Podcast with Lincoln Stone Paper, Tamara Lincoln Founder & CEO

Let’s talk about the earth & saving the trees!

Join me today as I chat it up with Tamara Lincoln, Founder & CEO of Lincoln Stone Paper Company! Learn how she uses & developed a sustainable way to manufacture paper without tree pulp! Lincoln Stone Paper notebooks are waterproof, water-free, and tree-free! 

Tamara shares her touching story of how & why she started her publishing company!
Her story will possibly move you, a curious entrepreneur to take that leap of faith into starting your own business. Her testimony will stimulate you to take that leap of faith.

Tamara Lincoln is a Christian, wife, mother, and community servant raised in Detroit and Highland Park, Michigan. She developed her line of notebooks to help others take the stresses of life and help encourage them to jot them down without the worry of them being destroyed or ruined by unfortunate situations including both our kids & possible spills.

She uses her notebooks to write and draw in order to help cope with life’s situation as they present themselves. After awhile she noticed her notebooks would deteriorate fast, and it became costly and a hassle. She wanted a notebook that would be durable and efficient. .. and that is how she created her stone paper notebooks. 

Lincoln Stone Paper’s vision is to create change in the pulp paper industry, raise the bar in the industry, and make a difference in our community. We dream to become the leading stationary supplier across many and previously unsought markets across the world.

Lincoln Stone Paper’s mission is to create change in the pulp paper industry and to save the trees with one stone at a time and improve sustainability by leaving a greener print on our planet.

Click HERE to join the Facebook event so you keep posted for all the details! Click HERE to listen on the PODCAST.

Until next time friends,

Happy Day,
Jean


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5 thoughts on “Podcast with Lincoln Stone Paper, Tamara Lincoln Founder & CEO

  1. Fascinating product!!
    In colonial days in the US, landowners were required to grow a certain amount of hemp in each of the 13 colonies, to be used for paper, plus rope and fiber (notably, canvas – used for sails, and covering the wagons as colonization continued!)
    The Declaration of Independence was permed on hemp paper! A bast fiber, the strands are as long as the plant is tall, and it requires less water that flax, which also has long fibers!

    Liked by 1 person

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