Christmas Cards | Bach Designs .com

Contemporary Christmas Cards


Wrapables

Christmas Cards


BlanckSlate Modern Christmas Tree Holiday Card, set of 5
Wrapables

Paper
5.5"H x 4.25"W each

Answers

Looking for beautiful places in Houston to photograph teens for Christmas card.?

I love little wooden bridges over water or rocks or awesome scenery, but not too contemporary.


Stark has some good ideas but I would add...
Bayou Bend Gardens
The bridge on Allen Parkway overlooking Eleanor Tinsley Park (great downtown skyline view)
The Water Wall at Williams Tower
The Gazabo at the Mecom Fountain
Vargo's

Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas - Sara Groves


Yes, it's a little early for Christmas but this is a lovely rendition of this old Christmas song. The images are vintage and antique Victorian ...

Help with baby girl name?

Well, we're not pregnant yet, but we're trying. We already have one daughter, named Makenzie. We have boy names picked out, but girl names seem to be harder to choose. I like the name Kyleigh, but it seems to be pretty popular (as is Makenzie, I guess (: ). Does anyone like Kyla? Can you please give some suggestions for other girl names that sound good w/ Makenzie? I like modern and contemporary names, b/c that's what we went w/ for the first child and I'd like to be consistent. I don't really think that Emma sounds good w/ Makenzie on Christmas cards and things like that. Please help. Also, any suggestions for middle names would be appreciated. Last name starts w/ an M. Don't really wanna give it out, though.


I do like Emma. My best friend's name is Emma. I like Kyla too. Here are some other suggestions. I like modern names as well. I don't like what everyone else has. I want something unique.

Kaylee, Brylee, Addison, Bailey, Grace, Madison, Olivia, Claudia, Reese, Elle, Ella, Alyssa, Kori, Lynli, Chloe

As for middle names: Bailey Grace, Olivia Jade, Ella Reese, Kaylee Ann, Erin Mallory

Hope some of those helped. Good Luck! :)

Do you believe Bush is like a contemporary tzar Midas? Whatever he touches turns into $h1t?

"I am not a conventionally religious man, or even a very superstitious one, but I do wish George Bush would stop asking God to bless America. Every time he does, we seem to be visited with another plague, suggesting divine wrath over our president’s evil ways. How else to explain the persistent calamity that has marked this administration: a pointless but very costly war over nonexistent Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, the devastating New Orleans flood, the betrayal of the nation by the money-changers—from Enron to Goldman Sachs—that Bush welcomed into the temple of the White House?

What’s next? Pestilence, frogs, locusts or incurable boils? Dare we risk four more years of catastrophic misrule by a “W” alter ego? For those indifferent to the serious implications of that question, I recommend Oliver Stone’s new bio-flick, which brilliantly captures the “banality of evil” that has controlled our political life these past eight years. This phrase from Hannah Arendt’s characterization of the mundane cruelty that so marked the daily experience of European fascism has a frightening applicability to the Republican leadership that has done so much damage to this nation’s reputation for democratic integrity.

Cynicism rules even as ritualistic prayer breaks, as depicted in the film “W,” abound. The pretense of piety earns the president and his accomplices a get-out-of-jail-free card; at no point in the film do any in the top ranks of this administration—captured so accurately and depressingly—accept one iota of accountability for how much damage they have wrought. Unrepentant, the same Republican apparatchiks are employing the familiar Rovian tactic of divide and conquer in seeking to continue their hold on power. Once again, they seek to focus attention on hot-button social issues and patriotic litmus tests to draw attention from the fact that family values are being destroyed by the loss of job and home.

Perhaps John McCain is not a perfect replica of George W. Bush, but the parallels go beyond the senator’s enthusiastic support for the toxic mix of Bush’s imperial foreign policy and his arrogant indifference to the travails of our domestic existence. Neither man seems to have any sense of how we actually live or what we need from government. How else to explain their common antipathy to Social Security and Medicare, which, after public education, represent the nation’s most successful programs? Can you imagine the panic today if McCain and Bush had succeeded in tying Social Security to investments in the stock market? They view government as nothing more than a proud sponsor of the military-industrial complex while ignoring the threat to homeland security from corporate pirates.

Don’t say we weren’t warned. Bush came into office believing fervently that what was good for Enron and its CEO, Kenneth “Kenny Boy” Lay, Bush’s top financial sponsor, was good for the country. So, too, McCain, who chose Phil Gramm as co-chair of his presidential campaign, ignoring the huge loophole in Gramm’s Commodity Futures Trading Act, which allowed Enron, where his wife, Wendy Gramm, was on the board of directors, to so shamelessly game the energy market.

Trumpeting the benefits of the legislation he tacked onto an omnibus spending bill the day before the 2000 Christmas recess, then-Sen. Gramm stated: “It protects financial institutions from over-regulation. It provides legal certainty for the $60 billion market in swaps.” Those swaps created the toxic investments that U.S. taxpayers are now stuck with as the nation struggles to save those unregulated financial institutions from bankruptcy.

McCain, who should have learned the cost of radical deregulation from his own involvement in the savings and loan scandal as one of the infamous “Keating Five,” totally bought Gramm’s line. McCain was the chair of Gramm’s 1996 presidential bid and up until major Wall Street firms collapsed continued to echo the insistence of the former-Texas-senator-turned-banker that there was no real crisis in the financial markets.

McCain evidences the underlying motivator attributed to Bush in Stone’s movie: the distorted priorities of a son of privilege doing battle with the legacy of more gifted and responsible family ancestors. Both grew up as spoiled screw-ups repeatedly bailed out of trouble by their highly accomplished fathers, in McCain’s case an admiral, and both assume, as a matter of legacy, that they have a right to rule. What they ignored in their legacy was a Christian’s obligation to make the economic system that handsomely rewarded their kin at least minimally responsive to the needs of ordinary folk
"


Bail Out huh? The only ones that got bailed out is Bush and his gang of thugs. I keep telling everyone, Bush and his thugs know that they are getting fired, so they just wanted to empty the cash register before they leave the store Duh!

' Santa is Magic ' Flat Single Panel Christmas Holiday Greeting Cards 20 Count with Envelopes
WM

Contemporary Flat One Panel Cards
20 Festive Red Cards with Light Blue Envelopes


  • Buy Cheap

  • Try a Contemporary Christmas Card | CardCube Blog

    Every year it is the same thing. We make our Christmas card lists so full of energy and vitality, relishing the chance to send personal greetings to our friends and family. However, by the time we are finished, we are exhausted, possibly vowing ‘never again’ and lending individuality to each card only by changing the name. Our handwriting is illegible, our tongue chapped and dry, and our last ounce of Christmas spirit is thoroughly expended.

    Then, just when we think it’s all over, we still have to send them all. As we get older and our list of acquaintances that we are obliged to grace with a card grows, the whole point of sending a special card seems to go right out of the window.

    ...

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    We actually are shopping a deal for a pop record, like a hot adult contemporary pop record. We have been working on that project for the past couple years