Heather Kate--Dreams Delivered.

Relax. Take a DEEP breath. Let me help you DREAM.

In The News

Main Street Web Development was featured in the first edition of The Altus Aviator today.  Here’s what The Aviator had to say:

McKelvey offers affordable websites

“The DigiFix Web Design Studio, the answer for Altus businesses seeking affordable internet presence, has just made personal web design even more inexpensive.

“Heather McKelvey, founder and executive director, says the web sites are easy to use and easy to find.  She is announcing her latest endeavor, Main Street Web Development, where websites can be created for less than $30 a month.

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Cheap websites are a dime a dozen.  There are plenty of places on the web you can go to get a website for just a few bucks a month.  Problem is, they’re kind of ugly.  And if, indeed, you do happen across one that really looks great, you have to do it yourself!  Now for do-it-yourself kind of folks, this is a good proposition.  But for those of you who don’t want any website DIY in your life, you’re kind of up a creek if you don’t want to make the initial investment a custom website requires.

At The DigiFix Web Design Studio, we have realized this conundrum for quite some time, and we’ve been working on a solution that acts like a “crossover” website.  With our new line of websites at Main Street Web Development, we are taking the affordable price of a DIY website, the fabulous creativity of a custom website, and DOING IT FOR YOU, to bridge that gap between what you want and what you can afford.

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My Sunday Cup

This afternoon I am drinking from my Sunday cup.  It’s one I haven’t used since before I lived in this house, which means I probably haven’t used it since becoming a mother.  I drank from this cup every Sunday afternoon BC (before children).  Drinking from my Sunday cup was a privilege I only allowed myself on a Sunday afternoon when my entire house was clean and sparkling, something of which I regrettably cannot currently boast.  The delicate, ornate, blue and white teacup and saucer were a gift to me from the tea room the day of my bridal shower.  Somehow that teacup spoke to me of a life which I had yet to live.  It seemed to represent a person, a season, an experience that I had yet to embark upon.  Now looking back, I see that my teacup was indeed symbolic--symbolic of my journey into adulthood where fantasy and reality intermingle too delicately to tell them apart.

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