NEW YORK TIMES
THE NEW TRADITIONALISTS
Thursday, September 7, 1989

SHE’S LIKE ANY OTHER GOOD ARCHITECT. SHE BUILDS THINGS OF BEAUTY THAT LAST.



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Rome wasn't built in a day. Neither was the Shauna Mosseri family.

When she was pregnant with her first son, she left a large architectural firm to start her own business.

"You have to be flexible, because you have to set priorities. It works, but it's also hard."

She's not alone. Her partner is also a mother, and they both face the same problems. And the same priorities.

They're hard at work at the same job 70% of todays mothers face: building a family, a career and a balance.

If the goal of the 80's was having it all, the reality and the reward of the 90's is having it work.

It's the New Traditionalist at work, in and out of the home, adding value and values to an increasingly complex equation.

Stress, pressure and load, balanced into a structure of beauty and warmth.

At Good Housekeeping the Magazine, the Institute and the Seal we've always been part of that equation.

And there's never been a better place to build for the decade to come.

AMERICA IS COMING HOME TO GOOD HOUSEKEEPING

END