Saturday, November 12, 2011

AsianWeek Interviews With San Francisco’s Mayoral Candidates: Terry Joan Baum

With Asian Americans comprising approximately one-third of the city’s population, the next mayor of San Francisco should have plans to address issues relevant to this robust community.
To ensure that they do, AsianWeek.com has invited all of the 16 mayoral candidates—including six well qualified and prominent Asian Americans: Mayor Ed Lee, California State Senator Leland Yee, Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting, President of the Board of Supervisors David Chiu, Public Defender Jeff Adachi, Wilma Pang a longtime community activist and college professor—to share with our readers their solutions to what they deem the most prevalent problems in the Asian American community.
Beginning Oct. 24, 2011 and leading up to the Nov. 8th election, AsianWeek.com will be highlighting a different mayoral candidate.
Featured in this installment is pioneer lesbian playwright Terry Joan Baum:

1. What is(are) the greatest health issue(s) facing Asian American Pacific Islanders (API’s) and you do as mayor to address it (them)?
– One, the absence of affordable, comprehensive, and high quality health care for all, but especially for recently arrived immigrants. Forty-one percent of the people who are enrolled in Healthy SF are Asian-Pacific Islanders — that is the largest representation by any ethnic group in the program.  And yet the administrators of Healthy SF stress that it is NOT health insurance (in fact, if a participant needs medical care outside of  San Francisco, they must pay out of pocket for that care);
– Two, Hepatitis B, the silent infection that leads to liver disease and liver cancer. While Asian Americans make up only five percent of the national population, they make up 50 percent of those afflicted with the virus. The way to prevent this disease is through vaccination, and the way to ensure that people get vaccinated is through extensive public informationand education campaigns; and,
– Three, while I am not yet aware of any studies on the issue, empirical evidence seems to indicate that Americanized Asian American children have not been spared the epidemic in childhood obesity. It is crucial that preventive measures be taken now to educate parents, guardians, and children about healthy eating habits.
Creating a high-quality and comprehensive national single-payer health system would be the best solution to address health issues in the Asian American community, but in the absence of Democratic leadership on this issue, as a Green mayor in San Francisco I would work to expand Healthy San Francisco into a full-fledged health insurance program for all people in need, regardless of immigration status and regardless of whether they need emergency medical care when they are not in San Francisco.  As mayor I would take a high-profile role in public education efforts.  Regarding childhood obesity, I would also take a high-profile role — and also work hard create programs so that produce stores want to open up in the Bayview where there are not enough stores that sell healthy food.  I also want to create a Bureau of Agriculture to jump start the local cultivation of fresh healthy produce.  This is one of the recommendations of the Peak Oil Preparedness Task Force.
2. Why should Asian American voters choose you as their next mayor?
People should vote for me because I do not accept the status quo and the premise that we must learn to do with less from government.  The Enron scandal, extreme weather events from Hurricanes Katrina to Irene and Lee, and the global recession notwithstanding, few elected officials are responding to these wake up calls that demand change. Money is being sucked
upwards as I write into the bank accounts of the wealthy all the while austerity measures are being forced upon ordinary people from Greece to San Francisco (in the form of pension reform). The current crop of political rock stars, from President Barack Obama to Governor Rick Perry range in their rhetoric from conventional to frightening– when what is most perilous right now is the growing gap between the wealthy and the rest of us, and the failure of all us to take the helm and confront the environmental
catastrophe that looms in front of us unless we start, now, to change the way we live on the planet.
As a Green, I have every intention of governing differently.  I call my platform The Green New Deal.  A few of the ideas my Green New Deal entails are:
– Levying progressive local income taxes that weigh most heavily on San Francisco’s wealthiest (this will require some changes in state law and a local charter amendment which I will champion);
– Placing a moratorium on permitting the construction of housing for the rich;
– Implementation of CleanPowerSF so that we can start generating our own, clean and renewable energy;
– Starting an Artist Urban Renewal program such that visual and performance artists can rent empty store fronts at affordable rates.  Such an effort would enliven our commercial corridors — and make them safer;
– Vastly expanding transit, in fact ‘Transit so good you don’t need your car, transit so good you don’t want your car; and,
– The Creation of a municipal bank (again this will require changes tostate and local law) among other ideas.
3. What type of relationships do you have with San Francisco’s Asian American community?
I am friendly with some Asian Americans, but I don’t really have a relationship with the Asian American community.  I have also collaborated with Asian Americans on various projects from time to time, most recently in regard to the Central Subway.
4. What are some prevalent problems in SF’s Asian American community?
There are some obvious ones that stem from language barriers, poverty, immigration status, and the fact that many children in Asian American households are living in separated families, with parents and siblings in separate countries.  Also, as I mentioned above, many Asian Americans lack access to adequate health care, and many do not have jobs that pay well. Transportation is another issue — and the planned Central Subway could very well make movement in and around The City more difficult for residents of
Chinatown than it is now.
Domestic violence is also a problem and human trafficking are also issues that Asian Americans deal with.  According to the Asian and Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence, a higher percentage of Asian Americans report domestic violence than any other ethnic group. It is very important that a network of safe houses be maintained as sanctuaries for victims of domestic abuse — and their children if any.
5. How do you plan on responding to these problems?
Most people immigrate for economic reasons.  Others immigrate to escape political or religious persecution.  These are international problems that need to be resolved through the global pursuit of human political, religious, and economic rights.
However, once here in San Francisco, it is very important to have programs that meet the needs of immigrants — programs must be language accessible, people must know their rights (especially that they are entitled to a minimum wage established by law), families and individuals must have safe places to live, children must have recreational and educational opportunities, and victims of domestic violence must know that they can escape.  It would be my intention to fully fund programs that provide these
kinds of services — with the caveat that I want full transparency and accountability in regard to programs that receive taxpayer money (while protecting the privacy of participants).
Virtually everyone in this country is either and immigrant or the descendant of immigrants.  We are never going to end immigration, no matter how stridently xenophobes decry it.  It is human to immigrate — let us roll out the welcome mat and make this jarring process as easy as possible.

AsianWeek Interviews With San Francisco’s Mayoral Candidates: Tony Hall

With Asian Americans comprising approximately one-third of the city’s population, the next mayor of San Francisco should have plans to address issues relevant to this robust community.
To ensure that they do, AsianWeek.com has invited all of the 16 mayoral candidates–including six well qualified and prominent Asian Americans: Mayor Ed Lee, California State Senator Leland Yee, Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting, President of the Board of Supervisors David Chiu, Public Defender Jeff Adachi, Wilma Pang a longtime community activist and college professor–to share with our readers their solutions to what they deem the most prevalent problems in the Asian American community.
Beginning Oct. 24, 2011 and leading up to the Nov.8 election, AsianWeek.com will be highlighting a different mayoral candidate.
Featured in this installment is former  Member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors Tony Hall.

1. What is (are) the greatest health issue(s) facing Asian American Pacific Islanders (API’s) and what will you do as mayor to address it (them)?
a. Unsanitary and crowded living conditions. As Mayor, I will conduct a survey and create a recommendation board to ensure that we draft the best policy to improve these shortcomings.
2. Why should Asian American voters choose you as their next mayor?
I have over 30 years experience in public service for the people of San Francisco, both as a Supervisor, and working closely with some of our great mayors as an administrator. I know what San Francisco can be: a thriving community of neighborhoods as diverse as its people-working together for the common good.  Since I left city service in 2004, I have watched San Francisco turning in the wrong direction as special interests and insider agendas have put politics over people. I am running for Mayor because San Francisco needs a working Mayor who isn’t running for higher office, but is simply focused on doing the people’s business with transparency and openness.  Specifically, I will fight for education, jobs, homeownership and small business to ensure our city is headed in the right direction.
3. What type of relationships do you have with San Francisco’s Asian American community?
a. I have a very positive working relationship with the Asian American community in San Francisco because they know that when they are working with Tony Hall, they’ll always get the truth.
4. What are some prevalent problems in SF’s Asian American community?
a. San Francisco’s Asian American community is crippled by backroom deals and systemic corruption.
5. How do you plan on responding to these problems?
a. The remedy to this dilemma starts with honest and open government. If elected, I will do everything in my power to root out this systemic corruption and give this city back to its people. I will recruit and build a farm team of young San Franciscans whose hearts, desires, and talents are matched with their ability to serve the people. I’ll also create an Office of Investigations, modeled after the 40 year-old office in New York, that will be dedicated to ferreting out fraud, waste, and abuse in city spending.  Finally, I will re-constitute the Office of the Chief Administrative Officer as intended by the 1932 Charter with authority and oversight of all administrative function.

AsianWeek Interviews With San Francisco’s Mayoral Candidates: Phil Ting

With Asian Americans comprising approximately one-third of the city’s population, the next mayor of San Francisco should have plans to address issues relevant to this robust community.
To ensure that they do, AsianWeek.com has invited all of the 16 mayoral candidates–including six well qualified and prominent Asian Americans: Mayor Ed Lee, California State Senator Leland Yee, Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting, President of the Board of Supervisors David Chiu, Public Defender Jeff Adachi, Wilma Pang a longtime community activist and college professor–to share with our readers their solutions to what they deem the most prevalent problems in the Asian American community.
Beginning Oct. 24, 2011 and leading up to the Nov.8 election, AsianWeek.com will be highlighting a different mayoral candidate.
Featured in this installment is San Francisco Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting.
1. What is (are) the greatest health issue(s) facing Asian American Pacific Islanders (API’s) and what will you do as mayor to address it (them)?
One in ten Asian & Pacific Islander Americans are chronically infected with Hepatitis B. It is of the utmost importance to me that we take preventive measures to address health issues – not just affecting the API community but every San Franciscan.
HBV known as the “silent killer” because many individuals don’t exhibit symptoms and don’t realize they’re infected.
We should expand and encourage more testing for HBV, while also making tests more accessible to residents. If anything, we need to ensure that individuals receive adequate treatment and understand the risk they pose to society if they are actually infected. The great work of active community members, like the Hepatitis C Task Force, goes a long way to map steps we can take in order to protect our city and neighbors. Sometimes it takes a compassionate community to really increase adequate awareness. That’s what my campaign to Reset San Francisco is all about – empowering the community to get engaged and to get involved in making San Francisco even better.
If elected Mayor, I would work with the San Francisco Department of Public Health to ensure we’re working to implement public education programs for prevention and treatment. In conjunction with these education programs, the City also needs to improve its methods for gathering data – so we can track outbreaks and target the neediest neighborhoods with high rates of infection. My campaign to Reset San Francisco focuses on the necessity for data-driven decision-making, so our city government can be more effective and more responsive.
2. Why should Asian American voters choose you as their next mayor?
Asian Americans in San Francisco face the same challenges as every other San Franciscan. And to find the solutions to these problems, we need to start working together to come up with solutions that work for us all.
All of the candidates are talking about more jobs, but I’m actually working to create them. I co-founded ChinaSF with Gavin Newsom and have helped attract more Chinese companies to the US and created new jobs for San Franciscans. I’ve seen the incredible economic benefit of building this bridge between San Francisco and Asia. I also launched GoSolarSF, which has created hundreds of high-wage green jobs for the entire community.
As one of San Francisco’s highest-ranking Chinese officials, I understand how important equality is for our citizens. As Executive Director of the Asian Law Caucus, an organization founded in 1972 to advance and promote the legal and civil rights of the Asian Pacific Islander community, I work hard to ensure that all San Franciscans receive fair treatment under the law.
I bring together the values of a civil rights advocate, the training of a business consultant and the hard-won experience of turning around one of the City’s worst agencies. I reformed the reformed the Assessor-Recorder’s office, bringing in $300 million in new revenue – without raising taxes.
I’m running to be San Francisco’s next mayor because I know we can do better as a city. But to do better, we all have to become more engaged and hold all politicians accountable (including me) – and hold our government accountable.
We need tools to get involved. We need to have facts. We need to understand what other cities are doing – so we can ask our government why we can’t implement those ideas as well. Why can’t we do better? And we need to build a better sense of community – both online and offline. I started Reset San Francisco to give voice to everyone who lives and works in San Francisco but doesn’t have the time or the opportunity to be involved.
I would be proud to be San Francisco’s first elected Chinese-American mayor.
3. What type of relationships do you have with San Francisco’s Asian American community?
I have worked my entire life on behalf of working and underserved Asian American communities. As a Chinese American, I am aware of what affects our community and pose challenges to achieving equality in our city. My experience as an advocate of the Asian American community demonstrates my commitment to community interests. I would be honored to continue my lifelong work by championing Asian American causes as we fight, together, on behalf of San Francisco’s diverse communities.
I co-founded ChinaSF, which is a public-private partnership dedicated to creating economic development opportunities by making San Francisco the gateway for Chinese companies looking to establish business operations in the Bay Area.
Beyond the economic benefit, we cannot realize our full potential as a city if we don’t have more people involved in San Francisco civic life. That’s why I started Reset San Francisco to give voice to everyone who lives and works in San Francisco but doesn’t have the time or the opportunity to be involved. To the extent that my candidacy, these new opportunities with Reset San Francisco, and the candidacy of other Asian Americans draws more of our community into civic life, the whole city will be stronger.
4. What are some prevalent problems in SF’s Asian American community?
Asian Americans face the same issues as every other San Franciscan.  We need to make sure government works, and we need a balanced budget.  If our budget is not balanced, we can’t fund public schools, police and fire stations and MUNI.
If MUNI doesn’t work, then sadly, neither can we. So many San Franciscans depend on reliable public transportation. And as mayor, I will focus on making MUNI faster and more reliable. Solutions are out there – we just need a leader with the courage to take the lead and to implement good ideas.
To make our city work, we need to focus on making government more efficient, more responsive and more open to innovative ideas. I’ve seen this in my own career in government, taking over a dysfunctional agency and helping it to work effectively. Because we closed loopholes and cleared much of our backlog at the Assessor’s office, we now have hundreds of millions of dollars more to spend on schools, MUNI, job creation and other programs – all without raising taxes.
City Hall needs to listen to San Franciscans and engage them to get involved. That’s what my Reset San Francisco campaign is all about – making sure everyone’s voice is heard, not just the API community but every community.
5. How do you plan on responding to these problems?
San Francisco is full of diversity, and we have one of the largest populations of Asian immigrants in the nation. In order to keep our city strong and diverse, we need to provide our immigrant population with the resources for language acquisition and job placement because government should fight for the people who cannot always fight for themselves. I understand how important our struggle for civil rights equality is, and I have worked to protect San Franciscans throughout my career in both the public and private sector.
While serving as Executive Director of the Asian Law Caucus, I saw firsthand the challenges that members of our community face as they fight for equality under the law. We need to guarantee that the civil rights of all San Franciscans are protected.
As mayor, I will continue fighting for greater equality for the API community. I will ensure MUNI is faster and more reliable, work to make city government more efficient and responsive, and create more jobs for San Franciscans to stimulate our economy.
There are solutions. But all too often, politicians don’t have the creativity, the commitment or the courage to innovate. That’s why better policy is just too important to leave to the politicians alone.
If politicians could solve all of our problems, we wouldn’t have so many. That’s why, as mayor, I will strive to engage the community to get involved and to participate. On Reset San Francisco, we are pushing City Hall to get better in all the ways, big and small, that add up to a San Francisco that is an easier place to live, work and raise a family.
Phil Ting for Mayor 2011

AsianWeek Interviews With San Francisco’s Mayoral Candidates: John Avalos

With Asian Americans comprising approximately one-third of the city’s population, the next mayor of San Francisco should have plans to address issues relevant to this robust community.
To ensure that they do, AsianWeek.com has invited all of the 16 mayoral candidates–including six well qualified and prominent Asian Americans: Mayor Ed Lee, California State Senator Leland Yee, Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting, President of the Board of Supervisors David Chiu, Public Defender Jeff Adachi, Wilma Pang a longtime community activist and college professor–to share with our readers their solutions to what they deem the most prevalent problems in the Asian American community.
Beginning Oct. 24, 2011 and leading up to the Nov. 8 election, AsianWeek.com will be highlighting a different mayoral candidate.
Featured in this installment is Member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors John Avalos.

1. What is (are) the greatest health issue(s) facing Asian American Pacific Islanders (API’s) and what will you do as mayor to address it (them)?
The number one health issue affecting the API community right now is access – both to healthcare and health insurance.  There are two ways I can make a difference on this issue as mayor. The first is closing the loophole in Healthy SF that allows businesses to pocket the money that they should be putting towards health insurance for their employees, while defrauding customers with claims that their price increase goes to employee healthcare.  The current mayor is on the record in opposition to closing this loophole, and as mayor I would work to make securing the rights for our most vulnerable workers my top priority.
The second thing I would do as mayor is make sure that as the City signs agreements with large hospital complexes, they set a real standard for the amount of charity care that the hospitals are obligated to provide.  Right now many members of the API community are forced to endure long waits at SF General to get the care they need.  Often they are confronted with language barriers and a lack of translators, forcing them to bring family members with them.  We need to ensure that our hospitals are prepared to serve all members of our community, regardless of their insurance status or language needs.
Lastly, Our City’s and our citizens’ health is also inextricably tied up in the environmental health of the Bay.  As more and more members of the API community move into the Southeast part of the City, we are seeing increasing asthma rates as a new health risk for API children.  As the newest member of the BAAQMD Board of Directors, my first responsibility is to ensure that the air in the Bay Area is clean, and I will be working closely with the Bay Area Environmental Health Collaborative and BAAQMD and City staff to ensure that the plans to decrease air pollution in the Bayview Hunters Point area are effective in reducing the area’s cancer and asthma rates.
2. Why should Asian American voters choose you as their next mayor?
I have a new vision for a working San Francisco, one that values people over corporations. I am a family man, a public servant, and a community organizer; I am driven by my values am accountable to the people I represent. I have the courage to stand on my own convictions, to stand up against the greed of big business, and to stand up for our children and future generations.
Since moving to San Francisco in 1989, I have dedicated myself to helping my fellow San Franciscans improve their lives and transform their communities. I have worked as a counselor at both the San Francisco Conservation Corps and the Columbia Park Boys and Girls Club, and as a community organizer with Coleman Advocates for Children and Youth, and as an organizer with the justice for Janitors Campaign of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 1877. In 2005 I began work in City Hall as a legislative aid to Supervisor Chris Daly, helping to craft the City’s budget as lead staff on the Budget and Finance Committee, expanding funding for affordable housing, childcare, health and mental services, park restorations, and senior programs.
In 2008 I was elected to the Board of Supervisors to represent District 11; in my first two years I served as the Chair of the Budget and Finance Committee, leading the City’s efforts to close a one billion dollar shortfall while preserving City jobs and services, preserving essential senior and children services and saving vital health programs. As Supervisor I championed the nation’s strongest Local-Hire legislation, which provides thousands of employment opportunities for San Franciscans on city-funded construction projects, and which as Mayor I plan on expanding into all sectors. I’ve also passed protections for tenants in foreclosed properties and need-based rental assistance to low-income families at risk of becoming homeless. My recent Real-Estate Transfer Tax on high-end commercial buildings has brought in $50 million in new revenue this year alone, and without it we could not have balanced the budget.
As Mayor my top priority will be to create living wage jobs for San Franciscans, to put local residents back to work with good green- and blue -collar jobs, as well as in the public sector. I plan on replacing the Payroll Business Tax, which discourages job growth, with a revenue-generating Gross Receipts Tax, to level the playing field in favor of small businesses. I will also create our own local bank to enable San Franciscans to decide where their tax dollars go, and whom they benefit. I want to expand and improve Muni by putting a stop to non-essential work orders so that we can provide riders with the service they deserve; every neighborhood should have access to timely, affordable, and accessible public transit options, and school-aged youth should have free passes to get to school.
These are only a few of my plans to make San Francisco a truly vibrant, livable city; read more at www.avalosformayor.com/issues.
3. What type of relationships do you have with San Francisco’s Asian American community?
In my years as a public servant, I have always worked and partnered with Asian Pacific American community groups, such as the Filipino Community Center, ChinatownCommunity Development Center, Chinese Progressive Association, Asian Law Caucus and many others to fight for tenants and workers rights, affordable housing, immigrant rights, and to preserve culturally competent services for the APA and other communities. The most recent examples are the 2008-09 and 2009-2010 City Budgets, where we built a broad coalition to craft a balanced budget that restored over $40 million in essential services. Before that, I worked closely with APA community groups and leaders to create the San Francisco Immigrant, Legal and Education Network. The purpose of my local-hire legislation was to expand opportunities to all communities, especially the Asian immigrant community, which faces many barriers within the construction industry, and currently, I am working closely with the Filipino community to advocate for transit-oriented affordable housing and workforce development for our diverse communities.
4. What are some prevalent problems in SF’s Asian American community?
Loss of affordable housing is a major issue, and the fight to keep our working families in San Francisco is why I am running for Mayor. As Mayor I will champion the Sustainable Communities Affordable Housing bond to create a permanent stream of funding for affordable housing in our City. If San Francisco is to be a true Sanctuary City, we need to address institutional racism where it exists, as well as the violence and prejudice between community groups. I will opt out of S-Comm on misdemeanors and ensure no City money goes towards this infringing federal program. Promoting relationship building within communities through neighborhood programs and services will go far in increasing awareness and amity between communities in San Francisco.
5. How do you plan on responding to these problems?
As Supervisor, I made a public commitment to attend every meeting of the District 11 Council (which represents all the neighborhood associations of the district). If elected, I will create an administration whose approach to governing is through collaboration and community. I will work closely with community and labor leaders, elected officials of the past and present, and local business-owners. I will create an office of Community Development and Civic Engagement that will unite our city departments, organized labor, educational institutions, local businesses and non-profit organizations, so we can together serve San Francisco’s neighborhoods and communities.

Featured Arts and Crafts Vendor: sumofish

Editor’s Note: From handcrafted jewelry, fabric hand bags made with Asian inspired prints to Asian influenced apparel and creative home decorations, AsianWeek will be featuring Asian-inspired Arts and Crafts vendors each Tuesday to kick off the summer festival season.
The featured vendors all have previously participated in the Asian Heritage Street Celebration (AHSC) – the largest pan Asian street fair nationwide that takes place the third Saturday of every May in San Francisco.
Produced by the AsianWeek Foundation, the AHSC is committed to supporting and promoting these creative and hardworking craftsmen vendors who may otherwise not get the online attention and exposure they deserve.
sumofish
sumofish’s  mission statement from Day 1 has been simple – create shirts that owner Brandt Fuse himself would wear.  The San Francisco based t-shirt brand first started  in August 2002 under the name bigsumo, which offered a line of tshirts featuring a mainly sumo theme.  In 2004,  Fuse had a design named “sumofish”,  which was an angry, fat blowfish wearing a sumo belt.  This popular character eventually became one of his best sellers, so he decided to rename the company sumofish, as a fun, graphic line of Japanese and Japanese American inspired designs.
Fuse  draws inspiration from his Japanese-American upbringing and his love for Japanese food and culture. The bold lines and bright colors in his designs come from an admiration for the bold strokes of both sumi-e brush painting, and modern street graffiti.  Furthermore, inspirations for his designs often come from everyday occurrences; one winter he was eating ramen a lot due to being cold and broke.  He realized that packaged ramen, despite being Japanese in origin, is one of the most universal foods, even more than hamburgers, and just about anyone can relate to it.  He was then inspired to create a robot made of ramen noodles, with the flavor packet as body armor, and wielding a sword made out of chopsticks.  To this day it is still one of his best sellers, and personally his favorite design.

For more information about sumofish, please visit: http://www.big-sumo.com/. Additionally,  sumofish also appears at festivals in the spring and summer months, and craft fairs in the fall/winter months.  His festival reach is from Hawaii (his hometown) to St Louis, MO ( his college town), with many cities in between.

Featured Arts and Crafts Vendor: WhimsyCo Clothing

Editor’s Note: From handcrafted jewelry, fabric hand bags made with Asian inspired prints to Asian influenced apparel and creative home decorations, AsianWeek will be featuring Asian-inspired Arts and Crafts vendors each Tuesday to kick off the summer festival season.
The featured vendors all have previously participated in the Asian Heritage Street Celebration (AHSC) – the largest pan Asian street fair nationwide that takes place the third Saturday of every May in San Francisco.
Produced by the AsianWeek Foundation, the AHSC is committed to supporting and promoting these creative and hardworking craftsmen vendors who may otherwise not get the online attention and exposure they deserve.
WhimsyCo Clothing
Started in 2010 by husband and wife team Stewart and Margaret Wong, WhimsyCo Clothing is  an online apparel store based in South San Francisco, CA. Their philosophy is making people smile and feel good while looking great, one style at a time at affordable prices. They believe that art should evoke emotions and serve a purpose; and their purpose is to create smiles.
They named the business “WhimsyCo” because their designs are full of whimsy. Upon discovering that the word “whimsy” is defined by Merriam-Webster dictionary as: “a fanciful or fantastic device, object, or creation especially in writing or art”, they felt even more compelled that this was the perfect name for their company.
All of their designs are original, and all apparel are printed by themselves at their studio. Margaret  creates Asian themed-designs that are inspired by current pop culture, play-on words, and funny everyday phrases. Both artists feel that bringing laughter to people is important, “…especially during this day and age when America’s caught in a recession, unemployment is at an all time high, and there just doesn’t seem to be as many things to smile about these days.”

For more information about WhimsyCo Clothing, please visit http://www.whimsycoclothing.com/.