Kate Spade‘s legacy lived on long after shestepped away from her namesake company, Kate Spade New York, in 2007. The late designer touched so many people across the world, including one mom whopaid tribute to Spadein a now-viral Facebook post about the special experience of bringing her five-year-old daughter to a Kate Spade New York store for the first time.

Heather Delaneypenned the heartfelt letterwritten to Spade, which has since been shared thousands of times on Facebook alone, just hours after news broke that theaccessories designer died of suicideon Tuesday in her N.Y.C. apartment.

During a family vacation to Florida, Delaney decided it would be the perfect time to take her daughter to the Kate Spade New York store for her first “Kate Spade” experience just days before her sixth birthday.

“Dear Kate spade, almost four years ago, during a family vacation to Florida, I decided it was time to take my daughter, Elle (who was two months shy of six years old at the time), for her very first Kate Spade experience,” Delaneystarted the letter. “The night before, I couldn’t sleep. My husband would laugh as we laid there in the bed, me jumping with excitement, in anticipation of her and I getting matching bags the next morning. This was a serious mama dream come true.”

Heather Delaney/Facebook

kate-spade

In her mind, the mom envisioned the adorable matching mother-daughter moment they would have from then on as her daughter would “get the crossbody; I would get the full size. Brilliant,” shewrote.

But ultimately, her daughter had a different idea.

“So the next morning, we walk in. I show her the white ones. The black ones. The legendary stripped ones. nope. nope. nope. None of them appealed to her ‘style’, she told me. (don’t take offense, Kate. Versace would have a hard time pleasing this one.),” Delaneysaid.

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“Then, she saw it. The first Kate Spade item that she would call hers. Her face would light up, and her eyes would go wide. She fell in love…with a pair of black, furry earmuffs. That’s right, a pair of freaking black, furry earmuffs, Kate. (I mean, does anything scream ‘Canadian’ more than going into a Florida store, and buying a pair of earmuffs?!#theanswerisno).”

Delaney continuedsaying, “Kate, I’m sorry that we could not bottle that up for you. I’m sorry that we could not bottle up every grin, every laughter, every happy heart that walked through your stores. I’m sorry that we could not gather every smile that you put on a humans face, whether it was because they just found the most loveliest brooch for their wedding day, the most exquisite pair of earrings to wear on their graduation day, or even the most coziest pair of earmuffs to wear around Florida (yes. again. those earmuffs) — and lay those smiles in your lap.”

Andrew Toth/FilmMagic

Build Series Presents Kate Spade and Andy Spade Discussing Their Latest Project Frances Valentine

Police said a housekeeper found Spade, née Katherine Noel Brosnahan, Tuesday morning in her bedroom at her Park Avenue home in Manhattan. A police source confirmed to PEOPLE thatSpade was alone when she died.

Spade founded her namesake brand in 1993 with her husband, Andy Spade, the brother of actorDavid Spade, and first launched the line with colorful handbags before expanding into other accessories and clothing, ultimately building a billion-dollar brand. The pair sold their stake in the company to Liz Claiborne, Inc. in 2006, and the brand was sold again in 2017 to Coach. (The newly formed company, which also includes Stuart Weitzman, is now called Tapestry, Inc.)

Wendy Maeda/The Boston Globe via Getty

Designer Kate Spade In Boston

After selling her ownership stake in her company, Spade and her husband took time away from design.

“I needed a break and I really wanted to raise my daughter [Frances],” she told PEOPLE in 2016. “People asked me, ‘Don’t you miss it?’ I really didn’t. I mean, I loved what I was doing, but I didn’t miss it as much as I thought I might.”

A decade later, she launched a brand new accessories brand, Frances Valentine. She legally changed her name to Kate Valentine Spade to match her new label in 2016. “I thought it was important to distinguish who I am now,” she said. “I’m the same person, but there’s a difference.”

If you or someone you know is considering suicide, please contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

source: people.com