Two Dallas girls are helping hundreds of people across the world gain access to clean water, and they’re doing it one sheet of paper at a time. The sisters first learned origami from their father when ...
Dallas sisters Isabelle (at right, age 15) and Katherine (age 12) Adams have turned the art of folding paper into more than $1.5 million for their nonprofit, Paper for Water, which funds clean water ...
Origami. In all shapes and sizes. On the piano. On the tables. On the shelves. The Adams family home in Dallas has been taken over by the ancient art, but no one seems to mind. Those paper creations ...
When Katherine and Isabelle Adams learned that a child dies from lack of clean water every 20 seconds, they wanted to help. At the time, they were just five and eight years old and decided to make ...
Deborah Adams, left, Katherine, 6, center, and Isabelle, 8, create origami ornaments to sell. The money they raise pays for new water wells in developing countries, where children die from unclean ...
With their bright, multicolored slides and tubes, most water parks stick out like unsightly sore thumbs in the landscape—but that’s not the case for the site-sensitive Water Park Aqualagon in Villages ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. Origami. In all shapes and sizes. On the ...
Origami. In all shapes and sizes. On the piano. On the tables. On the shelves. The Adams family home in Dallas has been taken over by the ancient art, but no one seems to mind. Those paper creations ...
Origami. In all shapes and sizes. On the piano. On the tables. On the shelves. The Adams family home in Dallas has been taken over by the ancient art, but no one seems to mind. Those paper creations ...