You know the drill: you get a Facebook reminder that it's your friend's birthday, so you end up writing her an email, or you post a brief note to her Facebook wall. Rather than follow everyone else's lead by posting an impersonal b-day message on Facebook, why not create a collective album of online letters that you and your friends can send to the birthday girl on her special day? A cool new site called From a Birdie, which I found on makeuseof, is similar to the site GroupCard because it allows an entire group of people to collaborate on a personalized card or letter.
While the typography trend continues to truck along, a new trend of decorating with letters, often consonants and syllables from vintage signs, has arisen. Personally, I find it kind of cheesy to decorate with initials — a big "C.S." on my wall is just not my style.
These Giant Orgy Letters ($1,800), which are actually Goodyear Tire sign letters from the 1940s, might give your mother a heart attack if you displayed them as-is in (or outside) your home. But, let's not do that, okay? For this challenge, I'd like you to tell me how you'd use the (ahem) excessively indulgent letters as décor without inflicting cardiac arrest on your relatives and neighbors.
Move over Bill Cosby. God seems to be getting an earful of the darndest things outta kids these days. The following are a batch of letters — or prayers — intended for the big dude upstairs.
Mmm...the all-you-can-guilt-trip buffet sounds good.
Source
What kind of a household is this? Eating and playing boardgames is no crime in my book. Having a strange curiosity about potentially killing off upholders of the law, however...
Good news! Paris is practicing her spelling again, which means that she's written another tell-all letter to the people who claim to like her. (We'll call them "friends" for short.) This time, Paris writes about lying talking to Barbara Walters, discovering that Jesus hottie, and all the "friends" she's made in jail already.
Paris plays pen pal to her friends again, but this time, via sidekick. The following email was sent at the time of her return to jail. Putting aside all shock and sadness, Paris openly wrote of her grudges, her new metal "bracelets," and the offensive smell of justice.
If you don't know already, Paris was sent back to jail on Friday and given a 45 day sentence. What will we ever do without her? Well, have no fear, because the first of her prison letters is here and, to my surprise, the girl's got more than a two-word vocabulary.
When you have nothing nice to say, take anonymous revenge and then confess in a passive-aggressive letter. Oh, and really emphasize that you're "Sorry!!!"
Source