Formerly Homeless Woman Finds Inspiration in the Trash

Inspired - Individuals

Lucinda YatesAfter surviving a year and a half of homelessness in the early 1980s, Lucinda Yates moved back to Portland and started putting her life back together by waitressing.

But her true breakthrough came in August 1988, when she noticed some colorful mat boards in a frame shop's trash can. She pulled the discarded boards out of the garbage and started cutting them into elementary shapes, eventually creating a pin that looked like a house. Yates sold the pins to a local homeless shelter for $6, which in turn sold the pins for $10 to raise funds.

To date, Designs by Lucinda has sold more than 5 million pins, raising more than $25 million for thousands of nonprofits in the U.S. and globally.

(READ the story in the Huffington Post)

Log-in

Shentrition
Banner

Do Your Part


RSS Feed

Add GNN to your favorite
newsfeed reader!

(includes myYahoo and Google)

Subscribe to GNN newsfeed!

GNN BUTTON2 150X200

Testimonials

Your daily stories have allowed me to rekindle a certain appreciate for the good things in life. The truth is, I was passing up a lot of good things in my life without realizing it. Please keep doing what you’re doing. It is making a huge difference in the way I see my world. -Trey Aubrey

  

-
View all