"I was like, 'Jesus Christ, this is how much I've been working?'" That's how designer Nikki Duong Koenig describes her reaction when she realized she could afford to buy a million-dollar home.
The 29-year-old Dallas resident and self-described "social entrepreneur" tells the Oak Cliff Advocate that she worked three to four photoshoots a day for more than a decade until she realized she could afford to buy a million-dollar home.
"I was like, 'Jesus Christ, this is how much I've been working?'" she says.
"I was like, 'This is how much I've been working?'" Now she lives in a $1.1 million two-story Art Deco Kessler Park home with a studio and space for her creative team to work and hang, as well as rooms for a friend and a family member.
She and husband Rockey even host yoga and art-gallery days.
The nonprofit CreativeMornings started in New York City in 2008 as a desire for an ongoing, accessible event for creative people in the community.
The concept was simple: breakfast and a short talk one Friday morning a month.
Volunteer hosts and their team members organize local chapters that not only celebrate a city's
A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.
In the world of social enterprises, failure is a cringe-worthy moment nobody wants to talk about. But, social entrepreneurs can benefit from their failures.