Camp Fire, now the deadliest and most destructive in California’s history, began on the clear morning of November 8, 2018. Before the Camp Fire, Paradise was a picturesque town in the Sierra Nevada foothills, once a gold rush town, now a retirement town. Parts of Gone With the Wind were shot in Paradise, which stood in for Scarlett O’Hara’s fictional plantation Tara, before it too was burned.⁣ ⁣ The sudden and arbitrary nature of fire shows exactly how unexpectedly a person can become homeless, how quickly the surety of one’s world can change, how the idea of home is upended. Tap the link in our bio to meet some of the women of Paradise, who are are taking it upon themselves to initiate long-term renewal, rebuilding, and creating community.⁣ ⁣ Today we are releasing the 2019 edition of #AmericanWomen, a portfolio of resilience, innovation, beauty, and daring, from the Arizona Border to the shores of Oahu and the snowy wilderness of Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula. For this annual series, we are highlighting the stories of ten extraordinary groups of women on the West coast of this should-be-great, can-do-better country. ⁣ ⁣ Above: Ciara Barnes (right), a women’s studies major at the University of California, Santa Barbara, started Miss HeartShine when she was still at Paradise High. “I heard pageants were a good way to get scholarships, so I started doing a few. I didn’t have the most expensive gown; I was a bigger size. I started to think how nice it would be if that wasn’t the focus. And if volunteer work wasn’t just an afterthought.” She founded the Miss Heartshine Pageant based on service and “inner beauty”—“A girl who has heartshine lights up a room naturally, and that’s what we look for,” Ciara says—and it has since grown to include regional and national pageants, with all-ages and gender-nonconforming categories, and a warehouse of 250 dresses for competitors who couldn’t otherwise afford them. All of the dresses were destroyed by the Camp Fire. Ciara, whose family lost everything, is taking a year off college to rebuild too. Photographed by @justine4good, written by @_true_stories_⁣

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Camp Fire, now the deadliest and most destructive in California’s history, began on the clear morning of November 8, 2018. Before the Camp Fire, Paradise was a picturesque town in the Sierra Nevada foothills, once a gold rush town, now a retirement town. Parts of Gone With the Wind were shot in Paradise, which stood in for Scarlett O’Hara’s fictional plantation Tara, before it too was burned.⁣

The sudden and arbitrary nature of fire shows exactly how unexpectedly a person can become homeless, how quickly the surety of one’s world can change, how the idea of home is upended. Tap the link in our bio to meet some of the women of Paradise, who are are taking it upon themselves to initiate long-term renewal, rebuilding, and creating community.⁣

Today we are releasing the 2019 edition of #AmericanWomen, a portfolio of resilience, innovation, beauty, and daring, from the Arizona Border to the shores of Oahu and the snowy wilderness of Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula. For this annual series, we are highlighting the stories of ten extraordinary groups of women on the West coast of this should-be-great, can-do-better country. ⁣

Above: Ciara Barnes (right), a women’s studies major at the University of California, Santa Barbara, started Miss HeartShine when she was still at Paradise High. “I heard pageants were a good way to get scholarships, so I started doing a few. I didn’t have the most expensive gown; I was a bigger size. I started to think how nice it would be if that wasn’t the focus. And if volunteer work wasn’t just an afterthought.” She founded the Miss Heartshine Pageant based on service and “inner beauty”—“A girl who has heartshine lights up a room naturally, and that’s what we look for,” Ciara says—and it has since grown to include regional and national pageants, with all-ages and gender-nonconforming categories, and a warehouse of 250 dresses for competitors who couldn’t otherwise afford them. All of the dresses were destroyed by the Camp Fire. Ciara, whose family lost everything, is taking a year off college to rebuild too. Photographed by @justine4good, written by @_true_stories_


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