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Why Every Product at Mary Milagros Is Named After a Catholic Saint

Each product is named after a saint whose story connects to what the product helps you do. Here's why.

People ask about the names all the time. “What’s The St. Carlo?” “Why is your quiz generator called The St. Cupertino?” “Is this a Catholic thing?”

Yes. It’s a Catholic thing.

But probably not the way you’re imagining. This isn’t about preaching or converting anyone. It’s about building a business on a foundation that means something to me – and giving every product a story that goes deeper than a product name.

Where it started

When I was building Mary Milagros, I knew I didn’t want generic product names. “Premium Coaching Template” or “Business Website Bundle” – those names tell you what the product is, but they don’t tell you anything about the person who made it.

I grew up Catholic. My faith is part of how I make decisions, how I treat people, and how I think about work. It felt wrong to build a business and leave that part of myself at the door.

So I started reading about patron saints. And I realized something: every saint is the patron of something specific. There’s a patron saint of the internet, of test-takers, of writers, of hairdressers, of photographers. These aren’t random assignments. Each one connects to something the saint actually did or experienced during their life.

That’s when the naming convention clicked.

The St. Carlo – Patron of the Internet

Carlo Acutis was born in 1991. He taught himself to code as a kid, built a website documenting Eucharistic miracles, wore jeans and Nikes, and played Halo. He died of leukemia at fifteen. He was canonized in 2025 – the first millennial saint.

Our done-for-you website design service carries his name because he believed the internet could be used for something good. Not just scrolling and selling, but connecting people to something real. That’s what I want every St. Carlo website to do.

The St. Cupertino – Patron of Test-Takers

Joseph of Cupertino was considered too dumb to be a priest. He couldn’t read well, he was clumsy, and his own mother called him useless. But when it came time for his ordination exam, the bishop happened to ask the one question he actually knew the answer to. He passed.

Our AI quiz generator carries his name because sometimes the right question – asked at the right time – changes everything. That’s what a good quiz does for your business. It asks the right questions and points people toward the right offer.

St. Therese – The Little Flower

Therese of Lisieux entered a convent at fifteen and died at twenty-four. She never left. She never preached to crowds. She believed that holiness was about doing small things with great love – her “Little Way.”

Our 30+ page Showit template carries her name because your website doesn’t need to be loud to be effective. Sometimes the quietest, most intentional design is the one that converts.

You don’t have to be Catholic to use any of this

I want to be clear about that. These products are for anyone – any faith, any background. The naming convention is my way of honoring where I come from and building with intention. You don’t have to share my beliefs to benefit from a well-designed Notion template or a high-converting website.

But if the names make you curious enough to read about the saints behind them, I think you’ll find their stories are worth knowing regardless. A teenager who built a website to document miracles. A woman who counseled popes through letters. A nun who believed that small acts of love were the most radical thing a person could do.

These are good stories. And I wanted my products to carry them.