Seven years ago, Meghan Coomes was working in television and traveling constantly. She missed seeing her family regularly and was homesick, so her grandmother gave her a letter.
But it wasn't just any letter; it was one of the thousands of letters her grandparents had written to each other when they were separated during World War II.
Coomes' grandmother, Agnes, met her future husband, Thomas, when she was a senior in high school. He asked his friends for a nickel to buy her a Coke, and she took him to her senior prom. They were apart for three years, three months and four days during the war and when Thomas returned, they got married.
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"We've been hearing about (these letters) our entire lives," Coomes told TODAY. "They had secret codes in their letters so that she would always know his location."
They wrote to each other every day, Coomes explained, and her grandmother kissed each letter with brightly colored lipstick. "She told me she hoped that he would press his lips to it and kiss her back."
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After hearing their romantic story for so long, Coomes knew she had to do something special with the letter she was given. She turned it into a bracelet that she could wear every day, and used other pieces of the letter to make a ring for her grandmother.
Since making that first bracelet in 2010, the 32 year old has expanded her work into a line of jewelry called "Forever Yours, Agnes."
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She transforms photo copies of her grandparents' correspondence into beautiful works of art and creates custom pieces for clients who want to carry a memento from their own loved ones.
Since her grandmother passed away two months ago and her grandfather before that, Coomes sees sharing her grandparents' love story as a way to keep their memory alive.
"My goal is to keep being able to meet strangers and touch people through the handwritten word," Coomes said. "It's been one of the most powerful experiences of my life."