Threadbare

My embroidery obsession is waning. I don’t think I’ll ever give it up, but I’m not producing with the intensity I was a few weeks ago. However I have found a few great sources for supplies I thought I’d share with you! First up, I found a craft supply store—Lynn’s—that’s not only locally owned, but it also has a better selection than any chain store in my area. Lynn’s has complete collections from three or four different embroidery floss brands, plus framing supplies, paints, paper, specialty writing utensils and many other odds and ends that are often difficult to find—including the mini easel pictured below, which is a great way to display smaller embroidery hoops!

Before I stumbled across a local venue, I turned to the internet. I ordered bulk hoops from Create for Less so I don’t have to run to the store every time I finish a piece. I purchased three different sizes and I’m excited for the variety they offer!

Hanging by a thread

As promised, here are my experiments in embroidery! I started by finishing a project I had started last winter… beleive it or not those satin stitches took FOREVER. I do love the results and have proudly listed it in my second etsy shop, although I’d be happy to keep it too! My first brand new design began with a monogram. I don’t think it was quite as successful, so I’m going to try the idea with a different stitch next.

But while I was still in love with French knots, I tried a few more things. Though I’ve embroidered before, I couldn’t remember how to do them (I found a great tutorial here!), and once I figured it out I was hooked! I started with my own color experiment in red.

Next up: combining those French knots with other stitches in a less abstract design. I’ve always loved poppies and I thought their black centers would be a fun way to work in texture to a piece. Red Poppy hoop available here! Stay tuned… I’m just waiting on more hoops to arrive in the mail and I’ll show you all what else I’ve been working on!

Vickangaroo

Greetings from the strange and wonderful creatures that populate The Vickangaroo Toy Company! I first fell in love with these little guys because of their animated faces—and upon closer inspection realized they really are miniature works of art. Aside from their whimsical and ever-appealing strangeness, each one has its own story—as told through the eyes of fictional explorer Professor Morongo Faust.

This evening we sit down with Victor Huang to talk about creativity, being unique and how he molds fabric into friends.

Tell us about your work—why do you create what you do?
I am a toymaker attempting to fill the world with as much nonsense as possible. I create a variety of toys that range from bunnies and crabs to larger, stranger monsters with more legs or teeth than they actually need.

Toys have a tremendous purpose and importance in the world. Whether they are manufactured and sold by the millions or entirely unique, ultimately the purpose of a toy is imbued by its owner not it’s creator. They are meant to be played with. The moment a toy is unwrapped and taken from its packaging it has the opportunity to fulfill any great number of roles from companion to accomplice or confidant to protector. They are an invitation accepted by a significant number of children, or those simply young at heart, to imagine, discover and create.

I am delighted and honored to be a contributor in that experience.

I’m also a printmaker, generally utilizing screen printing, with most of my print work focusing on unusual creatures and narratives involving robots.

Tell us about your process—start to finish.
In November of 2007, I decided that I wanted to make my own toys. I considered the cost of materials and the complicated processes involved for finishing plastic or wooden toys, and ultimately settled on utilizing spare fabric and thread. I had to teach myself how to sew and like most skills in life it required practice and patience, so my first “toy” was an uneven mess of a rectangle, made of orange cotton and stuffed with newspaper.

I generally keep a drawing pad on hand so that I might doodle as much as possible, of course a stack of napkins or a takeout menu would also suffice. Doodling is undoubtedly the greatest practice a person could adopt in the pursuit of creativity. Usually I’ll sketch a fairly simple form, fill it with teeth and add any number of ambiguous limbs. Not every idea is new or very different from that one that precedes it, however if a drawing begins to repeat itself often enough I tend to take that as a sign that it wants be made.

Eventually the work has to begin with making patterns, which I’ve discovered requires a fair grasp of geometry. Understanding the different ways that different shapes can be built is a great boon in creating more challenging and stranger creatures.

The fabric is cut based on the pattern. The pieces are sewn together. The toy is stuffed. I find it delightful that my plans for a toy can be torn asunder in that final step. I may understand the geometry of the parts of the monster, but the stuffing pulls and stretches and until I cut the final knot of the final closing stitch, I remain unsure but optimistic of the result.

What type of environment stimulates your creativity?
I have a cat and prefer to keep him separate from my work, so I’m holed up in a small pleasant room in the basement with half of a ping pong table to work on. It’s nice to be able to wake up in the morning and get started in the sewing room. It’s comfortable, well lit and all the necessary materials are within reach; it’s all I need to make toys. Although inspiration for work can strike anywhere!

What inspires you?
Good Golly, I can hardly fathom what my inspirations are. There are certainly general inspirations such as my own childhood toys, animated films, dinosaurs, octopuses, robots and I sincerely doubt there’s an end to that list. However, I do love discovering new toymakers and artists. Being knowledgeable of what others are creating helps me in challenging myself and creating more and more unique items.

What is your greatest challenge?
While I do have a work space a hallway away, I find that working from home can be somewhat daunting. Honestly, my greatest challenge in being a toymaker is actually just sitting down and getting started. Even with stacks of doodles and unfinished patterns craving to come into existence, I’m quite easily distracted by the idea of lunch or scouring Netflix for a good movie or TV show to play in the background while I consider the possibility of getting started on my work. I think it takes a particular strength of character to work from home; a trait I’m still developing.

How has your work evolved?
I believe it is important to constantly challenge yourself. My sewing work began as two dimensional plushes where the back and front are roughly the same shape. I then moved onto three dimensional plushes; creating cubes and spheres keeping the details while trying to grasp working on creating geometric shapes in fabric. Ultimately I found myself adding teeth, lips and tentacles searching and refining my own style of toymaking. I still am of course! There’s always room for improvement and always more opportunities to evolve. I actually find that creating smaller, simpler toys is very difficult. It’s much more of a process to create a tiny cute toy, that still feels unique.

Tell us about your etsy business.
Honestly, I don’t consider myself much of a business person. I started selling my toys at the end of 2007, after I had decided that my toys were worth selling. Way back when, (four years have already passed by?!) Etsy while certainly sizeable was still somewhat unknown and outside of Ebay, my selling options were fairly limited.

I remember the very “reasonable” prices that I originally set for my toys and I remember the gradual increases over time as I began to take into account how much work would go into some toys. Of course I had my share of mistakes, which unfortunately I think others have had to experience as well. I’d rather not go into specifics, although it is certainly wise advice to make sure the customer’s Paypal shipping address and listed Etsy address match before sending out a delivery.
Selling on Etsy is not my full time job; I have a number of other long term projects that require as much of a time investment as my toys. Since I’ve started selling on Etsy I’ve had a few long stretches where my shop would be completely empty; not the best business practice!

What advice do you have for new etsians?
New Etsians of the world! Don’t expect that because you’ve opened your doors that the sales will flood in. Share your work with the world, but be cautious, patient and prepared for mistakes. Challenge yourselves and offer a product, that doesn’t just feel like a rehash of a trendy object but something that you’d be willing to buy yourself. It can be difficult to be found on Etsy, with so many other sellers seemingly pushing your products to furthest, darkest recesses of the Etsy search pages. Persevere! Keep creating and listing new work and be hopeful.

Where can readers find your work?
Currently, my work is only for sale on Etsy however I am quite optimistic about this new year and selling in other venues, most likely in and around Chicago. My website, www.vickangaroo.com, is also in progress (has been for a while) but I foresee a particularly exciting event occurring when it’s ready. I’m also working on a mailing list: join by emailing “mailinglist@vickangaroo.com” with “mailing list” in the subject line.

Bo Betsy

As I mentioned, I have a new obsession. Bo Betsy was one of my original inspiration artists in my last post, but I decided to ask her for an interview instead! Cath has quite the variety of work in her etsy shop, but my favorite by far are the marine/floral/abstract pieces in the most fantastic color combinations.

Tell us about your work—why do you create what you do?
I embroider because I can’t stop. I don’t know that there has ever been something I so loved to do that I didn’t want to put it down. Stitching is certainly like that for me. There’s something wonderful about hand stitching… each slow, purposeful stitch adds up to something lasting and beautiful.

What are some of your first memories of the craft?
I first learned to embroider in junior high home economics class. I loved it. My mom recently found an embroidery I did back then—of an easter egg. A sort of sampler with lots of different stitches and colors. Very similar to the colors and variation i use now! When the class ended, so did my embroidery until five years ago, when my baby daughter’s pink sweater with gorgeously bold hand embroidered flowers inspired me to pick it up again.

Tell us about your process—start to finish.
I have been using mainly new fabrics in colors I love for my hoops, which are my current obsession. I’ve also discovered the amazing stash of scrap pool table felt my dad has at the pool hall he has owned for nearly fifty years. It’s 80% wool, super dense, and i’ve got loads of it now in the most beautiful colors—I love the stuff!

Typically, my only “plan” is a color scheme (and maybe a new stitch I want to try out)… I’ll pick the fabric or felt and a few floss colors I love together. Often, i’ll start with a buttonhole stitch flower (I don’t know when I’ll tire of them—I know I will eventually, but for now I’m in love) then embellish it with unique stitches and colorful goodness.

Where do you work?
My happy place is generally on the couch next to the ott-light lamp in our cozy country bungalow. I just have to ignore the voices from the kitchen and laundry area, telling me things are piling up… I’m pretty good at that.

How has your work evolved?
My first beloved project was embroidering one of my son’s drawings onto a handkerchief for father’s day. I’ve stitched a ton of sublime stitching and Aunt Martha patterns and wonderful vintage patterns I’ve found online. I started doing monograms and words on handkerchiefs and pillowcases and have stitched up tons of custom wedding hankies. The amazing Sandy Mastroni, a Connecticut artist who is also on etsy, has allowed me to recreate some of her art in embroidery, which is a joy. I began doing custom portraits of children and babies—and even stitched the faces of three adult siblings onto a duvet cover for their parent’s 50th anniversary.

Something changed in me last spring, and I started going in a new direction. My etsy shop has been directed largely by requests from customers, and I suddenly craved creating and experimenting with stitches in new ways. Most of my work up until this point has been prettying up something functional – pillowcases, handkerchiefs, tea towels, underwear… My current hoops are just decoration. Dare i say “art”?

What is your greatest challenge?
Learning to smile and say thank you when someone compliments my work—instead of rolling my eyes.

What inspires you?
Mmmmm…. Color. I notice color combinations in movie scenes, magazines, fabrics, vintage children’s books—all around me—and incorporate them into my embroidery.

A few embroidery artists have also been hugely inspirational to me. I tend to be a perfectionist in my stitching, which has it’s place, but Aimee Ray’s book Doodle Stitching got me to realize that it’s the imperfect, organic sorts of designs and lines that are the most fun for me to look at. I remind myself of that, and try to stitch in some wonky-ness.

And Carla Madrigal’s amazing stitching… Who could not love it? The stitches, the colors—that is what is the art. Not some design or outline she stitches along. It is gorgeous and freeform and fantastic.

Tell us about your etsy business.
I first happened upon etsy at a crafty wonderland christmas show in Portland. Several of the business cards I collected took me to etsy shops. I’d never known there was a site like etsy out there—and it got the wheels turning. The next May (2008), I opened my etsy shop. I’ll have had bo betsy open for four years in May. It’s changed so much in that time—i’m excited to see what the coming years will bring!

What advice do you have for new etsians?
If your art/craft allows, I would suggest offering custom work. The custom work I’ve done was invaluable for building sales, relationships, and glowing feedback. Working with people to create what they want gives you the awesome chance to make people happy—and let your work and customer service really shine.
I also tell customers that I’d love to have their feedback in the shop after they receive their order… And I always leave feedback for them quickly after the sale, as opposed to waiting for them to leave feedback first.

Where can readers find your work?
A wonderful place called The Marketplace at Rain Dance Ranch, here in Newberg wine country, is carrying my embroidered hoops. And now, an amazing gallery called knack has my hoops. You can find knack nestled into the charming Multnomah Village of southwest Portland.

I should also say that my facebook page is a nifty way to keep in touch with the friends I’ve made through bo betsy. I’d love to see more people there!

An old soul

My sisters like to call me an old soul. I wouldn’t define my style as retro by any standards, but I do like old things: Bess, my press, old houses, repurposed furniture, and lately, heirloom crafts. In the last couple weeks, I’ve rediscovered my love for embroidery. I’m not going to lie to you—it’s putsy and incredibly slow, but there’s something lovely about single strands of glossy thread laying just right against a fabric. Plus, I’ve been trying to pare down the amount of stuff I own—and this is the perfect thing to create so as not to accumulate even more!

This morning I thought I’d share a few of the embroiderers who are inspiring me—enjoy, and look for new work from yours truly soon!

If I’ve said it once, I’ve said it a thousand times: I’m a typography nut. Typography-inspired embroidery has been my latest project… and while I’m still working out the kinks, I love it! Look for new work in the shop soon, otherwise I found the examples above on Pinterest!

I always admire artists who can create something truly abstract, as that’s something I struggle with. I beleive art has to be made with purpose in order to be art, so I have a difficult time just working with pattern or texture and no subject. I love this simple color progression from Sometimes I Swirl. I say simple because the design is clean and modern and the stitch is repetitive—but after my recent projects, I know this took a lot of work!

There’s something weird and wonderful about a technical drawing reproduced in thread—or any unexpected medium really. Why wouldn’t you want a 9 inch illustration of a Buckminster Fuller Dymaxion Car on your wall? I can’t think of a single reason.

Last but not least, something a little more traditional. I love simple and clean traditional motifs—they always look modern but can work in with any decor style. This miniature version in the form of a brooch by Skrynka is a great example. I told you I was an old soul!

And finally, my own embroidered wallhanging was included in several treasuries not too long ago. Thanks to Lotus and Janneke Hoekstra for the inclusions!