Posts tagged Etsy

Candy Conversations : Sian Hughes

Welcome back to Candy Conversations! It’s time to meet Sian, of Siansburys, and chat about monkeys!

Candy Stats

  • Name : Sian Hughes
  • Hometown : Sheffield
  • Craft : Sewing (Sock Monkeys)
  • Company Name : Siansburys
  • Likes : Monkeys, Otters, Badgers, Foxes, animals, wildlife, trees, plants, walking on the moors, drawing, painting and pottering.
  • Dislikes : Spiders, enclosed spaces, public speaking, rude people, drizzle. If you combined all these things into one event I would probably self-destruct!

Sian Hughes

Candy Conversation

  • Hello Sian! Welcome to Candy Conversations. Thanks for chatting to us!

Hello, thanks for having me!

  • So…tell us a bit about yourself.

I’m 33 and live in Sheffield with Andy, my partner of many, many years, our cat Mia and some fish. After school, I went to Sheffield College to study my Art Foundation before realising I wasn’t competitive enough to ever make any money at it, so went on to study Geography at the University of Derby. I specialised in Landscape Ecology, which mostly involved going out into the countryside with ranging poles and looking at trees. I’m not sure how I thought I’d make any money with that either, but that’s what happened.

  • Have you always been creative though, or is it something you rediscovered again later on?

I know everyone says this, but I have always been creative. I remember sitting round my grandparent’s kitchen table and being taught how to draw stars using two triangles, and then showing off my skills to my new friends at infant school, only much later realising I’d drawn the second triangle sideways rather than upside down. Actually, that probably shows how artistically inept I was, but creative, right?

Little Sian drawing with her Granddad

My Dad is an architect (or was, he’s recently retired) and has always been a major influence. He had a drawing board at home so my siblings and I had unlimited access to paper and art materials, as well as his expertise of course! I remember ‘helping’ him with posters for the rugby club and being allowed to sit next to him and draw while he worked. My Mum likes to deny that she’s creative, but she sculpts, carves, knits and sews, and both of her parents painted, so it’s definitely in the blood. Every Christmas we would get drawing paper and pens as well as whatever it was we’d asked for, so I think you could say we were encouraged!

I always really enjoyed art as a subject at school but don’t feel like I ever found my ‘style’, or if I did it wasn’t necessarily encouraged. I was definitely pushed in a certain direction at A’ Level and at College, which is why I lost interest for a few years, as it wasn’t a direction I was comfortable with.

In terms of ‘craft’, I was in the knitting club at junior school (first rule of knit club… etc) I think I knitted a snowman. I made a teddy bear at junior school as well, though I don’t know what I did with that either. Later, I received an excellent report for Home Economics, and considered it a huge joke because I was also quite academic. However, since leaving school I’ve had to thread a sewing machine and cook potatoes about a thousand times, and I have never needed to know the molecular structure of… well… anything, so thank you Home Economics teacher!

  • So, what is your craft exactly? Will you tell us about what you do, and how you started off?

I make sock monkeys, which basically involves taking a perfectly good pair of socks, cutting them up, and stitching them back together again in the shape of a monkey. The craft itself started off in Depression-era America, where wives would take their husbands worn out work socks and make them into toys for their kids.

Ruby

I started making sock monkeys after a few things conspired towards it. Firstly, I have always loved monkeys. My favourite programmes when I was little were ‘Monkey’, various documentaries about wildlife and ‘Animal Magic’ with Johnny Morris.

Scrumpy

Second, I was given the gift of a book called ‘Sock Monkeys (200 Out of 1, 863)’ by Arne Svenson and Ron Warren, which contains black and white portrait photos of vintage red-heeled sock monkeys, with their life ‘histories’ written by American authors.

Chef

Third, I discovered Myspace and a whole community of people making stuff, and selling on Etsy.

Jimbo

Fourth, we went to visit my sister and her husband in Michigan, and I was enamoured with the culture of homemade, which is so much more prevalent over there. I also picked up a copy of ‘Stupid Sock Creatures’ by John Murphy at a gift shop in Chicago, which must have been a turning point. After making a few sock creatures inspired by John’s designs, I did a couple of trades with my contacts on Myspace, and didn’t think anything more of it until I got made redundant from BTCV (an environmental conservation charity).

Punk

So finally (sorry, this is turning into my life story), I got made redundant and needed some income. I started selling my creatures on Ebay to make a few pennies while I looked for other work. Soon I discovered a lovely community of UK makers on Etsy, where I had intended to sell all my crafts: paintings, prints, greetings cards etc, and sock creatures were just a sideline. However, the monkeys were an immediate success, and all of my other crafts dropped to the bottom of my listings, so I gradually admitted defeat and removed them. My ‘Super’ sock monkeys started as a result of the UK Etsy Challenge theme of ‘clouds’, for which I made ‘Monkey’ monkey. I took some (what I thought were) emotive photos of him riding his pink cloud, and was absolutely over the moon to actually win the challenge, and sell the monkey! The rest of my custom orders were off the back of that really.

Monkey Magic

  • Where do you currently sell your monkeys, and how do you go about self-promoting your work?

I sell on Etsy and at Craft Candy fairs – I will be at the next one: Candy Cane at the Millennium Galleries on November 27th which I’m really excited about, and I’m looking forward to doing my Christmas shopping!

I have a Facebook Page and a profile on almost every social network, but find Flickr is probably the best place for getting your work seen by people who wouldn’t otherwise have found you. Twitter is great for chatting to people and staying sane, particularly when you work from home and don’t have any workmates! I don’t tend to promote too much except on my Facebook page, as that’s what that was set up for – I don’t want to annoy people too much with links to my shop!

I also have a blog, and everything is linked together, so people who are interested can click their way though a maze of technology to find me all over the web! I think I’ve had sales through all my profiles, either by people finding my Etsy page or by sending me a message, so it’s all good.

  • Are you able to produce one off commissioned pieces for people who would like their own personalised monkey?

Yes, I am usually working on two or three custom orders at any time. I’m happy to say that I am booked up for Christmas now, but am open to more commissions for the New Year. The best way for people to contact me is to see my website, where I set out the basic process, and you can see examples of my previous work. Then you can email me at siansburys@gmail.com with your ideas!

Jack Sparrow

Clint

  • Do you work from home, or have a studio space?

I work from home in the spare bedroom and it’s an absolute tip, which really annoys me. I love to be tidy and organised, but I have a habit of dragging everything out at once and then being too overwhelmed to put it away. I tend to find its easier then to pick up the essentials and move to the sofa, and keep on bringing more and more stuff down until practically my whole room is on the sofa. We’ve just got our own place after ten years of renting, so I’m hoping that getting permanent shelving in a permanent space will sort my messiness out. I doubt it though!

  • Is monkey-making your main job, or do you have a day job too?

I have worked as an animal care worker, as a rocking horse painter and restorer, as a volunteer and as a project officer for BTCV. I currently work for a rocking horse maker, my main responsibility being managing their Sheffield toy shop. I have worked for the company since I graduated in 2001, but have been in my current role since about 2008. I work part time and my hours can be fairly flexible, which usually works quite well as it gives me time for crafting, but obviously it’s tricky that both of my ‘jobs’ get busy at the same time in the run-up to Christmas! My job doesn’t relate to my craft as much as you’d think, because although my monkeys look like toys, they are intended as works of art (in the least pretentious way possible!) and collectors items. My craft does however draw heavily on childhood, nostalgia and play, so it’s quite a good combination in a lot of ways!

  • Who or what inspires you, and how do you think this comes through in your work?

Oh gosh, I find inspiration in everything. I love colour and line. Some of my all-time favourite artists are Egon Schiele and Gustav Klimt, Van Gogh, and many children’s book illustrators including EH Shepard, Alexis Deacon, and Lane Smith.

Yellow Submarine and anything produced by Jim Henson’s monster factory and Pixar. Movies and music from the 80s (mainly thanks to my Dad’s VHS, without which I would have missed most of it); Watership Down, The Muppets, The Kenny Everett Show, Tom & Jerry and The Goodies. Most of these influences come through in the stories I write for my monkeys, and in the ‘Superstar’ monkeys that I make.

Above all I’m a country-girl, I adore the bleak, sweeping moors that surround the south west of the city, and the plants and creatures that inhabit them, I find them endlessly fascinating and beautiful. Does that make me sound odd? Probably, but I’m okay with that!

Shaak ti

  • Which of your contemporaries do you admire?

Becky Gould of Scrumptious Delight – I discovered Becky through the Etsy Plush Team, of which we are both members. Her work is brilliant and hilarious, she made a plush Chopper for goodness sakes! I love the look of surprise on his face, and the fact that he has a face. I want to go and live in her head; I imagine it’s like the Chocolate Room in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. I can’t omit to mention the rest of the Plush Team here, as they are all unbelievably talented people! You can peruse their work at http://plushteam.com

Plush chopper - by Scrumptious Delight

Joey Ramone of Joey’s Dream Garden – I met Joey through Craft Candy and saw her work at one of the fairs. She is such a lovely person, and her stitching is simply sublime! I have bought a few of her things for friends, but I’d like to think that one day one of her ‘The Owl and the Pussycat’ sets (a collaboration with artist Claire Hoey) will adorn that highly organised, opulently-shelved work-room I’m dreaming about.

Tototl, Minoo, mandolin & boat - a collaboration between Joey Ramone of Joeys Dream Garden, and Claire Hoey of The Pin Factory.

Louise Evans aka Felt Mistress – This is a new one on me, but her (or their – ‘creature maker’ Louise works with her partner, illustrator Jonathan Edwards) work is mind-boggling. You can find Felt Mistress designs at Selfridges in London up to Christmas – she even has her own window display, which is not only awesome in itself, but is a brilliant boost for other Plush makers across the UK.

At home with the Treeps - by Felt Mistress

The spectacular Felt Mistress window at Selfridges

  • What’s your favourite thing about being creative?

It helps me relax definitely (although the opposite is also true at busy times), but the freedom of being able to earn money selling things I have made, or at least having the skills to make something out of nothing (physically or notionally), is definitely a big part of it. And just being able to find fun in almost anything – I’m easily entertained!

  • Of all the sock monkeys you have made and sold, which has been your favourite?

My favourite monkey was Braveheart – I made him as a custom order for a brilliant couple over in the USA. It took ages and ages, but the photos still make me laugh every time I see them. I took the photos at one of my most favourite places in the world, so it’s also close to my heart for that reason.

Braveheart

  • And do you have a favourite craft item that you have bought?

The very first thing I bought on Etsy has to be my favourite – Peaches the sock creature by Kittypinkstars. She’s got so much character and she always makes me smile! And the sock creature’s pretty special too… hahah ;)

Peaches sock creature by Kittypinkstars

I bought Peaches in about 2003 and then bought one for most of my friends! I would definitely recommend Kittypinkstars as a maker – she is amazing, and has enough creativity and positivity for possibly everyone else in the world ever. My sister recently bought me a ‘custom doodle’ by Kitty for my birthday, which is really cute.

Crow Folk - by Deb Champion

I’ve also got the original of a beautiful painting called ‘Crowfolk’ by Deb Champion, and a big print of ‘Why People Never Visit’ by Siobhian Carroll which reminds me of the village where I grew up! These two ladies are both absolutely fantastic in every way too. Apologies for harping on about how lovely everyone is but I have met so many wonderful, talented people through crafting, its impossible not to!

Why people never visit - by Siobhian Carroll

  • Besides crafting and monkey-making, do you have any other hobbies or interests?

Sock monkeys are definitely my main pastime, but more than anything I love to draw and paint. I’ve recently begun drawing again and have started a blog – http://sianhughes.blogspot.com to try to make myself keep up with it. I’ve been going to Sketchcrawls – http://www.sketchcrawl.com/ round Sheffield, and have just started going to an art class this week for the first time in ten years. I also enjoy taking photographs but I am fairly rubbish at it as I haven’t got the patience for the technicalities of it at all. When I was a teenager I was heavily into horse-riding (I even had my own pony – I still can’t believe how lucky I was) so um, yes, I used to go to Pony Club! I would love to get back into riding one day too but for now I’ll just stick to the arts and crafts!

  • What do you like about being a Craft Candy member, and how do you feel you benefit from being in the group?

I think I’ve been a member of Craft Candy for about 2 years, having found out about it through Sarah on Etsy. I joined mainly for the social side of things and I think (I hope!) I’ve made a few good friends along the way!

Craft Candy monkey mascot!

In my first year I made the gigantic step of doing my first ever craft fair, and it was made such and easy and friendly experience by the team that I’ve applied for every one since. I haven’t yet taken advantage of the workshops, as for a long time I was working every Saturday, but hopefully I’ll be able to join in with those soon.

Sian and her Dad Bryn disappearing under a pile of monkeys, on their shared stall at the Candy Floss fair. They will be sharing a stall again at Candy Cane on 27th Nov.

  • Last but not least, what are your hopes and dreams for the future?

I’m hoping to build my Etsy store back up and restock my Folksy shop in the New Year. I would love to eventually have my own online store to sell directly through my website, but that’s a while off yet! I’d also like to be an amazing artist and photographer. Hey, you said I could dream!

  • Thank you for chatting Sian!

No, no – thank you! :-)

And finally - a sock monkey crossed with a lobster!



Candy Conversations : Kay Guccione

Hi everyone, this week we’re meeting Kay, of ‘lilidrawspictures’ fame. So without further ado…it’s over to Mrs. Guccione herself!

Candy Stats

  • Name : Kay Guccione
  • Hometown : Sheffield
  • Craft : Accessories from Recycled Textiles
  • Company Name : lilidrawspictures
  • Likes : reclaimed fabric, Star Trek, recycling paper, ballet, found objects, lists, ribbon, exaggerating, tape measures, musical theatre, graph paper, gymnastics, notebooks (terrible costly fetish) vintage comics, stationery, vintage buttons, string, ink, badges and champagne
  • Dislikes : sitting still, waiting, chocolate, noisy eaters and bows on bras

Kay Guccione

Candy Conversation

  • Hi Kay! Tell us a bit about yourself…

I’ve lived in Sheffield all my life, including my seven years as a student, studying Zoology & Genetics, and then my PhD in molecular DNA repair pathways. I now work for the University of Sheffield, as does my husband Ed who is the lilidrawspictures website wunderkind.

Being at the University for so long has afforded me the opportunity to take up a new hobby every year, something I hope to maintain into old age. I sing with Singsoc (The Singers’ Society at Sheffield Uni), and spend a lot of time at the Lantern Theatre.

I turned 30 this year, and I absolutely wasn’t dreading it. I like to surprise people who think they’re talking to a 12 year old!

  • Have you always been creative?

After a lifetime of watching my Mum sew, I suddenly got the point and flung myself fabricwards! It started with the desire to make things for myself. Altering, upcycling, and customizing clothing; making one of a kind dresses from vintage bed linens; having something recycled and original. I enjoyed the designing and creating process so much that I started making things for friends and family, for Christmas. And it was only a small step further to open a shop.

  • Can you explain your craft in a bit more detail?

At lilidrawspictures we design and produce original mod-ish clothing, super-strong book bags, brooches, clutch purses and notebooks. Work stuff and school stuff. We do so without sweatshop labour, and with environmental kindness, using old favourite materials.

lilidrawspictures book bag

  • Where can we buy lilidrawspictures stuff?

I sell through Etsy and Folksy (new stock coming in v. v. soon), and also at a selected handful of fairs each year – mainly our Craft Candy Fairs, but I’m also doing the Reet Sweet Event in Leeds Corn Exchange on the 7th November. I supply the 20-21 Gallery in Lincolnshire, and also Salford Museums gallery. In the USA, I supply Southern Fried Comics with my upcycled comic book accessories and notebooks.

Upcycled Comic Book badges

  • How do you go about promoting lilidrawspictures?

My Facebook page is a great way to promote my work, with a good few commissioned pieces resulting form the showcasing I can do there. My main neglected creative outlet is my blog – MUSEROUND which, although very popular, has been static since February, as I’ve been too busy to do it proper justice since changing jobs. Blogging will recommence in the next couple of weeks though now I am settled in and ready to go!

  • Are you available to produce commissioned pieces and one-offs?

Absolutely I am – I love to make something especially to suit a particular person or event. A clutch bag to match a dress, something in a specific fabric, or a custom size of shopping bag. Just let me know what you’d like – you can email me at enquiries@lilidrawspictures.com

Ridicule is nothing to be scared of!

  • What is your workspace like? Do you work from home, or have a studio?

I work from my tiny studio (dining table) at home in Shalesmoor, Sheffield. I am anally tidy – I can’t work in a mess at all. That’s possibly my scientific training coming through, but in a small apartment like ours, needs must! I would love to have a tiny dedicated studio space one day. Somewhere to go to be creative and somewhere to leave behind when it’s time for dinner!

Home studio space

  • Can you tell us more about your day job?

Following my PhD, I worked for four years in scientific research, working in Plant Molecular Science, on a project to increase food-security in sub Saharan Africa. I now work as a Training and Development Advisor, creating and co-ordinating professional development training systems for The Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health. I run lilidrawspictures in my evenings and weekends.

  • Who or what inspires you?

Everything inspires me! I’m short (5’ nearly 1”) and petite, and so I get a lot of inspiration altering shop bought and second hand clothes to fit me, and re-designing them. I take a lot of photos, draw things I’ve seen, and browse a lot of websites and blogs. I catalogue all the pictures, with annotations in a series of small scrap books, and whenever I need inspiration, I make a cup of tea and browse back through my collections. I also love to make lists, lists of dresses I want to make, lists of fabrics I want to find. That way I always have something on the go.

I get something like 130 different RSS blog feeds on a daily basis. Largely they are craft based blogs, all the usual suspects, but I also love Design Sponge, they produce a mean before-and-after style interior design blog. Also to mention are We Are What We Do, and World Sweet World amongst other ‘green’ blogs. And have you seen ‘My cardboard Life’?

Yellow Birds clutch

  • Which of your contemporaries do you admire?

My list of favourite artists is extensive, and I like to have a favourite for each mood and whim. Roy Lichtenstein overall I think. Dresses are my thing too. I pore over any shop on Etsy selling handmade frocks.

I love…

Parsimony

Joodito

SohoMode

and…

Heidi & Seek

  • What is your favourite thing about being creative?

Always having a matching bag and dress. Made from curtains!

  • What’s your favourite thing you’ve made and then sold?

I love all my clutch bags. I only make bags that I’d want to use myself, but it’s not really a good business strategy to keep them all! They’re all original, I don’t like to have duplicates. My favourite is a piece called ‘Yee Har’ that was featured on a lot of blogs/Folksy Fridays etc, but sold almost immediately. It’s a recycled wool skirt with cowgirls and bows.

'Out tonight' clutch by lilidrawspictures

  • And what is your favourite craft related item that you’ve bought?

It has to be my sewing machine Brother BM2600 – it’s the thing I’d save first in the event of a fire (after Ed of course, maybe…). It’s from Woodseats Sewing Machines. I really recommend that shop, they are very good at helping you to get what you need, not what they need to flog.

  • What other hobbies and interests do you have?

Singing and dancing.  Sometimes both together. I have just been involved as assistant director with an excellent production of ‘Much Ado About Nothing’, at the Lantern Theatre in Nether Edge. I have been part of this theatre group since I was 15 (exactly half my life) and this as my first venture into directing. I’m normally up there on the stage, having been in ‘Be My Baby’, ‘Ladies Day’ and ‘Players Angels’ in the last couple of years.

  • How long have you been a member of Craft Candy, and what do you love best about being part of the group?

I joined in 2008 after receiving an invitation to attend the first Spring Fling fair at The Workstation. Since then I have been on the committee, helping to organise events and members. This summer I joined the management committee as Secretary, and I absolutely love being part of something so well organised and successful as Craft Candy. We’re going from strength to strength – great kudos. I think we’re really going to grow this year, and I can’t wait to put all our great ideas into practise and kick on with the world domination!

Recycled tape measures!

  • And what are your plans for the future?

Short term: To survive the Christmas rush. To get back on with regular curator blogs on MUSEROUND. To accept invitations from a couple more galleries. To grow Craft Candy. To visit more fairs, especially ‘Zine’ fairs. To develop the recycled paper/stationery side of the business. And to enjoy my crafting.

Long term: to do an Architecture degree.

  • Thank you Kay for the insight into your world, it’s been lovely finding out more about you and what you do!

Yee Har! clutch

Candy Conversations : Vyctoria Hart

Welcome to Candy Conversations! This week we’re chatting with Vyctoria of Phantoms Siren.

Candy Stats

Name : Vyctoria Hart

Hometown : Rotherham

Craft : Graphic Design

Company Name : Phantoms Siren

Website : http://www.phantoms-siren.com

Deviantart : http://phantoms-siren.deviantart.com

Blog : http://phantomssiren.livejournal.com

Etsy : http://phantomssiren.etsy.com

Likes : Coffee by the pint and chocolate by the crate. Music with cogs and art with gears. Tales of daring airship shenanigans and books of science fantasy. Steampunk and dieselgoth and the goggle wearing crowd. People who know their history but aren’t afraid to play fast and loose with it. Comedy with bite and humour with brains. Yoga that doesn’t take itself too seriously and meditation without the incense.

Dislikes : Hipsters, fashionistas and scene snobs. Celery. Hatred, intolerance and misplaced self importance. Tea. The feeling that you’ve forgotten to do something really important.

Vyctoria Hart

Candy Conversation

  • Hi Vycotoria, welcome to Candy Conversations. Tell us a bit about yourself!

I’m 27 and I currently live on the outskirts of Rotherham (someone has to!) with my fiance David. I followed him to The University of York in 2001 where I studied The History of Art at degree level. It was a terribly difficult course, requiring a whole four hours of lectures a week and a free international holiday… ahem.. I mean an intensive overseas studies session every year. I graduated in 2004 with a 2:1 BA Hons and the feeling that I should have studied harder. I had intended to study Medievalism in the Victorian Era to Masters level but went into the world of work instead.

The dreaded Vyctoria!

David and I have been together for ten years and plan to get married in 2012. We’re planning a steampunk wedding with a theme loosely based on the Jim Henson movie Labyrinth, with almost everything coming from the local arts and crafts community. We currently share our home with a six month old black kitten named Du and our garden is occupied by a growing number of ornamental Koi carp.

  • Have you always been creative?

I’ve been artistic for as long as I can remember. When I was small Tony Hart was something of a hero to me, not least because of the shared surname, and I watched HartBeat religiously every week after school. It was my dearest ambition to have a picture featured in The Gallery. Whilst I never achieved this aim, I did get two out of my three Blue Peter badges for art work.

Sadly I had a number of problems when it came to GCSE and A-Level art classes as I found the insistence on following other artistic styles to be stifling. As a result I didn’t speak to my GCSE art teacher for over a year of that course. Whilst I tried to abandon my own style during my A-Levels I wasn’t successful in emulating the approved styles and gained only a grade D. As a result I gave up on visual art and didn’t draw a thing for over a year.

Vyctoria portraits

Whilst I was at University I discovered a love of concert photography and spent a number of years following a band called The Cruxshadows all over Europe and into the US. Gradually, through the people and friends I met along the way, I found my way back to the pen. During that period I also happened upon knitting, crochet, costume design, spinning, origami, baking and a bit of hair dressing.  Whilst my focus these days is mostly on digital art, I still love to indulge in my other loves whenever I have the time.

Concert photography by Vyctoria Hart

  • Tell us more about your craft…

I have two main crafts. The first and foremost is digital design. This involves a huge amount of time tied to a computer and a graphics tablet. A graphics tablet is a wonderful invention that allows you to draw straight into a computer program with a pen, rather than scanning from paper or struggling with an unwieldy mouse. I work almost exclusively in Photoshop, though I am trained in Illustrator and GIMP I just feel most comfortable in Photoshop.

Some of my designs have been created for one specific product, such as a calendar, tattoo or magazine cover, whilst others are created for the sheer joy of it and are subsequently translated into greeting cards and prints.

My second craft is spinning yarn. I find the process very relaxing and rewarding as yarn can be surprisingly artistic and complex. Whilst I own a spinning wheel I often prefer to spin with a rather low tech drop spindle as its quieter and easier to transport. As I only spin art yarn, the lengths and the weights of the product can vary widely from piece to piece and each piece is completely unique and cannot be repeated. This is a huge contrast for me creatively from the digital art which can be printed and duplicated ad infinitum.

Passiflora yarn

Rose tag stitch set

Made for you, with love

  • Where do you sell your products, and how do you promote your work?

Currently most of my sales are through my DeviantArt website, though I have recently set up an Etsy shop.

The benefit of DeviantArt is that the art is printed on demand and shipped directly from the printer to the buyer. As DeviantArt is primarily an art site I have received a number of commissions as a result of customers using their search functions to find specific types of artist. The wider DeviantArt community system also makes it easier to find artists to collaborate with and provides a wide range of contests and challenges that can bring your work to a wider audience.

I have had a stall at a Craft Candy fair on two occasions now and received my most exciting commission to date as a result of my art being displayed there. In October 2009 I was fortunate enough to be asked to create the cover for issue 2 of Irregular Magazine.

Irregular Magazine artwork

I am extremely fortunate to have my work displayed at the Davenport and Winkleperry Art Gallery in Pittsboro, North Carolina. This is one of the major advantages of working digitally – I can paint work here, and have it printed at a gallery on the other side of the Atlantic in minutes rather than waiting weeks for shipping.

  • So are you currently available for commissions?

I’m happy to consider any kind of commission, from custom portraits and tattoos, to advertisements and logo design.

I work on a sliding scale of basic prices depending on the complexity of the finished piece. Something like a small tattoo design can cost very little, whilst a 4 foot by 6 foot hugely complex art nouveau piece can cost a great deal more. My current commission prices are outlined on my website, but I am also open to trades and collaborations.

This piece, ‘Iola’, (see below) was created for a friends wedding, the bride is a fellow fan of Alphonse Mucha, so I used his style, whilst the gladioli in the girls hand is a symbol of the groom’s love of The Smiths/Morrissey. All the other flowers were specifically chosen for their meaning in relation to the bridal bouquets.

Iola

  • Do you work from home or do you have a studio? What is your work space like?

I have two work spaces in my home. The first is my desk in the living room, this holds my iMac, scanner, graphics tablet, a massive collection of art magazines and stock discs, and usually an excessive number of mugs and chocolate wrappers. I spend at least 3 hours a day here, and when I’m on a creative roll I can be staring at this screen for 14 hours or more. As such, I try to keep it tidy enough to work, but when I’m concentrating on the art the mess becomes invisible.

My second workspace is my custom built craft room. It was the first room I decorated when we moved into this house, the walls are a lurid mix of hot pink and brilliant aqua with lots of functional white storage and work surfaces. This is a huge contrast to the rest of our home, which is rather darker and more gothic. However I adore the energising feel of this space, it is perfect for sewing, spinning and all the other noisy or messy art processes. Also its much easier to find wayward pins on white surfaces than it is on black!

Whilst I like the idea of having a studio elsewhere I prefer to be able to work and spend time with my partner at the same time. Also I tend to get inspired at 2am in the morning, and I prefer not to have to travel far to translate that inspiration into reality.

Craft room

  • Who or what inspires you, and how does this come through in your work?

Artistically, the majority of my work is inspired by the work of Alphonse Mucha and the wider Art Nouveau movement. My work has always been reliant on linework for its structure, and as I’ve progressed, the combination of Steampunk and Art Nouveau has been a natural one. I’ve always admired his use of framing devices and flowing fabrics. Art Nouveau also represented a move towards advertising as a form of artist expression and the concept that one could have as much selling impact with images as with words. This is a concept I’ve experimented with, as in this poster I created for the Clockwork Cabaret radio show www.clockworkcabaret.com

Clockwork Cabaret

In terms of the content, my art is frequently inspired by music, literature, film and television. In my gallery you’ll find pieces inspired by The War of the Worlds, Blade Runner, Doctor Who, the author Neil Gaiman and the music of Abney Park to name but a few.

This set of examples (below) shows a selection of works inspired by musicals – a crocheted version of the evil Audrey II plant from Little Shop of Horrors, a yarn inspired by Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street and a poster created to advertise a live version of REPO! The Genetic Opera.

Musical Inspirations

  • Which of your contemporaries do you admire?

Dr Geof Banyard, the genius behind the Fetishman comicbooks and a glorious range of deviously steampunk designs at the islandofdoctorgeof.co.uk, many of which feature squid, tea or zeppelins, sometimes all in the same image. If I could work with even 50% of Geof’s wit, range and teainess I’d be 50% more successful! *WARNING: THESE MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR UNDER 18s*!

Ida Mary Walker Larsen, a hugely talented digital manipulator in her own right, Ida is one of my preferred sources of stock photography. The amount of work that she puts into the costumes and poses results in source images of amazing quality. A number of my images have been inspired directly by her stock.

Steph Gorin, who sells spinning supplies as Loop, is the reason I spin at all, her beautiful spinning batts are artworks in their own right. Sometimes I feel guilty turning these wonderful creations into yarn, they’re almost too good to use.

  • What is your favourite craft item that you have made and sold?

It’s hard to choose a favorite but the piece I’m currently most proud of is “The Frost Fairy” which was created as my 2008 Christmas/Yule/Winter Holiday greetings card.

Frost Fairy

  • And what’s your favourite hand crafted item that you’ve bought?

It’s hard to choose a favorite item, but I’d have to say the custom monkey made by Siansburys is my current favorite. I’d wanted a custom monkey for a long time and this one is absolutely perfect. He’s based on Alan Cumming’s character Glitch in the Sci-Fi Channel series Tin Man, which is a retelling of the Wizard of Oz. The amount of detail on this monkey is amazing, from the stitching on the waistcoat and the tears in his jacket, to the curled wool dreadlocks and perfect handstitched felt zipper on his head. I’d love to have a shelf full of monkeys!

Glitch Monkey, handcrafted by Siansburys

  • What do you love about belonging to Craft Candy, and how do you feel you have benefitted from being a member of the group?

I originally found Craft Candy via Ravelry, the knitting website and I volunteered to join the group without knowing too much about it. I was hooked from the first meeting, the other members of the group create a wonderful atmosphere and it’s so easy to relax.

Vyctoria on her stall at the Craft Candy fair in March 2009

Vyctoria's stall at

I’ve attended a few of the workshops and there is always a friendly face to chat with whilst you craft. So far I’ve had a stall at two of the craft fairs and I’ve always done my best to help out on the welcome desk at the other fairs.

Vyctoria, with Kati, on the welcome desk, at Candy Floss 2010

As the overall style of the group is very different to my own, I created this logo (below) based on Victorian candy tins last year, so I can advertise the group on my website without compromising the aesthetics.

Craft Candy tin - alternative Craft Candy logo

  • Finally, what are your plans for the future?

I want to create art that helps people in some way, and as I already do a lot of work for charity, I’d love to find away to combine the two. For the last few years I’ve been involved in art contests in aid of Lupus research, and recently I designed a logo for LARP-AID, a group that runs live-action roleplay events in aid of charity. I’d love the opportunity to do more like that.

Vyctoria's work for Lupus research

  • Thank you for chatting Vyctoria, it’s been good to find out more about your work!

Phantoms Siren in York, by Margrethe Aas Johnsen