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18 Shopping Days Left: Unique Event at Colorful Visions Art Glass Studio

Bayport shopping opportunity also doubles as benefit for BULA.

If you haven't discovered the perfect gift yet Patch wants to make sure you do and will be spotlighting ideas at local businesses every day until Dec. 25 between Blue Point and West Sayville.

Today Patch spotlights a very special shopping experience that also benefits a great organization. It’s happening this Sunday, December 9 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Colorful Visions Art Glass Studio on Montauk Highway in Bayport.

Called “Celebrate the Season with Women in Art,” the shopping event is also a fundraiser for BULA, and is the second annual benefit the studio has sponsored to help the organization.

Creative items made by a wide range of local artists will be for sale including glass art by studio owners Sandy and Kathy Seff, a cookbook from authors Nicole and Mary Elizabeth Roarke, gourmet foods from Miss Amy’s, wheel-thrown ceramic mugs and items by Lisa Di Stefano, handmade knitwear from Ellen Cremer and jewelry and craft handmade by women in Uganda.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
John Thompson May 19, 2013 at 10:26 pm
And so the taxpayer is once again asked to give more to an already out of control and bloatedRead More system. Every year the school districts on Long Island receive increases of millions of dollars to their budgets, and still they want to bleed the taxpayer for more. As two income families struggle to pay exorbitant tax bills, we’re asked to pay even more? We’ll here’s a novel idea, how about if the teachers union’s began demanding less? This early retirement baloney must stop, salaries should be capped, administrators and their staffs must be cut by at least eighty percent. In addition, educators and staff should have to pay for their own medical and retirement plans just as the rest of us must. Here on Long Island, families are suffering and sacrificing, and many are being forced to leave due to taxes which are out of control. It is time for educators to cease hiding behind children with threats of decreased student programs, and to make an honest and realistic observation as to why things are as bad as they are. To blame parents for not paying enough into the system to support the schools is ludicrous. The real problem lies in a system which is self serving, and run by incompetents blind to the harm they are inflicting upon our children and families.