
The producers of tonight's Golden Globes telecast wanted thousands of "awareness ribbons" for participants to wear as a reminder of the suffering in Haiti. They called on
Regal Ribbons -- and all of our West Coast family joined in the amazing team effort that produced 3,500 special ribbons in a day and a half.
Marie -- who just happened to be in Morgan Hill for
a visit -- tells the amazing story:
"We got an email from Dick Clark Productions at 5:35 p.m. on Thursday asking us if we could get them 2,000 Haiti Disaster awareness ribbons in red, blue and yellow for the Golden Globes on Sunday. We sent them a prototype picture (the photo above) and told them to get back to us by 10 p.m. if they'd like us to make them. At 9:56 p.m. they got back to us saying they wanted them, and could we make that 2,500?
"We knew we'd need all hands on deck and then some, so I called
Genevieve and asked her if she would like to come back down Friday to help out. It had to have been a bizarre phone call - I was light on details and in a big hurry - but she agreed anyway.
"By 11 p.m. Dick Clark Productions had asked for yet another thousand ribbons and
Mom, Eyvonne, and I were cutting and hand-sewing ribbon to get a jump on the production. Mom and I stayed up very late and got up very early to keep things moving until reinforcements arrived.

"And boy did they ever. In the morning Eyvonne and her mom,
Jayne, brought equipment, including two sewing machines, cutting mats, rotary cutters, pins, and thread. They devised a system for sewing the three layers of ribbon together quickly and beautifully. (Eyvonne had to go to work but came back at 5 and worked the rest of the night.)
"Genevieve arrived at 9 a.m. and took over the job of putting pins in the sewn ribbons and bagging them by the 100s. She kept the official count and checked the stitching and placement on the ribbons before she bagged them up.
"Dan cut hundreds of ribbon segments and ran errands all day long after working a full morning at Peet's Coffee.
Ozzie woke up ungodly early (for him) and cut ribbon for hour upon hour.
"We explained to
Xander that we were working to make ribbons to help the "kids who don't have toys", the catchall I use to help explain things when we're donating his old toys or clothes. Xander really does feel for those kids, and he was so cooperative about staying away from all the sharp stuff and generally being agreeable while we were all busy. He also got a few play-date breaks over at Eyvonne's house with Eyvonne's parents, who are his buddies.

"At around 6-ish we all took a break for dinner, then we got back to work.
John came down to help out and we blasted through the last few hundred ribbons incredibly fast. By midnight on Friday we were finished with all 2,500 of the first batch of ribbon.
(Here Genevieve and Jon model the finished product.)
"In the morning mom printed the "extra" thousand ribbons and Dan, Eyvonne, Mom, Ozzie, Os and I all cut and pinned those in a few hours because they were much simpler (just one ribbon looped and pinned). A courier came to pick them up at 3 p.m. and they were off to the Golden Globes and an undisclosed after-party.
"It's possible that the ribbons we assembled together will be seen all over the place on Sunday, and we're all hoping that they help, somehow. It felt good to do something, however small.

"It was a lot of work, but we all had so much fun together. This morning I had a few sore spots on my hands and feet from all the work; I had a bruise on my right thumb where the loop of a pair of scissors had sat for hours, and my thumbs and fingers were dimpled from pushing in straight pins. I also noticed a soreness in my chest.
"It wasn't long before I realized it was because I had spent so much of Friday laughing."
See all the photos in this slideshow:(If you can't see the slideshow on this page,
click here.)