Tag Archives: aids cure

“Red Ribbon Rider” UTAC Velo Original Bike Scribble Painting on Canvas

Artist Kathleen King created this beautiful design for the UTAC Velo cycling team. This design is an official logo of Team UTACVelo (Until There is A Cure) and is used on apparel to raise funds for AIDS research, treatment and prevention.

She is generously donating 50% of the proceeds from the sale of this painting directly to Until There’s A Cure. Acrylic on canvas 18″ x18″.
Click here to purchase or inquire about this painting. Please email the artist at BikeScribble@gmail.com if you have any questions and the artist will be happy to contact you by phone.

Fashion with a Heart

New Partnership Promotes “Positive Action”

Until There’s a Cure is thrilled to announce its partnership with Kreeya.com, a curated online shopping destination for local, independent fashion in San Francisco. Kreeya, sanskrit for “positive action,” connects independent designers with people who want to make a statement with the clothes they wear.

Starting today, you can shop for many UTAC bracelet styles on Kreeya.com. All proceeds from the sales of these gorgeous pieces will go towards funding prevention education, care services, vaccine development, and increasing public awareness of AIDS. It’s a real no-brainer, right? Buy a gorgeous piece of jewelry AND support a fabulous cause, all in one fell swoop. 

Like classic, clean design? Select a Cuff Style Bracelet, available in silver platedstainless steel, or sterling silver. Love to pile on lots of color? Add several Jelly Bracelets to your bag—it’s available in 10 different colors! Need a truly memorable gift? Try an African Art Bracelet (shown right) on for size—hand-carved PVC pipe in Namibia, no two are exactly alike. Your purchase of this unique bracelet provides care, food and schooling for children living in African villages ravaged by AIDS. Any purchase you make from this amazing collection makes a difference!

You can stay connected with Until There’s A Cure on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/Until.Org and Twitter at http://twitter.com/until_dot_org.

You can stay connected with Kreeya on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/mykreeya, and Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/mykreeya.

Honoring National Volunteer Week

An Interview with Until There’s A Cure Volunteer Martha Phillips

BY LINDSAY STEELE

“I am passionate about fairness and giving a helping hand to those in need. It will make us all stronger!” – Martha Phillips

Martha Phillips is a veteran of the fashion industry. Her diverse back groundincludes trend forecasting, merchandising, buying and fashion publishing in apparel, accessories and home decor. Having worked in companies that range from luxury to mass, Martha has a clear understanding of where trends come from and how they translate to any market. Martha volunteers 3 – 4 days a week while her 4-year old twin girls are at school.

Lindsay: Why HIV/AIDS and why Until There’s A Cure?

Martha: Having spent my career in the Fashion Industry, I have had close personal experience with people affected by HIV/AIDS. And back in the late 1980′s, when I lived in NYC and worked in the fashion industry there, it wasn’t about HIV because no one even knew they had HIV until they had full blown AIDS. And they died fast. You couldn’t open Women’s Wear Daily without seeing an obituary of a man in his 40s and we all knew what that meant. It was excruciating.

Today, with the amazing progress in drug treatments, my biggest fear is that people will be complacent about HIV/AIDS. In America, it feels sometimes like the forgotten disease, not like the incurable epidemic it really is. My hope is that UTAC can raise awareness enough to help compassionate Americans – and there are millions of them – realize that the problem is not gone.

Today too, the world-wide epidemic is even more tragic, due to the inability of poverty stricken populations to get testing and adequate treatment. Now that I have children, I am profoundly affected by the way this tragedy affects the innocents; the children who are infected by their pregnant mothers or left orphaned.

30 years ago when HIV was first identified, I think people thought that if you got it, it was your own fault. Today’s HIV does not discriminate.

Why UTAC? Until There’s A Cure doesn’t have a big administration. They don’t have a fancy office. They don’t have a team of thousands. It’s lean, and as such, nearly all of the money raised goes to those in need. This is the kind of philanthropic institution that I want to be associated with and that needs my help the most.

Lindsay: What keeps you coming back to volunteer?

Martha: The cause and the inspiring people I get to work with, who share my concern.

Lindsay: What bracelets do you wear?

Martha: African Art bracelet, Kazuri stretch bracelet, Orphan bracelet (3 at a time), The World Bracelet. I love to stack them up my arm, some or all at once. And I wear the exquisitely crafted Sterling UNTIL Ribbon necklace.

Lindsay: What are your short term and long term goals for Until There’s A Cure?

Martha: Short term, I’m here to help things run more smoothly so the key people at Until There’s A Cure can be freed up to focus on the big goal, finding new and bigger resources for funding and getting that funding to those in need.

Long term, my goal is to be a part of that bigger focus of driving more significant fund raising for UTAC, and to be around on the day that we can close the doors at UTAC, when we’ve found the cure.