if I was on solid ground or floating in water, and everytime the shadows of life would start to form around me and I would think that I was getting oriented in the world, the shapes would change and I'd find myself adrift again.
But just like with actual fog, time, like the sun, slowly melts it away.
After my father passed away in October of 2020, the grief shifted and changed, changing with it the landscape with which I had previously become familiar. The grief of his death felt more like the fog that rolls in and pools up atop a river in the evenings and then dissipates in the morning. It felt more temporary, more weatherable. It still occasionally rolls in at certain moments of remembering, but it’s much softer and doesn’t linger quite so long. In truth, it has been much easier to grieve his death than it was to grieve his absence.
The process of grieving the father I didn’t have actually helped me come into a greater place of acceptance for who he was and the relationship we did have. It was because of this I was able to spend some of his last moments with him without expectation or need and that I was able to reconnect with the few fond memories we did share from our history before he passed away.
It was when I was painting this piece, and reflecting on our history and those few fond memories that I realized that there is something about grief that softens the sharp edges of painful memories and helps us come into a deeper relationship with peace.
Collectors Club Members will get exclusive access to this original painting on Friday, November the 19th. The painting will then become publicly available on November 20th. To make sure you don’t miss out on collecting your ornament, join the Collectors Club here!
Seed Planters Hand-Painted Ornaments
For the first time ever, I am offering hand-painted Christmas ornaments in my Holiday Shop this year and I am so excited! Painting ornaments is a new tradition I hope to incorporate as part of my holiday season. In fact, I named these ornaments “Seed Planters” in honor of the people out there forging their own paths by weeding out the old traditions they have outgrown, and seeding new, soul-nourishing traditions to cherish for years on.
Seed Planters
One-of-a-Kind, Hand-Painted Christmas Ornaments
Coming Friday, November 19th to Collectors Club Members
Public release on Saturday, November 20th
“There are far better things ahead than any we leave behind.”
-C.S. Lewis
For the first time ever, I am offering hand-painted Christmas ornaments in my Holiday Shop this year and I am so excited! Painting ornaments is a new tradition I hope to incorporate as part of my holiday season. In fact, I named these ornaments “Seed Planters” in honor of the people out there forging their own paths by weeding out the old traditions they have outgrown, and seeding new, soul-nourishing traditions to cherish for years on.
The holiday season brings with it the nostalgia of long-held family traditions. My most favorite memories of the holiday season are from when my grandmother, Marcella, was still alive. I come from a pretty big family and for the week of Christmas all of my grandmother’s children (5 total) and their children (12 total) and their children (11 at that time) would gather together at her house on the hill the week of Christmas to eat, play games, watch movies, play Yahtzee, and reconnect over the miles and years of life that had grown between us.
When my grandmother passed away, my mother moved into her home and has kept the tradition alive, taking up the mantle of host, and keeping the house on the hill as the heart of the family; the point of gravity drawing us all back together to reconnect every year.
One of the very first Christmases my husband, Adam, and I shared, after my grandmother had passed away and long before the pandemic imposed restrictions around people gathering together indoors, Adam walked through my mom’s house counting all of the people. He comes from a smaller family, so he wasn’t used to holiday gatherings quite like ours. I remember him coming up to me, somewhat amazed and saying, “There are 29 people in this house right now.”
I absolutely loved this tradition in our family. Yes, it gets a little hectic, especially when it comes to sleeping arrangements for everybody, or who’s turn it is at the yahtzee table, but I love getting to see my family and their families, and hear their stories and see how they’re growing.
For many of us, though, this past year meant that a lot of our long-standing family traditions, like the tradition of packing 30 people into the house on the hill, had to be broken and new traditions had to take their place.
Because we weren’t spending as much time at the house on the hill (we visited briefly outdoors around the fire pit), this meant we spent more time at home celebrating with our own little family and being more intentional about the time we spent together and making our home all the more cozy and festive. I have since spent more time thinking about what holiday traditions are worth keeping, like holding special people close and letting them know how much I love them, and what traditions I am ready to let go of, like avoiding vulnerable conversations and the assortment of casseroles my mom makes (if you read this, I love you mom!).
These ornaments, to me, are representative of the traditions we choose to keep and the new traditions we choose to make. Each of these ornaments are hand-painted and each one is completely unique, no two are exactly alike. I painted them intending for them to be incorporated into long-held family traditions and, like the good traditions that endure, be passed down as precious heirlooms for generations to come.
Collectors Club Members will get exclusive access to this collection of ornaments on Friday, November the 19th. The ornaments will then become publicly available on November 20th. To make sure you don’t miss out on collecting your ornament, join the Collectors Club here!