Fallon Drewett is a storyteller, communications specialist, and the heartbeat behind The Just Saying Project — a grassroots movement that believes every woman has a story worth sharing. With more than a decade of experience in journalism and over five years in corporate marketing and communications, Fallon brings a rare blend of professional polish, creative intuition, and deep heart to every project she touches.

A seasoned communications professional, Fallon crafts impactful content and leads creative marketing campaigns across digital and traditional platforms. Her background as a Features Editor and journalist at The Daily Mercury sharpened her ability to find the human thread in every story — a skill that continues to define her work today. Clear, compelling communication is her craft; authenticity is her signature.

Fallon’s journalist soul and community-driven heart collide — creating spaces where women feel seen, heard, and reminded of their brilliance. She believes storytelling isn’t just an art; it’s a form of connection that strengthens communities and sparks cultural change.

Her experience spans across project management, ideation,  content creation, social media strategy, media relations, and high-impact campaign development. Whether she’s building a brand narrative, managing press engagement, or bringing a storytelling event to life, Fallon thrives on creating content that inspires, informs, and ignites something real.

Because Fallon doesn’t speak to impress — she speaks to spark. Her presence isn’t about performance; it’s about truth, connection, and shifting something inside the room. When Fallon speaks, women recognise themselves on the page, in the story, and in the moment.

Holding a double degree in Journalism and Communications from James Cook University, Fallon combines strategic communication expertise with a deep understanding of what makes people lean in. She was named one of Mackay’s Power 50 leaders and has been nominated multiple times for Citizen of the Year — recognition of her unwavering commitment to creativity, community, and amplifying women’s voices.

Heartfelt, human, and unapologetically real, Fallon is dedicated to making sure no woman forgets the power she carries. One story at a time.

FALLON DREWETT

Breeanna Poxon is a visual storyteller, senior arts educator, and creative strategist whose work defines the visual heart and creative direction of The Just Saying Project. Bree leads JSP’s aesthetic vision with clarity, innovation, and intention — ensuring every artwork, product, and experience embodies the organisation’s pillars of Joy, Strength, and Purpose.

Based in Springfield and originally from Mackay, Bree brings 15 years of experience across education and a strong foundation in positive psychology, curriculum innovation, and arts leadership. As Head of Arts, she has guided P–12 teams through contemporary arts practice, embedding creativity, wellbeing, and critical thinking into whole-school pedagogy. Her leadership style centres on collaboration, strengths-based culture, and thoughtful people development — informed by four years of senior team management.

Alongside her educational expertise, Bree is an artist working with acrylic on paper and fabric, with a growing interest in digital illustration. Her work speaks in layers — of memory, of womanhood, of lived experience — each piece a quiet story told through mark-making, repetition, and rhythm. Numbers and patterns become language; composition becomes code. She approaches her practice slowly and intuitively, following colour and instinct to articulate what words cannot.

Bree’s artistic fingerprints are woven throughout JSP. Since 2018, she has shaped many of its most recognisable creative moments lead artist behind the annual JSP Women’s Awards artwork, creator of the Bare Cabaret visual identity for Mackay Festival of Arts (2022), illustrator of Seas the Day (2020 and visual strategist for brand and product direction.

More than an artist, Bree brings strategic thinking, educational depth, design literacy, and an unwavering commitment to women’s creative expression. Her work ensures JSP’s visual storytelling is inclusive, imaginative, and deeply grounded in lived experience.

Professional, intuitive, and purpose-led, Bree continues to shape the creative evolution of The Just Saying Project - guiding their artistic identity into the next decade.

BREEANNA POXON

GEORGIA Holden

Georgia is a Registered Nurse with nearly 14 years of experience, including the past decade specialising in emergency care. Her nursing career has taken her into remote communities across the Northern Territory and Western Australia, including Katherine, where she has worked with skill, calm, compassion, and deep respect for people’s lived experiences.

Now based in Broome, Georgia balances clinical practice, motherhood, and her creative work in textile art, using fabric, needle and thread as her materials of expression. Her nursing background deeply informs the way she creates. In both nursing and textile work, there is care in the small details. There is patience, precision, steadiness, and an understanding that every stitch, every choice, and every moment of attention matters.

For Georgia, textile art is more than sewing. It encompasses many forms of making by hand, from weaving, crochet and cross-stitch, to embroidery, sewing and fabric work. It is a way of slowing down, gathering pieces, working with colour, texture, pattern and memory, and creating something meaningful with care. Fabric and thread become a way of exploring the thread of life, how our experiences, stories, relationships, and seasons are stitched together over time.

In healthcare, hands are used to comfort, support, dress wounds, hold pressure, and respond in moments of urgency. In her creative life, those same hands are used to stitch, mend, shape, layer, weave and create. The thread becomes a gentle symbol of connection, between women, between stories, between the body and the heart, between what has been lived and what can still be made.

In recent years, Georgia has stepped back from the intensity of emergency nursing to raise her son, work part-time, and make more space for creativity, community, and the slower rhythms of making by hand.

Through The Just Saying Project, Georgia hopes to create welcoming spaces where women can gather around textile art, fabric, thread, conversation, and story. She believes creativity can nourish the soul, calm the mind, and remind women of their own capability. Whether someone has worked with textiles for years or has never picked up a needle before, Georgia brings a warm, gentle approach that encourages women to try, learn, laugh, connect, and make something meaningful.

Her work with JSP brings together the care of nursing and the craft of textile art, reminding us that wellbeing is not only about the body. It is also about connection, expression, confidence, creativity, and the small acts of repair that help us feel whole again.