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Upcoming Events + Welcome New Clients! MUSEUM OF DESIGN ATLANTA (MODA) CAMPS
SUMMER'S NOT JUST FOR KIDS ANYMOREWHY SHOULD KIDS HAVE ALL THE FUN??DESIGN CAMP FOR GROWN-UPS AND CAMPS FOR KIDS!Every summer, kids come to MODA's design camps to think boldly, learn something new, and ask big questions about how the world works. We thought adults deserved the same chance.
That's why we created Design Camp for Grownups — a series of three Wednesdays this summer, each built around different ways of being creative together. Because you are more creative than your schedule allows, and one day might be all it takes to remember that.Why should kids have all the fun?Not only do you get to rediscover your creativity, you're also making sure a child gets their first chance at it.All proceeds fund summer Design Camp scholarships for youth ages 6-18.INTRODUCING THE ATLANTA WOOD FOUNDATION
🌳 Locally owned and operated by husband-and-wife reclamation and nature enthusiasts Kelly and Ali Syed, Atlanta Wood Foundation was founded in 2021 with a simple mission: to prevent fallen trees from ending up in landfills. ♻️ What began as a grassroots effort has evolved into a growing resource for woodworkers, interior designers, builders, and enthusiasts who value sustainability, craftsmanship, and the preservation of natural materials. 🌳 Atlanta Wood Foundation, is a 501c3 nonprofit started in 2021 dedicated to reclaiming fallen, dead, and unwanted trees across the city and transforming them into accessible, low-cost urban lumber. It is the only lumber and sawmill in the city of Atlanta and one of very few nonprofit sawmills in the country! 🌳 Did you know that at almost 50%, Atlanta has the highest urban tree canopy in the nation? Just think about it, what if these repurposed trees could become the materials that build our future?
Atlanta Wood Foundation founders Ali and Kelly Syed
SERVICES OFFERED + CLASSESMADISON MORGAN CULTURAL CENTER -ART OPENING
Olsen returned to the country in which he served in combat and Cleaveland learned to view the world in a wider context. “It was an epiphany of sorts to see the world in a different way.”Cleaveland said that trip was both transformational and the basis for the connection in ‘experience and intersection.’MADISON MORGAN CULTURAL CENTER
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