Posts Tagged ‘designer’

Quick Four with Map 29

28
May

Map 29 in.cube8r designer purses

Is there a particular theme, style or ethic behind your current collection?
Map 29 happened quite by accident.  I’ve always loved maps and am quite nostalgic about my childhood and where I lived.  A childhood friend had a significant birthday  and I wanted to give her something memorable and nostalgic.  I made her a map purse of where we grew up on one side and where she lives now on the other.  She loved it and showed it to her friends who loved  the concept.  I made purses for a few different people and decided to seek permission from Melways  to use the maps.

Have you always been into making stuff?
I am a late blooming designer and crafter with no formal training but a great passion for making and buying quirky, high quality handmade goods. I learnt to knit, crochet and embroider at an early age but could never use a sewing machine, in fact avoided it at all costs.

What are your future plans for your label?
I’d like to grow my label gradually and expand into the tourist sector.  Map 29 isn’t only about making money but about giving back too.  I try to donate a percentage of my profits to a charity of my choice each month.

Any advice for others wanting to follow a creative career?
Go for it!  You never know where it will lead you.

sakki design

27
Apr

Tina creates clothing, bags and hats in her sewing room. It’s in this room, surrounded by fabric, buttons and her Great Dane Gordon, that she designs and makes her collection of unique garments for Sakki Design, her own business. These garments, inspired by and including Japanese obi, are amazing to look at and touch, and are also wonderfully made. The obi Tina uses sometimes have little imperfections, but she loves it; she believes it often makes the textile more beautiful. Tina’s favourite part of her job is when her creation has made someone feel especially wonderful about themselves.

Christina McDonald
0411109780
sakki@ozemail.com.au

scrappycards

27
Apr

scrappycards is a combination of the name of a loved family dog, scrappy the boxer who lived for 14 years. she liked a good scrap, in every sense of the word. a member of scrappy’s family is a compulsive hoarder of stationery and cards, wrapping paper, programs and other bits and pieces. put the two together, and you get every-one-an-original cards, and the lovely old dog memorialised.

e scrappycards@bigpond.com
p  03 9380 9601

shabana jacobson

27
Apr

Shabana has created several different lines of jewellery titled “Wearable Art” for the simple fact that each piece has been specially handcrafted and created into a one-off mini artwork for you to wear in the form of necklaces, earrings and brooches.  Each piece of jewellery has been created by shabana in her Melbourne studio using techniques she taught herself and some gained from her studies of visual arts, fine arts in Brisbane in 2002. Shabana makes everything from start to finish with her jewellery, from  rolling out the porcelain and firing it herself, to cutting the metal pieces, creating the images and embedding them in resin and all the final touches to bring them to the public herself.

Shabana Jacobson
ph: 0405 044 142
www.shabanajacobson.com
info@shabanajacobson.com

tobye

27
Apr

Toby Eagle is a Sydney based Gold and Silver smith who graduated from ANU School of Arts and designs and hand crafts the TobyE jewellery range.
Her collections have developed through her fascination of various cultures and historic movements as well as from the organic shapes found in her coastal environment.
All Jewellery is nickel free and made with quality materials specifically for people with sensitive skin types. Toby works predominately with sterling silver, stainless steel and precious stones.

www.tobye.com.au
sales@tobye.com.au

Hand.Hook.Yarn

2
Mar

hand hook yarn aqua cropped hand hook yarn bern hand hook yarn carlahand hook yarn drum mustard hand hook yarn white col hand hook yarn agg

Is there a particular theme, style or ethic behind your current collection?
My collars are inspired by vintage fashion, and it shows, iv been going to op shops since i was a little tacker with mum and i dont think i’ll ever stop. It’s when im happiest going through racks of random stuff and the smell, it’s like a treasure hunt. I think it’s taught me to really appreciate the styles of old, the thought and skill that goes into garments, and quality of materials, and above all it’s just an aesthetic i resonate with the most.

How long has your label been an ongoing project for you?
I came up with the label early last winter, after thinking about it for a while it just came to me. Hand Hook Yarn seemed so fitting, it describes the organic process of what i do, my hand controls the hook which weaves the yarn. It’s all i need and i can do it anywhere, sometimes i jump on the train and crochet to the end of the line and back, or i go to the park, it’s better than staying home.

Who taught you how to crochet?
In 2006 i volunteered in a program which was based in a remote aboriginal community called Papunya, another volunteer ‘Zowie’ was crocheting on the bus as we headed out from Alice, it looked interesting and i asked her to teach me. I really enjoyed it and i think being a knitter had helped me understand the concept, i picked it up pretty easily and after a while i started to experiment and come up with my own designs.

Tell us a bit about your favorite piece, if you can pick one as they’re all so adorable!
My collars are my baby’s now, since i started them i haven’t paid much attention to any other projects, i like them because they’re smaller and more interesting, i don’t get bored because i can constantly challenge myself with formulating new designs.

What are your future plans for your label?
i have no idea! its crazy and exiting and so satisfying to have my talents recognized. I take everyday as it comes, but i’d be lying if i said it wasn’t the unlimited dream to make a living off my art, i know a lot of people agree with me on that one.

Any advice for others wanting to follow a creative career?
Do it! don’t delay, don’t procrastinate, make a plan, break it up into small achievable tasks and do one of them right away. It feels good.