Showing posts with label $1000 grant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label $1000 grant. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Plaid, Rocks, Saxophones and Affirmations



October 2012's Awesome Calgary Thousand Dollar Thursday returned to its normal schedule of the fourth Thursday of the month, and we headed back to class as we held it at the Bissett School of Business at Mount Royal University.

The emcee for the night was Brian Singh, a Founding Trustee of AF-Calgary.  He had the privilege of hosting four super-awesome ideas, all attempting to convince the Trustees and audience why their idea deserved AF-Calgary's November $1,000 no-strings-attached micro-grant.

Pitch 1:  Gratitude Rocks!

First up was Gratitude Rocks! by Susanne Alexander-Heaton.

Susanne's idea was to get artists at the Calgary Drop-In Centre (who are also residents) to paint one of 26 different powerful words (Examples:  Harmony, balance, love) on approximately 450 rocks.  A pay-it-forward process, these rocks would then be given away to people who they feel most needs the words on the rock.  The person must then share their story when they give the rock away.  This way, the artists at the Drop-In Centre can see the impact they have on people with their creations.

The $1,000 would go towards paying the artists at the Drop-In Centre directly for their time in painting the rocks as well as for materials and supplies to pull off the project.

Pitch 2:  I am. We are. We will.

Second was I am. We are. We will. by Kaitilin Roth.

An enthusiastic Calgarian herself, Kaitlin's idea is to create a wall of affirmations from fellow Calgarians highlighting who they are as a person, who they are as a group of Calgarians, and what they will do as a city to continue in their Awesomeness.

Three large canvases would be decoupaged with written affirmations, as well as with various photos taken around the city of Calgarians in action, serving their fellow Calgarians through various AWESOME acts of humanity.  Finally, a mirror would be placed in the middle of each canvas so that no matter what you look at, your awesome self will be reflected as you contemplate on how you have and can serve Calgary better.

The majority of the $1,000 would be used to pay for the materials needed to pull of the project.  Any leftover money would go towards light refreshments and other goodies to be given away at the official Hanging Ceremony where the completed project will be displayed.

Kaitlin would love for the project to be ultimately displayed at City Hall or one of the universities, and would aim to have the project completed by July 2013.

Pitch 3:   A Song for Westwinds

Third was A Song for Westwinds by the Westwinds Music Society, accompanied by a lovely performance from one of their saxophonists.

This year is the society's 25th anniversary, and they hoped to commission pianist Matt Harris to write a piece of music to commemorate the special occasion.  The piece would be premiered with a Big Band Dinner Dance at the end of the year that would be open to the public to enjoy.  The piece of music would be kept in the society's music library, and possibly made available to school and community bands everywhere.

The $1,000 would go solely towards the commissioning of the piece.

Pitch 4:  The 2nd Annual Log Driver's Waltz Gala - A Plaid Party!

Last was The 2nd Annual Log Driver's Waltz Gala:  A Plaid Party! by Karilynn Thompson on behalf of the GIRAF Animation Festival.

A Plaid Party! is a wholesome plaid-themed party hearkening to the days of National Film Board animations on CBC television in the 1960s and on.  The Log Driver's Waltz Gala is a family-friendly event featuring GIANT retro-animations projected onto the five-storey tall side of the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium, along with fire-pits, lots of free hot chocolate, animation workshops, DJs, food trucks and more.

The name of the gala was inspired by the famous piece of Canadiana, Log Driver's Waltz, an animated short by the NFB created in 1979.

The $1,000 would be used towards helping to pay for the projection equipment needed to run the event.  That way, Karilynn would be able to ensure that the event could be kept at low-cost to no cost for the public to attend.

And the Winner is…


AF-Calgary's October 2012 no-strings-attached $1,000 micro-grant went to Karilynn Thompson and her Plaid Party.  Congratulations, Karilynn!

This month, each of our AF-Calgary Top4 Finalists received an Awesome Foundation - Calgary T-shirt as well as a $250 gift certificate from Gilmour Photography that the finalists can use towards highlighting or showcasing all of their awesomeness, in whatever form it takes.

Thank you to Mount Royal University for allowing us to host our event on campus.

Also, a BIG Thank You and heartfelt thanks and appreciation to ING Direct for sponsoring our latest batch of AF-Calgary T-shirts.  The only way you can get one is if you're a Top4 Finalist or a Trustee/Volunteer with Awesome Calgary, so they're super-extra limited edition.

If you'd like to relive the night's events as they happened, check out our recap on Storify.

And with that, we look forward to our FINAL Awesome Calgary Thousand Dollar Thursday event of 2012, being held in partnership with the Calgary Public Library and their One Book, One Calgary program on Thursday, November 22.  For more details, see here, and if you're coming, make sure to RSVP on Eventbrite, Facebook or Yelp!

Photo Copyrights:  Brett Gilmour / Eleni Tsaprailis

Monday, October 1, 2012

A SUPER SPECIAL Night with Four Super-Awesome Ideas!


September's Awesome Calgary Thousand Dollar Thursday was SUPER SPECIAL, being held on a Saturday (instead of the normal fourth Thursday of the month) to coincide with Alberta Culture Days, Doors Open at King Edward and the milestone We Should Know Each Other #100!

There were so many things happening at the King Edward Arts Hub and Incubator during the weekend, and Awesome Foundation - Calgary was excited to be a part of it all!  Our Pitch Night event was sandwiched in-between speeches from Alberta's Minister of Culture, the Honourable Heather Klimchuk, and a performance by Calgary's first-ever Poet Laureate, Kris Demeanor.

Our emcee for the night, AF-Calgary Trustee of Awesome Sue McMaster, had her work cut out for her, and it was with that backdrop that the Top4 Finalists for September 2012 took to the stage to try to convince the Trustees and the audience why their idea should win the $1,000 no-strings-attached micro-grant.

Pitch 1:  PODPLAYS: Downloadable Art for Your Ears

First up was Natalie Meisner with PODPLAYS:  Downloadable Art for Your Ears.

Created by Natalie and her students, these free PODPLAYS are downloadable plays designed specifically for your ears that anyone can access.  Some are best listened to in a certain location or site, some ask you to be a spectator on the move and listen while you walk or run a certain route, and some ask you to simply download, plug in your earphones, and close your eyes.

Natalie wishes to develop these plays to highlight unused or neglected spaces in the city core to the public.  This project would also allow Natalie's students first-hand experience working with professional directors and actors.

The entirety of the $1,000 would go towards hiring actors and directors instead of props and other high cost items.  Any leftover money would go towards promotion of the project.

Pitch 2:  52 Weaks Strong

Next up was 52 Weaks Strong by Jason Hagen.

52 Weaks Strong is a project to help build stronger marriages through journaling.  The way it works is that every week for one year, the husband in the relationship would be encouraged to ask his wife one question, and then the husband then has one week to create an experience or gift based on her response.  One side of the page of the journal entry for the week would contain the question and the answer, and the other side would contain the wife's account of the experience that he created for her.

The idea of the project would be to create a program that would try and help encourage stronger relationships one week at a time.

The $1,000 would go towards developing a template for the journal that anyone can access and download, as well as to start up a website where men can blog about their experiences.

Pitch 3:  Start-up of a Community Food Security Strategy

In third was Start-up of a Community Food Security Strategy by Quentin Sinclair.

Quentin's idea is to lead community events and workshops that teaches people about Food Security and the benefits of locally-sourced and sustainable foods centred around a new monthly winter farmer's market located in the Hillhurst-Sunnyside area to compliment the one already held during the summer.  A new monthly winter market would allow the existing summer farmers a break while still allowing them the opportunity to sell things that are available locally in winter.

10-15 vendors are already signed up for the program, and Quentin would use the $1,000 to promote and host supporting events leading up to the new farmer's market, to develop the workshops centred around cooking with food available locally over the winter months, as well as investigating other ways to develop programs that aim to reducing food insecurity in the long term.

Pitch 4:  Kmitt (a.k.a. Homesewn)

Last was Kmitt by Nick Meehan, formally known as Homesewn.

Inspired by the TOMS' Shoes initiative in Chicago where for every shoe purchased from their website, a pair of shoes is donated by the company to a person in need, Kmitt aims to create mittens from scratch in a one-for-one model for the homeless to help keep them warm and to create awareness for homelessness in Calgary, as well as to strengthen community bonds by engaging many people such as seniors groups to gather and knit together on a volunteer basis for a worthwhile cause.

The mittens would be easily distinguished from normal mittens through an accent piece with a simple colour contrast, promoting awareness of the issue of homelessness in Calgary (similar to how those popular red mittens raised awareness of sport and Canadian athletes during the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics).

One ball of yarn is enough to create one pair of mittens, and 100% of the $1,000 would go towards knitting supplies to use in the project.

And The Winner Is…


Another tough month to decide on a winner, but Natalie Meisner wins our SUPER SPECIAL September 2012 no-strings-attached $1,000 micro-grant for her PODPLAYS project.  Congratulations, Natalie!

Make sure to check out www.PODPLAYS.ca in the coming weeks to learn more about how you can participate in the project.

A BIG Thank You to Mark Hopkins for including us in the We Should Know Each Other #100 extravaganza, and to cSPACE for allowing us to participate in Doors Open at King Edward.  The King Edward Arts Hub and Incubator will be an AMAZING collaborative space when it fully launches, so keep an eye out on that!

And if you missed this edition of We Should Know Each Other, keep an eye on WSKEO.com for details on the next one and meet someone new!

Finally, we're still accepting submissions for our October 2012 prize.  The deadline for submissions is Wednesday, October 10 at 11:59 p.m. and if you'd like to submit an idea or project for consideration, fill out this handy-dandy web form!

Thanks to everyone who took time out of their busy evening to come down and watch, and we hope you'll join us next month as we return to our regular fourth-Thursday-of-the-month Thousand Dollar Thursday schedule!

In the meantime, relive the events of our SUPER SPECIAL Thousand Dollar Thursday by checking out our Storify piece!

Friday, February 24, 2012

Double the Pleasure, Double the Fun!


Here at AF-Calgary, we're starting to hit a few milestones. For example, we hit our one-year anniversary on Twitter back on January 31, and we're approaching the one-year anniversary of awarding our very first $1,000 micro-grant in April. Last night's Thousand Dollar Thursday, our second of 2012, hit another milestone, which was a historic one for our chapter but definitely not unprecedented throughout the Awesome Foundation.

February's Thousand Dollar Thursday took place at AcceleratorYYC, an early stage start-up tech incubator space located in Inglewood run by entrepreneurs Victoria and Christian MacLean. AcceleratorYYC really boils down to entrepreneurs helping other entrepreneurs become successful, which made it an ideal venue for awesome people trying to help other awesome people realize their ideas.

In fact, some of the folks at AcceleratorYYC made Top4 and pitched their idea to us back in October 2011, and while they didn't win the prize, they were able to connect with Trevor Gair from The SoJo (another Top4 Finalist from that month) and they are currently collaborating together to try to realize Trevor's idea. Truly awesome.

This month's AF-Calgary Thousand Dollar Thursday was hosted by Emma Grace May, a new AF-Calgary Trustee who joined us at the end of last year. She now has the honour of being the emcee to an important event in the history of AF-Calgary, and it was with this backdrop (and a lot of big TV cameras) that the Top4 Finalists for February 2012 took the stage for 90 seconds each to try to convince the Trustees and audience why they felt they were deserving of the $1,000 prize.

Pitch 1: Timmy's Only Delivery Service

First up was Tim Barber representing Timmy's Only Delivery Service. It's a delivery service that provides downtown Calgary employees the opportunity to get any food delivered from any downtown restaurant to their office or business, and they recently celebrated one month in business.

The delivery service is unique in that all of its employees are homeless. In fact, Tim and his business partner Chris were once homeless themselves (they are now housed) and they started this business to try to give themselves and other homeless people in the city an opportunity to get themselves off the streets.

Tim wanted to use the $1,000 to help launch a campaign to help promote and raise awareness of the program, cover some of the logistical costs involved in running the program, upgrade equipment to ensure that delivered goods remain hot, as well as to help grow the business by recruiting more employees and getting more people involved. He hopes to increase staff by at least 10 people in the near future.

Pitch 2: Gumsphere 300

Up next was John Frosst and his partner Shawn Petsche with Gumsphere 300. Like Ed Kusmirski from the Calgary Science Network last month, John was a former Top4 Finalist back in September 2011 who didn't end up winning the $1,000 prize, but decided to re-submit his idea again to AF-Calgary for consideration.

Gumsphere 300 is a 15,000 km, month-long North America-wide traveling road show and rally with 27 shows, three Alberta bands, four artists, a film crew, one photojournalist, one mechanic, one chef and eight Ford Festivas. The tour aims to promote Alberta bands around North America who may not get any other exposure otherwise.

The Ford Festivas would be used as the primary mode of transportation for the road show. Launching this summer in July, the Gumsphere 300 folks are still short one Festiva to pull off the project, so what they'd like to do with the $1,000 is purchase one Ford Aspire and one Ford Escort GT and smoosh them together to create a hybrid Franken-monster-type Festiva to finish off their fleet.

Pitch 3: River Surfing Wave

Third was Neil Egsgard from the Alberta Surfing Association with River Surfing Wave, a project that aims to build a world-class river surfing wave in Kananaskis that emulates the Eisbach Surf Wave in Munich, Germany.

River Surfing is unique in that there are no ropes and no boats involved and relies solely on the organic flow of the river to propel the surfers. Most of the work in designing the wave has been done as they have the structural diagrams direct from Munich and conditional government support for the program. The plans and any knowledge that the Alberta Surfing Association gains from completing this project will be posted online so that any other municipalities around the world who are interested in undertaking similar endeavours can learn from what happens here in Alberta.

While the entire project will ultimately cost around $200,000 to complete, the $1,000 micro-grant would be used to help kickstart the fundraising and engineering efforts needed to build the surfing wave, as well as to help promote the project.

Pitch 4: Art for Strangers

Up last was Aoife Baldwin-Maher and her partner Hillary with Art for Strangers, a volunteer-run community initiative directed at putting the local art community in direct contact with the larger Calgary community through publicly distributing free works of art to the public.

They will be putting out an open call to local artists to donate works of art to be distributed for free to passersby around the downtown core via bicycle courier on a pre-determined date (tentatively May 24) in the hopes of strengthening the personal connections and awareness of Calgary's vibrant art community with the community at large. The types of art available for distribution would range from traditional pieces like paintings and sculptures to new media and digital art like animated gifs distributed on CD or DVD.

Art for Strangers is heavily inspired by the Papergirl Calgary project (which itself was inspired by a project out of Berlin), but Aoife wishes to create a version that's more open to all types of art and all types of people and make things really accessible to all.

The group would like to use the $1,000 to help pay for promotional materials and campaigns online (like procuring a website and social media presence) and in the real world (like poster campaigns) to reach as many people as possible, purchase equipment like bike baskets and rear racks to help distribute the art to the public, and to help pay for additional expenses in terms of covering the logistics of the endeavour like renting a venue to facilitate the art donations.

And the winner is...

The original idea of the Awesome Foundation was to gather 10 people who'd be willing to put out $100 each and that would form the basis of the $1,000 prize. While it is a minimal requirement for any city or group hoping to start up their own official AF chapter, these days it has evolved into more of a guiding principle rather than a hard-and-fast rule (for example, the recently-launched Awesome Foundation - Halifax chapter recruited a whopping 30 founding Trustees).

Almost one year ago, Calgary initially brought on 10+3 Trustees (i.e. 13) in the hopes of using the extra money every month to give out two or three extra prizes a year for special occasions or in months where we have trouble deciding a winner. Because the only funding our chapter has access to is the money that the Trustees can put in out of their own pockets each month, we didn't award any extra prizes last year because we had to cover capital expenses like T-Shirts to give to the Top4 Finalists, business cards to help promote the program, and similar expenses like that.

That said, we managed to pay off the bulk of our bills last year and have finally had an opportunity to let the rainy-day fund grow a bit.

Every month is a tough one to decide a winner because all of the ideas that are submitted to us are stellar, and this month was no different. Day-of deliberations took the longest they ever had for us, and we even had to call back the Trustees to the back room a second time for more discussion.

In the end, we had such a hard time deciding on a winner that we decided to empty the bank account and award our first multi-grant in AF-Calgary history.

So, with that in mind, AF-Calgary's February 2012 joint winners are Tim Barber with Timmy's Only Delivery Service and John Frosst with Gumsphere 300. Tim and John will each receive a full no-strings-attached $1,000 micro-grant to help realize their respective projects.

That said, because we weren't planning on giving away $2,000 last night, we only had one money bag to give away, but if you're reading this John, rest assured that your check is in the mail. ;-)

John's win here also shows that it's worthwhile to re-submit an idea for consideration. While we can only afford to give away one (or so) $1,000 micro-grant a month (because bottom line, we ain't rich), even if an idea doesn't win one of the monthly prizes, it still doesn't detract from the merit of the idea. We have a saying around here: If it's worthy to be submitted, it's worthy for consideration, which is why we developed the Top4 Pitch format when we started up back in April 2011 (as well as choose to write long blog posts such as this one summarizing as much as possible) rather than adopt the traditional Scholarship-like format that some of the other chapters still use, as we want to highlight as many Awesome Ideas that are feasible for our small group of people to the public and anyone out there willing to support the projects we can't afford to support ourselves.

Congratulations Tim, John and Shawn!

Kudos to everyone who submitted (or re-submitted!) an idea or project for consideration this month, and congratulations to all of our Top4 Finalists and Honourable Mentions for the month of February.

And a BIG Thank You to our Awesome Support Team for February: Sarah Pynoo, Tara Prudhomme and Matt Braithwaite with the Twitter work for the night and Lonnie Taylor with photography duties.

We're still accepting submissions for the AF-Calgary March 2012 prize, and the deadline for that one is Saturday, March 10 at 11:59 p.m. To apply, fill out this handy-dandy web form!

Thanks to everyone who took time out of their evening to join us at AcceleratorYYC, and stay tuned for the announcement of our March venue!

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

May Submissions are in!

Well, it's down to decision time - who's in May's Top4 finalists list??

With 14 incredibly awesome ideas to ponder and discuss this month, it's not only going to be a tough decision for the trustee team on Thursday but I think it's going to lead to a very exciting Top4 Pitch n' Party night on May 26th.   Finalists and honourable mentions will be published on Friday May 20th.

Save the date for Party n' Party - May 26

Here's a bit of a preview and scoop on how to attend this months' Pitch n'Party  where you can watch and hear the pitches and help the trustees make the decision on who gets the $1000 free grant this month!

May 26th - 6:00 pm at Higher Ground Cafe (1126 Kensington Road Northwest)
  • Mix & mingle at 6pm 
  • 90-second rapid pitches from each finalist start at 6:30pm sharp
  • Trustee Q & A 2mins each
  • Audience Q & A 2mins each 
  • $1000 cash awarded on the spot to most awesome idea
  • chat with finalists & trustees 
Then stay at Higher Ground as they host CJSW 90.9 and  Breakthrough Acoustic at 7:30.  It's going to be an Awesome evening!  

Got your own awesome idea?  Need $1000 cash and a boost to get it going?  Submit for June!  Next deadline is June 10th.