Securing the American food supply one hive at a time.
About Love A Bee
“Love A Bee began not in a lab or a boardroom, but in the eyes of an artist drawn to color, nature, and pattern. When Colony Collapse Disorder left bees dying at alarming rates, I turned to what I knew: color as a way to see, connect, and create meaning.
What I learned was that forage diversity built resilience. The more colors of pollen in the hive, the healthier the bees. That insight became my lens: honey was not a byproduct of pollination, but a gift of millions of flowers. Each jar carried flavor and color as unique as the landscape that created it.
But Love A Bee also had to be a profit-driven business. For us, and for the bees, it mattered that people paused when they picked up a $20 jar of honey. It was a commitment — a decision to value the work of the bees and the diversity of flowers behind every drop. ‘More money for honey’ wasn’t just a slogan; it was exactly what was needed to support beekeepers, shift perceptions, and sustain resilience.
In this way, Love A Bee became a sustainable and fair business for ourselves that honored the bees — and offered a model for how honey could sustain beekeepers beyond pollination contracts.
✨ What commitments in your own life remind you to pause, honor the work behind them, and choose with intention?”