JOPLIN, Mo. —
Helen Edlin, of Dickson, Tenn., remembers how she fell in love with Hallmark ornaments.
“I’ve been collecting since 1978, when my small town in Tennessee got a Hallmark store,” she said. “They (the ornaments) are so detailed and so personal.”
Edlin was one of several hundred people, many from outside Southwest Missouri, who were at Amanda’s Hallmark Shop, 1651 W. Seventh St., on Saturday for the chance to buy exclusive Christmas ornaments and have them signed by a few of the artists who helped design them.
The store was selling two ornaments exclusive to Saturday’s event — a Christmas-themed table and a stove — and was expected to sell out of all 324 of them by the end of the day, said store manager Donna Garrigan. She said she expected about 500 people to have passed through the store by the end of Saturday.
“We knew we’d have a huge crowd,” she said.
Hallmark’s Linda Sickman, a retired artist, and Kristina Gaughran and Ruth Donikowski, senior sculptors, signed ornaments for visitors. Appointment times for the signings, as well as tickets to buy the exclusive ornaments, were distributed before the event to those waiting in line outside the store.
Because a limited number of people were allowed inside the store to prevent overcrowding, the line snaked along the sidewalk outside all morning, even as the temperature inched toward 100 degrees. Staff members handed out bottles of water.
Edlin joined the line at about 4:45 a.m. It was worth it, she said, because not only did she get the exclusive ornaments, but she also got a few other pieces signed by the artists. Come Christmastime, the ornaments will join about 3,000 others that she has on display across 45 trees in her house, she said.
Randi Collins, of Tulsa, Okla., had stood in line since just after 5 a.m. By 10 a.m., she was standing in the checkout line to buy a Hallmark Keepsake ornament that was missing from her collection — a green mug with a marshmallow snowman sitting inside.
Collins said she has between 400 and 500 ornaments, having started her collection at age 11 with an ornament from her mother, who was also at Saturday’s event.
“It’s kind of gone from her to me to my daughter, and now I have a grandson, so it’s four generations,” she said.
Janet Brown and her daughter, Kayla, drove for six hours from Des Moines, Iowa, specifically for Sickman, who they said was one of their favorite Hallmark artists.
“Where she goes, we follow,” Kayla Brown said.
The two brought nearly 100 ornaments from their 5,000-piece collection with them, carefully packaged in small plastic cases, to get some of them signed. They said they had been in line since 6 a.m.
Hosting rights
The Bright Christmas Dreamers, a local club for people who collect Hallmark Christmas ornaments, won the right to be the hosts for Saturday’s event in a contest by creating a video chronicle of the year 2011 in Joplin. Hallmark puts on several such signing events each year in different cities.
Local News
Hallmark ornament-signing event attracts hundreds to Joplin store
- Local News
-
-
Jasper County to start enforcing newly adopted nuisance ordinance
Jasper County has received 15 complaints based on a new nuisance ordinance adopted earlier this spring, members of the County Commission said Tuesday. John Bartosh, presiding commissioner, said he and the other commissioners reviewed the complaints during a meeting last week with workers at the Jasper County Health Department.
-
Neosho School Board votes to boost custodians’ salaries
Action taken Monday night by the Neosho Board of Education on salaries was designed partly to retain custodians. The measure approved by the board gives custodians, with a starting salary of $8.77 an hour, a 10 percent raise.
-
Mike Pound: Carthage holding parties for a good cause
When my wife told me that we were going to host a party, I had only one question: Why? My wife might be the party-hosting sort of person, but I am not. She said this party was for a good cause. She also told me that our friends Lana and Bill, Lee Ann and Rob, and Amy and Jimmy were going to help host it.
-
Proposal would reduce 20th Street to two lanes
A design proposal that would convert much of 20th Street into two lanes instead of four from Main Street to Campbell Parkway to make room for streetscape and green features did not draw much public support on Tuesday.
-
Local runners show support for Boston in cross-country relay
After completing the Boston Marathon on April 15, Ashleigh Beyersdorfer made her way through the throngs of runners to retrieve the bag she had checked in and was on her way to meet up with her family when she heard the explosions.
-
MSSU board to complete terms of president’s departure
The Board of Governors of Missouri Southern State University will meet Wednesday to complete the terms of the agreement that terminated President Bruce Speck’s contract, board Chairwoman Sherry Buchanan said.
-
State’s key witness testifies in murder trial
The fate of Dustin Boggs may ultimately depend on the credibility of Arturo Council. If jurors believe Council, then Boggs, 25, could be convicted of first-degree murder in the 2012 stabbing and shooting death of his ex-girlfriend, Danyel Borden, 21, at his trial this week in Ottawa County District Court.
-
Swimmers attempt to set world record
Even before the instructor had finished giving his direction to the class of young swimmers, 4-year-old Alexa DeBerry had dunked herself underwater and had come up giggling.
-
Missouri moves to lift ban on foreign farm owners
Weeks before a Chinese conglomerate agreed to buy Smithfield Foods Inc. in the largest such takeover of a U.S. business, Missouri lawmakers quietly approved legislation removing a ban on foreign ownership of agricultural land.
-
Neosho Board of Education approves 10 percent raise in effort to keep custodians
School custodians are receiving the biggest percentage raise among salaries approved Monday by the Neosho Board of Education.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Jasper County to start enforcing newly adopted nuisance ordinance



