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Friday Fieldtrip::Mainely Foliage and Flora

November 7, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Inspiration & Education, Photography

It’s Friday afternoon and I hope you had a wonderful week!  I want to leave you with some delightful moments from my trip to Maine in October…one of my favorite subjects to photograph is flowers and foliage.  That’s what this post is all about, eye candy!  We were in Maine at the most perfect time, while the flowers were still blooming AND the foliage was at peak AND the weather was perfect (60-70’s).  So, because I felt like this vacation was the best vacation my eyes have had in quite a long time I am sharing a few of these here with you…

Dogwood Reds

Dogwood Reds

Golden Susans

Golden Susans

Crazy Castor

Crazy-Beautiful-Castor

Fading Ferns

Fading Fern Foliage

For a few more from this trip you can check out my Maine Flickr album HERE…

Wishing you a fabulous weekend!

A Wellness Practice of Creating Space Within

October 22, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Home, Inspiration & Education, Organize, Systems & Techniques, Wellness & Mindset

To be driven by our appetites alone is slavery, while to obey a law that we have imposed on ourselves is freedom.– Jean-Jacques RosseauIMG_4885

Last week I began a simple practice of fasting for one day of the week inspired by a conversation I had with a girlfriend I was visiting in Maine-who is an amazing cook and we had the best time cooking together!  I’ve read several opinions on this subject and decided I’m simply doing this because it feels right and good for my body.

We are often a slave to our appetites so fasting one day a week is about creating a Practice to allow space for me to fill my life with other meaningful things.

Since I was away on vacation in Maine for the early part of October I did as many of you might, I over-indulged in wonderful foods, a bit too much alcohol and although I loved every nourishing, delicious bite and sip on my return flight last Tuesday night I felt full.  I don’t just mean the normal fullness of a meal but so full of all the experiences, interactions, stimulus and indulgences that I wanted a day of emptiness to process everything.  So I began my one day fast last week and this week it continues.  I may cheat and have an apple, or some tea or coffee and it’s not about a strict detox for health purposes (that’s another subject and you can read about it here).

For me this one day a week fast is more about not being a slave to my appetite.  Allowing space within so that I can process everything and digest it in a slower, more mindful manner.

One of our Feasts in Maine-Softshell Lobster, Raw oysters, fresh green beans, delicious garlic bread and a bit of southern indulgence-Squash Casserole

Do you fast or have a practice of internal-physical clearing?  If so what space have you discovered or created both internally and externally?

Maybe you have noticed that I recently changed my tag line to “Cultivating Creative Space”, this is because I believe we all need to practice the art of cultivating space in our lives.  This can be done in so many ways and over the course of the next year or so I plan to explore this more in depth, in my own life, with my clients and in the content I share with you here (and newsletters soon to come!).

I had the Blues…The Rebellious Blues (II of II)

September 24, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Inspiration & Education, Photography, Textiles & Pattern

I’ll continue to weave tale of Sea Island Blues here with this past weekend’s Indigo Retreat in Charleston at Rebellion Farms.  I’m calling this event the Rebellious Blues workshop! This event marked the launch of Sea Island Indigo workshops and retreats in Charleston and the surrounding low country area (& maybe further!).

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Here’s our swag bag which included a variety of fabrics, yarns and trim in both cellulose and protein fibers for each of us to dye.  There were additional yarns and fabrics for sale and attendee’s also brought their own goodies.

The first day included a (brief) history of Indigo in the southeast US, a visit to the Charleston Museum and a demonstration from The Gullah Lady, Sharon Cooper Murray who showed us all the traditional technique of Rag Quilting.CAM02423

On our second day of the workshop we all (around 20 of us total) gathered out at Rebellion Farms, just outside of Charleston.  This farm is a special place where Donna has been nurturing a crop of Indigo just for this workshop.  So we all headed out to the field to see the beautiful Indigo growing and to begin to gather leaves to learn the technique of Fresh Leaf Vats.

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We had not one but Two incredible instructors for this workshop, Donna Hardy of Sea Island Indigo and Kathy Hattori of Botanical Colors (Seattle WA).

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Above, Kathy collects leaves from the indigo growing on the farm.  Below, the fresh leaf vat process begins with water.

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We are all as excited as Donna to see this transformation from leaf to dye material.  Below, the blue is starting to show in the water surrounding the indigo leaves.

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Finally after a couple of hours the fresh leaf vat has developed the beautiful coppery sheen on the surface that tells us the vat is ready to be used for dyeing.

Rebellious Blues

While we waited we stitched, bound and clamped our fabrics using various shibori techniques.

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The blue that came from the fresh leaf vat was a remarkable vivid almost turquoise blue.  Each type of Indigo and vat yields subtle variations in the colors hue and saturation.

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Saturday was the final day of the workshop and we had several vats all going at once including the 1-2-3 Fructose vat and a couple vats each for dyeing cellulose and protein fibers.

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The farm pigs kept us company…but since there was a hog roasting right next to us we didn’t get too attached.

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And we stitched…

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And we ohhhed and ahhed over the beauty of the vats…

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We witnessed Sharon Cooper Murray create her indigo rope babies…

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 And we dyed so much fabric and yarn that we covered just about every available surface!

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Rebellious Blues

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Finally it was time to wrap things up and begin to transform this make shift dye shed into a farm dinner extravaganza!

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Within a couple hours we re-set the tables and adorned them with indigo dyed linens and farm cut wild flowers and indigo sprigs.  Every place you looked there were indigo dyed textiles draped on tables, lines and more.  It was truly a beautiful and magical setting!

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We were practically drooling over the smell of the Ossabaw hog that had been roasting right next to our vats all day.  This beautiful hog was donated by Holy City Hogs and roasted to perfection by Jeff Allen of Rebellion and his friends.  We finally came to feast with farm and fiber friends on southern favorites like okra stew, cornbread, Carolina gold rice (from Anson Mills), butter beans and hash while celebrating old traditions brought back to life.

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The evening closed with one last sunset visit to the field and the debut screening of Cotton Road, a movie about the global supply chain of cotton.  We were mesmerized, filled and satisfied in our souls with everything we came together to experience for this workshop and this feast in celebration of some of the incredibly rich southern traditions that are worth preserving.

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I left (& hope others did too) feeling sparked with curiosity and the desire to secure another string of our Southern American heritage.  These are traditions that have brought farmers and artists together over centuries. They continue to teach us and inspire us through friendship and gatherings like this one-touched by a rainbow, magically blessed and hopefully containing seeds of both our roots and our future that will sail the winds and be planted and cultivated by many!  I’m certain there will be many more great Sea Island Indigo events to come but this was the first and it was very special indeed!

I had the Blues…The Sea Island Blues (I of II)

September 23, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Handmade, Inspiration & Education, Textiles & Pattern

I had the blues but in the BEST way!  The Sea Island Blues! Two weeks ago I went down to Ossabaw Island with Donna Hard to help with a 2 day Indigo retreat out on this magical Island.  Sea Island Blues

I have wanted to go to Ossabaw since I was in school at SCAD and I finally got the opportunity for which I am so grateful for.  You can’t just go out there  for any old reason, you practically have to be invited to go…or chance upon the beach by way of boat but while I was on this island and never saw the beach or really even the ocean because it’s wild and there are no paved roads.  There was so much to see though that I really didn’t miss it but maybe another trip, another day…

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It is a remarkably beautiful place, kind of frozen in time but not exactly.  Cut off from the mainland and protected through partnerships between the State of GA and the Ossabaw Foundation.  I highly recommend checking out their website and reading up on it.  I predict that you will be hearing more about this special place in years to come.  It’s already quite well know in “these parts” for the wild Ossabaw Hogs, which I did not encounter on the island during my sunrise walks, thank god!  But I did come by them this past weekend, more on that to come…there’s a thread to be woven here so please be patient while I continue to weave.

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Upon this Island you may stumble upon oyster shell middens, graceful water birds such as egrets and heron’s, deer, wild indigo, loggerhead sea turtles, Indigo eating feral donkey’s-who can’t stay out of the action, ancient pottery shards, racoons, Tabby Ruins,  Slave houses, a once active pottery kiln-part of the former Genesis Project, more Spanish moss than I’ve ever seen in one place and a resident sharp shooter for those Wild Ossabaw hogs.  But since I had the blues we got down to mixing blue…Indigo blue which has roots on this island that was at one point an Indigo Plantation.  Once we had some vats prepared the workshop participants arrived and learned all about the Island and using natural Indigo as a sustainable solution for making textiles more beautiful.

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This workshop was open to all levels of experience and they came, learned and created some exceptional pieces.  Some of the folks who came knew a thing or two about fibers and natural dye and others were totally new to the experience, like the donkey’s who didn’t so much care about the indigo or textiles and were mostly looking for handouts of other sorts.

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I’m pretty sure everyone had a lot of fun too, despite about a million love bugs pestering us while we worked.    We had several of the resident DNR folks join in the fun, Indigo can be addictive and there are several on Ossabaw who’ve been bitten:) not by the love bug but by the blue bug.

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We had a very special visit from Mrs. West who is now 101 and loves this island so much she lives here still, with a caretaker or two.  She didn’t feel the same when she arrived at age 10 and welcomed the island by spitting on it.  She came to love this land though and had the vision to donate the island as a Heritage preserve.   Mrs. West wanted us to help her dye a bit of her hair or perhaps one of her dog’s tails, instead we convinced her an Ossabaw tee shirt would be a safer and more long lasting choice.

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Ossabaw is a very special place for many reasons and for Donna, that reason is all about the Indigo.  The Indigo led her here and will hopefully continue to lead her and many others here to learn about the art of natural dyeing with this remarkable plant that yields it’s beautiful array of blues…the ocean and the sky are ever present when you witness a piece of cloth that’s been dyed with the artful hands of a skilled indigo dyer.

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Here’s the happy group of workshop participants from Saturday’s workshop sharing some of their beautiful creations…Now you can understand why I had the Blues!  In part two I’ll share last weekend’s blues…not just 1 day of dyeing but a whole long weekend retreat with two master natural dyers.

My Letter to the Mayor about the Makers Movement in Charleston

September 17, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Art, Art & Design, Handmade, Inspiration & Education

I came across an upcoming event for American Craft Week this morning and decided to write to Charleston’s Mayor, Joe Riley, about crafts and the makers movement here  in our community.  I think it’s important enough to make sure that our Mayor sees these talented folks!

Dear Mayor Riley,

As a designer, artist, teacher and maker I want to be sure that you have your eye on the talent that is being nurtured here in Charleston through the “Makers Movement” via local craft galleries (like new gallery Surface, charlestoncrafts.org) and maker spaces like Spacecraft Studio, Cone 10, Rock Paper Scissors, Redux and more.  These are places where people can learn new crafts make beautiful things and find a healthy personal creative outlet while meeting other like minded folks in their community.

Did you know that the first week in October (3rd – 12th) is American Craft week?  http://americancraftweek.com/  Many mayor’s across the country are planning events to celebrate this movement, including this one that I saw upcoming in Asheville; http://americancraftweek.com/wnc.

Charleston’s makers movement is on the rise with some amazing, creative people who are working hard to find ways to make sustainable and local handmade items.  I’m sure you know some of these talented people already, people like Mary Edna Fraser and Jocelyn Chateauvert, whose work is world renowned.  This list is expanding to include newcomers like Donna Hardy who is working to revive natural Indigo (growing, processing and dyeing), Kris Westerson, a paper maker who is launching “Street Pulp”, Heather Rose Johnson of Charleston Garment Manufactory (Did you know that there is a “Slow Fiber & Fashion movement?), Susan Hull Walker who has started the Ibu Movement and will open a shop on King Street next month, Charleston Supported Art where you can “subscribe” to seasons of one of a kind art and crafts made by local artists and Spacecraft Studio where you can “Meet people Make Stuff” including using their 3–D printer!  I hope you will take the time to look at some of these new small creative business’ and see the potential in them.

I know you have many important matters on your hands but I think know how important it is to stop and celebrate the fun, creative, exciting things going on and encourage them to be nurtured and celebrated!  Those of us who are makers would love to hear that you offer your support and appreciation for how crafts and the makers movement are beginning to contribute to our local economy and provide us with an avenue for personal self expression.

Cheers,  Heather

 

Moving Monday Unpacked In A Day

September 1, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Move Management, Organize, Organizing Projects

I’m honoring this holiday by not laboring myself, how about you?  I was on the road for a last minute business trip last week that took me over 1000 miles in 3.5 days!  Since I love to share projects I’ve completed, today I’m share photos (Before & After’s!) of a Quick Moving Monday Unpacked In A Day job I did about 2 weeks ago.  I love how satisfying unpack jobs are, either working with the client or on my own I get to “Play House” and help them get settled into their new home! 

This was a 1 person corporate executive relocation and I unpacked this 2 BR/2BA apartment in one long day. This was a tight fit and the client was told she would have a 3 BR but only a 2BR was available for now…

When I arrived the boxes were placed in the general rooms they belonged in but you just never know what you are getting into and so I always feel a mix of excitement and anxiety (not stressed and worried-just that sense of the total unknown) as I get started on a job like this…it was a tight fit to begin with.

The project went like this…

Moving Monday Unpacked In A Day

 Above and Below::open plan Living Room and Kitchen/Dining area were full of boxes. This is where I started, getting the larger items and boxes out of the way first. 

Everything was unpacked, lamps and accessories placed and boxes broken down/removed.

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 The Master Bedroom was a very tight fit with the over sized furniture (king bed set)  but with ample closet and storage space all non-essentials were moved out and the room now feels bright, cheerful and relaxing.

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The guest room went from awkward to comfy and cozy.  I re-arranged furniture so the chair and an additional piece would fit, unpacked and made up the bed.

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 Kitchen, from empty cabinets to thoughtfully arranged and easy to access items in the “zone” they will be used.

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I was super pleased with the results but more importantly, so was the client.  Here’s what she had to say when she arrived home that night…”I just went by the apartment and you are amazing! When I got there I was completely blown away.  Before you came I just wanted to cry, but after you left I felt at home.  I can not believe you found a way to get all that furniture to fit and the back bedroom looks awesome.  I think you have done a fantastic job in such a short time.  I can’t thank you enough.”.-Terri H. (Charleston, SC 2014)

It’s always my pleasure to do my job and leave my clients feeling happy!  If you ever need help with a move, keep in mind my unpacking services might just give you some peace of mind in an otherwise hectic situation!

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In the Studio with Dee Clements Of Herron Clothier

July 24, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Art, In the Studio, Inspiration & Education, Organize, Systems & Techniques

Welcome back to another sneak peek into a Fab Fiber Artist studio, Dee Clements of Herron Clothier.  I’m so thrilled to be sharing her work with ya’ll because I’m very proud of Dee!  She and I met (as roomies) back at Penland in 2011 when she was there for a weaving workshop and I was there for a textile exploration class with Jason Pollen.   Dee and I have stayed in touch via the interwebs…mainly facebook and now instagram.  Why am I so proud of Dee?  Well, she’s a super sweet, hard working and talented weaver and since we met she has mastered the art of moving (to Maine, back to Chicago and a bit of a pit stop elsewhere if I recall) and more important her own art of weaving!  Dee’s textiles have been picked up by several national brands and you can learn more about that over on her blog and her work has outgrown her small studio space.  I am truly grateful she’s invited us in to see and learn more about her organizing triumphs and challenges, especially as she’s about to move studio again!  If we are lucky maybe we will get invited back into her new space but for now I’m happy to share her un-staged, real working weaving studio!

HKPS::What age did you suspect or know you were an artist?

DC::When I was a kid, I was always drawing or making up some craft project for myself. I was a bit of a latchkey kid so I learned how to keep myself entertained and I could sit for hours with an art project or just drawing pictures with crayons and be perfectly content. I am still like that and I still love crayons!  I have some things in a box from my elementary school days and there is this packet from my first grade class that we had to fill in answers to. One of the questions was what do you want to be when you grow up? And I wrote in my first grader check scrawl, an artist or a veterinarian.

HKPS::What mediums do you work with?
DC::I’m a weaver.  I like to use natural fibers, nothing that is chemically processed.  All of the fibers I use in my woven work are from small US farms.

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HKPS:: Where do you make your art, how big is your studio and how long have you been in this space?
DC::I have a space behind my home that I use for my studio. I have three large floor looms an industrial sewing machine, an overlock machine and a cutting table along with shelves of yarn. I am beginning to outgrow my space, as my business grows, I am at the point that I am looking to move to a commercial studio space. This is both very exciting and a little scary.

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HKPS::When you began working in this space did you plan any systems for the overall set up or did you let things evolve organically? How did past studio spaces or systems influence this space?

DC::I have a general idea usually of how I like to set up my studio. I need to have all things set up so I can just move from sewing machine to loom to table easily and organically.

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HKPS:: Do you consider yourself to be an organized person?
DC::Yes and no. Organization is a thing I am constantly working on and trying to improve. I am not organized by nature but I strive hard to be. I have systems in place that work for me. I have learned how to use spread sheets and folders, that is helping me a lot. I organize my yarns by fiber and color and size so that I am not searching for something when I need it quick. It’s still a work in progress though, my organizational skills.
HKPS::Have you ever worked with another artist or gallery? If so did you learn any systems for organizing?
DC::Yes, I have worked with lots of artists and galleries. Organization is not really the first thing that comes to mind when working with them though.
HKPS::How or where else have you learn your organizing habits and systems ?
DC::It’s nice to visit other people’s studios and see their systems, especially ones that work well. I have also learned really good tools for organization from past employment.
HKPS::What types of schedules, systems, tools or processes do you use to help maintain organization in your studio?  Would you like to share any tips?
DC::Hmmm, systems. Well I use a lot of file folders and shelves. Shelves for finished products, shelves for yarn and file folders for invoices, paid invoices and my reciepts and expenses. I keep good records in a n excel spreadsheet for my business stuff and I like to use old coffee cans to hold my tools. Organization is something I am constantly working on and teaching myself. I am messy by nature. As my studio grows and expands, it will be important to keep things labeled and make sure everything has a place that it lives. My studio is an organization work-in-progress.

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HKPS::What kinds of materials/tools do you find challenging to keep organized or locate when you need to use them?
DC::When I start working I use things and put them down where ever I am, I am a messy worker in my studio. I usually get into a flow so I lose things all the time when I am working. Mainly small tools like bobbins or my snips or my pen. I keep detailed notes while I weave and I am always losing my pen!
HKPS::How many projects are you usually working on at once? Is this due to space constraints, creative process, organizing systems or other influences?
DC::Anywhere between 3-9 projects. I have projects booked through next Spring and it is a matter of prioritizing by deadline. I am moving into a new commercial studio at the end of the summer that is 700sq ft as opposed to my tiny 200 sq ft right now. I am really looking forward to spreading out a little and feeling the delight of having actual space to move around in. right now, I have a lot of shelving and things in jars and folders to try and keep organized. But I am definitely busting at the seams.

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HKPS::How often do you purge, clean or de-clutter your supply stash and space due to space or other constraints?
DC::After every project I complete I usually do a big clean up. I like to freshen the space for the next project. I try to use everything because I hate waste. That said, it has to be necessary to be in my studio and it has to be utterly useless for me to get rid of it.

HKPS::Please describe how creative cycles of organization or dis-organization affect your creative process? Are there certain phases of projects that are more or less organized?
DC::Large scale commissions are usually messier for me than my production weaving projects. For my wholesale accounts, I keep very organized.  I have to for my clients. I work in a very systematic organized way when I am production weaving and making products. For my tapestry pieces, those are more art based and my process is more free. I let myself deviate from my weave plans and I like to get messy. Because those are essentially my “art” and one of a kind, the chaos of messiness with them helps me creatively.

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HKPS::How much thought do you give to your artistic body of work in terms of historic value and the overall legacy you will leave behind? How do you store/archive your work or records?
DC::I give a lot of thought to this. I keep a very detailed archive of all my work and I keep detailed notes and sketchbooks of all my pieces and the processes of making them. I use high quality fibers, I work with small us fiber farms, I never use synthetic fibers. My work is heirloom quality and I am a perfectionist about that. I want my work to live on after I am gone.

My greatest wish is that through seeing how other artist work we can learn from one another.  There is no ONE correct system or way of organizing.  There are as many creative systems as their creative makers!  My aim is to highlight these unique makers in each interview.  A HUGE thank you Dee for inviting us into her studio (despite being in the preparations for moving) and sharing her small working space through her photo’s, her personal systems and how organizing affects her creative process.  Please check out her work over at her website and learn more about where her work is available now and in the near future (CB2 etc…)!

Dee Clements Weaving Studio

* Inside the Studio was my brainchild in 2011. There are a lot of popular studio features on the web and in magazines but I’m specifically interested in showing how organizational process influences the artists studio work. These photo’s are not styled and are typical of how the artists working studio looks.  I request that each artist leave their space as it would be on a daily basis (just like I ask my clients).  This series is meant to highlight how artist REALLY work rather than showing STYLED shots (popular in home and organizing magazines and blogs).  I’m sure just like me, you are fascinated by the “behind the scenes” sneak peek into these artists working lives!

In the Studio with Cara DiJulio

June 26, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Art & Design, In the Studio, Inspiration & Education, Organize, Systems & Techniques, Tips & Resources

Thanks for joining me today for another artist studio Sneak Peek.  This week I’m sharing the small studio space of SCAD MFA Fibers candidate, Cara DiJulio who’s space and work I saw back a few months ago at their Open Studio night.  I left Cara a note and she responded and we made arrangements to meet up on my last visit to Savannah.  I love sharing this sneak peek because as most students know, even if you are lucky enough to be assigned a studio space while you are in school, it’s likely very small.  So this small space studio highlights efficient use of space and storage including vertical, horizontal and “layering” (storing below other pieces etc).

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HKPS::What age did you suspect or know you were an artist?

CD::In the sixth grade my art teacher told me that she thought my project was at an ‘advanced level’ for a sixth grader. It was a perspective drawing of the word “STAR” with a drop shadow… (so, it was pretty cool). I thought I was on top of the world. I think that’s when it occurred to me that I should keep taking art classes.

In undergrad I originally intended to major in Apparel Merchandising, but I kept avoiding my apparel classes and was taking art classes instead. Even though I didn’t want to be an art major, by the end of my sophomore year I was accidentally on track for an MS in Studio Art. I eventually changed my major.

HKPS::What mediums do you work with?

CD::My primary focus is geometric repeat pattern, so I weave with the digital jacquard loom, I screen print, I free motion embroider, and I draw with pencil and gouache.

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HKPS::Where do you make your art, how big is your studio and how long have you been in this space?

CD::I share a great studio space with four other (amazingly talented!) graduate students in Pepe Hall at Savannah College of Art and Design.

I prefer to work in the studio, working at home can be hard!

HKPS::When you began working in this space did you plan any systems for the overall set up or did you let things evolve organically? How did past studio spaces or systems influence this space?

CD::I tend to keep my organizational systems pretty much the same from place to place. I use a large ikea cabinet with pull out wire baskets for most of my supplies. Its great because I can see what is in the drawers before opening them.

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I also like to keep my screen printing ink organized by color, visible on a wire baker’s rack.

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HKPS::Do you consider yourself to be an organized person?

CD::I TRY, it’s hard! Every part of me prefers to work in an organized space, and I’m so much more focused in an organized space, but I’m a messy worker.

The organizational structure exists in my studio, whether things get to their homes on a regular basis is a different story!

HKPS::Have you ever worked with another artist or gallery? If so did you learn any systems for organizing?

CD::Nope!

HKPS::How or where else have you learn your organizing habits and systems ?

CD::Mostly, my mom. She is the most organized person I think I’ve ever met. Everything has a place, and is in its place, at her house.

HKPS::What types of schedules, systems, tools or processes do you use to help maintain organization in your studio?  Would you like to share any tips?

CD::I love organizing things by color, it makes life a lot easier. I also have my thread organized in an old silverware organizer! It works so well, I’ve tried other systems but this seems to work the best.

Inside the Studio with Cara DiJulio

I think I’m best at staying organized when I’m conscious of my space, and conscious of my studio mates (no one likes looking at a messy desk)

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HKPS::What kinds of materials/tools do you find challenging to keep organized or locate when you need to use them?

CD::Refolding fabric nicely is always a challenge for me. I also misplace needles constantly.

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HKPS::How many projects are you usually working on at once? Is this due to space constraints, creative process, organizing systems or other influences?

CD::Oh, this is a tough question. It really depends. I would say, 1 to 5 projects. I can get easily frustrated, so I like to jump around with projects when I’m drawing or designing on the computer.

HKPS::How often do you purge, clean or de-clutter your supply stash and space due to space or other constraints? (ex. yes monthly/few times a year or when I feel like it, because I have visitors etc)

CD::Not as often as I should! I probably purge about twice a year. Fabric is always a really tough thing to purge, it’s also a real pain to cart around.

HKPS::Please describe how creative cycles of organization or dis-organization affect your creative process?Are there certain phases of projects that are more or less organized?(ex. I can’t focus unless things are put away, creative chaos inspires me, and things get messy as I work but I clean up at the end of projects)

CD::I like to have a clean space before I work. Frequently I’ll be exhausted when I leave the studio at night, and opt to clean up my space in the morning instead. I need to get in the habit of cleaning when I leave though.

HKPS::How much thought do you give to your artistic body of work in terms of historic value and the overall legacy you will leave behind?  How do you store/archive your work or records?

CD::I don’t really think much about my legacy, I don’t typically concern myself too much with archival quality. The work I’m doing right now is still very exploratory, so its life cycle isn’t a major concern. I keep my old work in some plastic containers in my studio and in my home.  (Maybe we will check back with you in a few years to see if you still feel this way?)

My greatest wish is that through seeing how other artist work we can learn from one another.  There is no ONE correct system or way of organizing.  There are as many creative systems as their creative makers!  My aim is to highlight these unique makers in each interview.  I was so grateful to Cara for responding and inviting me back to see her studio and ahow organizing affects her creative process.  Please check out her work over at her website (which is still under construction) or on Instagram (@caradijulio) and keep your eye on her since she is an emerging artist and designer!  As for this series, please check back here or better yet, sign up for my emails on the top left of any page so you don’t’ miss any of the amazing artists in the near future ‘Inside the Studio’!

* Inside the Studio was my brainchild in 2011. There are a lot of popular studio features on the web and in magazines but I’m specifically interested in showing how organizational process influences the artists studio work. These photo’s are not styled and are typical of how the artists working studio looks.  I request that each artist leave their space as it would be on a daily basis (just like I ask my clients).  This series is meant to highlight how artist REALLY work rather than showing STYLED shots (popular in home and organizing magazines and blogs).  I’m sure just like me, you are fascinated by the “behind the scenes” sneak peek into these artists working lives!

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Color-Coded Tools

June 17, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Organize, Organizing Projects, Tips & Resources

This is a really quick and easy idea I recently got from my friend Bill.  He was in the midst of organizing and stopped to share his clever Color-Coded Tools with me.

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He sorted all his small tools into categories and created a color chart to help him remember what goes in each.  He could even take it a step further and paint or add color coded tape to each tool’s handle so he would not have to look at his reference chart.

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I love these bags and could see a similar method used for sorting any small tools or objects such as craft supplies, bathroom products, small camping gear, toys and more!  If you would rather use clear bags you could still use this concept and be able to see the contents.  But these Klein bags are super durable and come in great colors for a great price!

Color-Coded Tools

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In the Studio with Hollis Hamonds

June 12, 2014 by Heather Filed Under: Art, In the Studio, Inspiration & Education, Museums & Galleries, Organize, Systems & Techniques

Thanks for joining me today for another artist studio Sneak Peek.  There have been some fantastic creative events and exhibitions here in Charleston over the past month or so and we just wrapped up Spoleto festival which is always a favorite for locals and tourists.  One of the great exhibits on display right now at Redux Studio’s is the work of Texas artist Hollis Hammonds::Worthless Matter.  I knew after reading an article or two about her work that I had to see the exhibit and was really hoping she would agree to this interview and she did, yeah for all of us!  Here is a short blurb from straight from Hollis’ bio page and this pretty much makes it clear why I was fascinated by her work and how her experiences have shaped it.

“Exploring consumerist culture through evidence of accumulation, hoarding and collecting, piles of rubble permeate the works of Hollis Hammonds. Growing up in semi-rural Kentucky, the youngest child of depression era parents, her surroundings were those of cold war stockpiling, nick-knack collections, and junk-yard recycling. After surviving a house fire in her teens, piles of burnt keepsakes created a lasting impression on her, of the impermanence and worthlessness of superficial possessions.” 

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HKPS::What age did you suspect or know you were an artist?

HH::Not sure, but I always drew from a very young age, in church, on the bus, in school. I was told in the 5th grade that I had talent. I guess I was particularly good at drawing horses that year. I didn’t have any formal art classes though until high school. I think I was always an artist, although as an undergraduate I loathed the term, finding it pretentious and seeing it as something that was possibly unattainable. It has only been in the last few years that I’ve become comfortable with the title of artist.

HKPS::What mediums do you work with?

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HH::I use all types of media, but favor drawing over all other forms of art making. I’ve used traditional drawing media like charcoal, ink, pen, graphite, litho crayon on substrates like paper, canvas, vinyl fabric, and Mylar. I also have used hand cut strips of wood veneer to create wall drawings and installations.  Although the works I make using wood veneer are 3-dimensional, I still conceptually think of them as drawing with line.

HKPS::Where do you make your art, how big is your studio and how long have you been in this space?

HH::I have a studio in Austin, Texas. It is modest, 4 white walls, concrete floor, 400 sq. ft. I moved into this space in June 2013, and hope to stay there for a while. It is a neutral space that’s usually organized. I enjoy the white walls as a buffer for my usually complex work.

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HKPS::When you began working in this space did you plan any systems for the overall set up or did you let things evolve organically?  How did past studio spaces or systems influence this space?

HH::This studio was a fresh start for me. I hadn’t had an official studio, outside of my home, since I moved to Austin in 2007. So it was a clean slate, and I knew that I needed 3 things: solid worktables, 2 chairs, and a shelving unit. It was that simple. After a few hours at IKEA I was all set. I have rearranged these few items several times since I moved in, added a few items, including a donated desk and rolling cart. My creative work tends to determine the layout of the space. If I’m making a large installation on the wall then my tables move to the center of the space, and if I need to make a suspended piece in the center of the room then my furniture migrates back toward the walls. I like to keep it minimal, simple, easily moveable and adaptable.

HKPS::Do you consider yourself to be an organized person?

HH::I would say somewhat. I do make a lot of piles, that I tend to deal with much later. I like to sort things, grouping similar things together. You can see this in my drawings as well. I like those see-thru plastic organizers where I can sort all of my tools and materials.

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HKPS::Have you ever worked with another artist or gallery?  If so did you learn any systems for organizing?

HH::Yes, but not really.

HKPS:: How or where else have you learn your organizing habits and systems?

HH::Probably all of my organizational habits came from my parents. My father saved everything, and organized those things by type, size, and usefulness. In the pantry were piles of plastic and paper bags filled with other like bags. In the basement of our home there was an entire walk-in closet-sized room filled with empty plastic milk and juice jugs, and 2-liter soda pop bottles. Outside, he had filled an entire shed with rusty metal tools, chains, thousands of rusty nails, nuts, bolts & screws, all sorted and in their place. It was overwhelming, since every usable space became filled over time, yet organized. It was clear that there was a system in everything he did and in everything he saved/recycled. In that world, nothing was new. Everything had a past and future purpose, even if those were completely different. Every piece of old trash or junk was a treasure to my father.

My mother on the other hand valued new and officially collectible items, designer dolls, Lilliput houses, and ceramic figurines. Each of these items was grouped with their own kind, adorning shelves and the tops of cabinets. She had a box filled with greeting cards, organized by holiday, type, age, boy, girl, and so on. Several closets in our house were stocked with gifts for birthdays and holidays to come, often wrapped in advance and labeled for whomever they were destined. The inside of the house, was just as filled as my father’s shed of metal treasures.

Organized chaos. That’s what I grew up in.

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HKPS::What types of schedules, systems, tools or processes do you use to help maintain organization in your studio?   Would you like to share any tips?

HH::Honestly, I purposely keep it simple. The less stuff you have in the studio, the fewer things you have to manage, and the more productive you can be. My advice is to cleanup and pack-up when each project is completed. I do like to document my work as soon as it is finished, and digital photo files are edited and organized as quickly as possible, so that the packing process may begin. Packing may entail rolling a large drawing on a tube, wrapping a framed piece in bubble wrap, or simply moving work from the working space to a temporary display space. That might be a tip… having multiple zones in the studio… working, storing, works in progress, and displaying. These zones sometimes run into each other, but it helps keep the overall studio in order, and satisfies my need to see progress, as projects move from one zone, or step in the process to another.

HKPS::What kinds of materials/tools do you find challenging to keep organized or locate when you need to use them?

HH::It is always the miscellaneous items that disappear when you most need them. I mainly use plastic storage containers, and I have one medium size bin for miscellaneous tools and large bin for miscellaneous larger items, like glue, tape, and twine.

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HKPS:: How many projects are you usually working on at once?  Is this due to space constraints, creative process, organizing systems or other influences?

HH::I would say that I always have at least 2 projects going on at any time. I like to be able to switch back and forth between varying tasks, which make more efficient use of my time. For instance, I’m currently laminating paper and canvas to Masonite, working on a marker drawing on vinyl, tweaking a pen drawing on Mylar, with a pile of small oil paintings that also need my attention. While one thing is drying you can tend to another, or if you get tired or bored with one project, you can easily pick up something else to work on. Being organized and having the projects I’m working on visible or easily accessible is really important when juggling several things.

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HKPS::How often do you purge, clean or de-clutter your supply stash and space due to space or other constraints?

HH::At home our general rule is if you buy something, like a new pair of shoes, then an old pair needs to go in the donation pile. At the studio it’s different since sometimes you need to collect a pile of furniture or materials for an upcoming project. So, sometimes the studio can seem cluttered. I do a massive re-organization and cleaning probably once a year, for a major studio tour event, and smaller cleanings randomly for curator visits and open studios. I don’t clean and put away my tools daily, but do always do so before I begin a new major project.

HKPS::Please describe how creative cycles of organization or dis-organization affect your creative process?  Are there certain phases of projects that are more or less organized?

HH::I think that I need the white walls of the studio to be able to work. Clutter, the kind I grew up surrounded by as a child would definitely keep me from being productive. It’s funny when you look at my work, since it looks like the work of a hoarder. My studio is the opposite, a sanctuary of sorts for creating art.

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HKPS:: How much thought do you give to your artistic body of work in terms of historic value and the overall legacy you will leave behind?  How do you store/archive your work or records?

HH::I never cared much about archival quality and longevity in my own work until recently. I was interested in all things fragile, ephemeral and fleeting, and so chose materials and practices that were sometimes impermanent. These days I do care, and hope my work will stand the test of time. I do also document everything through digital photography. I keep all of my original files, edit and save large versions, and small versions for web. I keep an inventory list that I update regularly. I reference my list all of the time, for title, size, date, and value information. I also note where the work is now, who owns it, what exhibits or publications it has been featured in, and so on. You can buy a program for this, but I just made my own system using a table in Microsoft Word. I also keep my website up to date, and use social media more and more these days. I have several ongoing series/bodies of work, and I tend to title things as part of that series. I sign and date each piece on the back… I can’t stand signatures on the fronts of paintings. I do believe that we need to archive our work as best we can, through preserving the physical pieces, but also through digital archives.

My greatest wish is that through seeing how other artist work we can learn from one another.  There is no ONE correct system or way of organizing.  There are as many creative systems as their creative makers!  My aim is to highlight these unique makers in each interview.   I was thrilled to be invited to see inside the studio of Hollis and thanks to her for providing all the excellent photo’s that illustrate how her studios space is arranged and organized, as well as how organizing affects her creative process.  Please check out her work over at her website and visit Redux Studio if you are in Charleston to see Worthless Matter while it’s still open-until June 28th.  As for this series, please check back here or better yet, sign up for my emails on the top left of any page so you don’t’ miss any of the amazing artists in the near future ‘Inside the Studio’!

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* Inside the Artist Studio was my brainchild in 2011. There are a lot of popular studio features on the web and in magazines but I’m specifically interested in showing how organizational process influences the artists studio work. These photo’s are not styled and are typical of how the artists working studio looks.  I request that each artist leave their space as it would be on a daily basis (just like I ask my clients).  This series is meant to highlight how artist REALLY work rather than showing STYLED shots (popular in home and organizing magazines and blogs).  I’m sure just like me, you are fascinated by the “behind the scenes” sneak peek into these artists working lives!

Hollis Hamonds Installation Art

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