Sparkle & Spill: 2-Kit Bundle
Sparkle & Spill: 2-Kit Bundle
Sparkle & Spill: 2-Kit Bundle
A silly reason to have a serious conversation.
The ladies in your life might not come over to talk about their mental health. But they'll come over to bedazzle a pill bottle.
No games. No icebreakers. No therapy session.
Just blinging pill bottles, three questions, and a chance to connect.
What's Included
Everything you need to turn any gathering into something real:
- Two complete kits (bedazzle materials, tools, extra goodies)
- Host guide (spoiler: it's super easy)
- Conversation card designed to cut through small talk
That's it. Invite people. Open the kits. Let the conversation happen.
How It Works
1. Invite. Your best friend. That person you keep meaning to get coffee with. A new friend. Anyone.
2. Gather. Your living room. A coffee shop. A bar. Anywhere.
3. Bedazzle. It sounds silly. It is. That's the point. Your hands stay busy while your mind gets open.
4. Talk. The conversation card is designed to go somewhere real. No games. No therapy session. Just permission to be human.
Why This Works
We're all lonely in the same way: surrounded by people but not really seen. And as women, we carry specific stuff — burnout, pressure, body image, motherhood, career expectations. We need spaces where we can actually talk about it.
The problem isn't that you don't care about the people in your life. It's that you never give yourselves the time and space to be real.
The rhinestones give you cover. The structure gives you permission. The conversation does the work.
The rhinestones are a trap. The conversation is the point.
This isn't a craft project. It's a reason to gather. A reason to go deeper. A reason to stop pretending everything is fine.
Who This Is For
You, if:
- You have women in your life who you want to connect with more deeply
- You're lonely despite having friends
- You want to turn acquaintances into friends
- You're tired of surface-level conversations
- You want an excuse to gather that feels intentional
- You want to have real conversations about what it means to be a woman in 2026
Not sure if it's for you? Read the But... Why? page. It'll either convince you or it won't, and either way you'll know.
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The Fine Print: The pill bottle included in this kit is a novelty item intended for decorative and creative use only. Rhinestone adhesive is not food-safe. Keep away from children under 3 due to small parts.
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Reviews
FAQs
Wait. A pill bottle?
Yeah. Two reasons.
First - it's funny. And funny lowers the guard in a way that serious never does. Your friends will come over to bedazzle a pill bottle in a way they won't come over to "discuss mental health." And once you're all sitting there with rhinestones on your fingers, laughing about it, the conversation card doesn't feel like a left turn. It feels like the obvious next thing.
Second (and this is the real one), a pill bottle has a lot of complicated connotations. Slapping some rhinestones on it is an act of reclaiming. It's taking a part of yourself that you might not celebrate, and making it unapologetic. Bringing it into the light. Put it on the bathroom counter. Let people ask.
That's what the whole night is about, really. The pill bottle just makes it tangible.
What is the conversation card?
It's one card (not a deck, not a game) with three questions designed to get past the "I'm fine" part of the conversation.
The questions are made to get to the heart of the unique experiences we face as women on the topic of mental health: how we cope, how we might be misunderstood, and how we present ourselves to the world as we navigate our own self-care.
The card says right at the top: "Pass if you want."
No pressure. No therapy. Just an opening, if you want to take it.
Do I have to use the card?
Nope. Some people bedazzle in silence and that is also a valid life choice. But most people find that once their hands are busy, the conversation starts on its own. The card just gives it somewhere to go.
Why is the conversation about women's mental health?
Because women's experiences are different. Burnout looks different. Friendship expectations are different. The pressure to be fine is different.
This isn't therapy. It's a space to acknowledge that being a woman is complicated, and your friends need to know you're struggling too.