Wednesday, 27 May 2015

Inspiration round up: Five inspiring creative podcasts


 
 
So I know I am way behind with my project with week three of my 52 of millinery project. I have found myself a bit stuck of ideas  after the first two weeks but am determined to get two pieces  created and posted by the end of the week so I don't fall to far behind. In the mean time I thought I would chare a new inspiration post with you.

Now I know it's been a couple of months since I did an inspiration round up but this weeks round up is focussing on just one inspiring thing rather than a varied few. This weeks round up is focusing on some of the inspiring podcasts I've been listening too lately.  



Before Christmas I started listening to the Unmistakable Creative podcast that I mentioned here . Since I enjoyed it so much I have been having a  hunt to find other podcasts that I can listen too while I work and provide me with insights and inspiration that I can draw from. It's a great way to soak up information and be engrossed in something interesting whilst doing other tasks especially when I'm at home with only the cats for company!

 Here are five others that I have enjoyed listening too over the last few months:


1, Grown-Up-Gigs podcast by Michele Ward

This podcast started life as a feature on Michelle's Blog over on whenIgrowupcoach.com, then it was a spreecast web chat  and in this last incantation it is a bi-weekly podcast where she interviews people who have had really inspirational passionate careers. What I really love about this podcast is that it shows how varied that journey can be and how  people can start their passionate career at any time in their life. I always find Michelle's work super inspiring and I love listening to her interact with her guests.

Fave episode so far: Michelle's interview with collaborator Tiffany Han



2. Raise Your Hand, Say Yes by Tiffany Han

I came across this podcast when Tiffany interviewed Michelle Ward ( can you see a trend arising here? ) for one of her shows. Tiffany's podcasts are a mixture of interview's with creative people and episodes of her sharing her own personal insights into pursuing creative projects. I love the way a central theme I have drawn from Tiffany's episodes are how the best way to get going on a project and find out if it will work is just to start it. ( sounds way simpler than it really feels!) Tiffany has a really relaxed feel to her podcasts and it always makes me feel like I'm just sharing a conversation with really inspiring people.

Fave Episode so far: Tiffany's interview with Jen Hewett

3. Creative & Thrive by Jess Van Den

Jess's podcast is relatively new but run along side her great blog sharing an insight, advise and knowledge of how to set up and run a successful craft business. Jess's own story is really interesting and she has a wealth of knowledge of how to set up a small creative business and in particular running a shop on Etsy.
 
Fave episode so far: Episode 6: Jess's Q&A
 
 
 
 
 
4. The Lively Show by Jess Lively

  I've only been listening to Jess's show for the last few weeks and it quickly became one of my firm favourites. I love the variety of people she interviews and the range of advice given from how to build a passive income for your business to  career tips from a NASA Aerospace engineer. Jess comes across as so positive, bright and open that all the episodes I have come across have been a joy to listen to.
                                                        
         Fave episode so far : Jess's interview with Mimi Ikonn
 
 
5.  Can I Park Here? by Nache & Astral
 
 
 Can I park Here? is my most recent find in the podcast world. Set up by Nache and Astral of Find a Fashion truck their  weekly podcasts are an insight into starting a business have great topics like "Everything can be found by googling it" or the slightly more sombre " Battling Anxiety and depression whilst trying to build a business. I think there fresh, chatty and honest approach will certainly land this one as one of my firm favourites. Also  they have introduced me to the fantastic idea of a  Fashion Truck ( a mobile boutique fun from a converted vehicle) I have images of a Millinery filed VW camper van already
 
Fave episode so far: Episode 7 -The ladies chat to Jason  Caston about success and growing your business
 
Right well that's my top five podcasts at the mo- I'm sure there are a ton that I have yet to come across so I'll keep you updated on any others I find
 
Before I dash off here are a couple of non creative podcasts I love too
 
health and well being - The Jillian Michaels show- I find Jillian's podcast  really funny but also very informative
 
Running -  Jog Tunes - this is a great podcast that matches the length of time  and speed that you want to run with a variety of songs to help you get through your run- I've just started training for a half marathon and I know this will be super helpful
 
Meditation -The meditation podcast- this is a series of different podcasts to help you build a meditation practice. I  often go through phases of wanting to meditate and these podcasts are really good to assist this as otherwise I just end up going to sleep !!
 

Wednesday, 13 May 2015

52 weeks of millinery - Week 2

 
 
So on to my second week of my 52 week millinery project and this week I have created this blue felted button fascinator.
 
A couple of months ago I had a serious liberty fabric craving and  treated my self to  a few small pieces off ebay. The piece that I have used on this fascinator is called Strawberry Thief and was originally a print created in 1883 by William Morris.
 
 
I adore bird motifs and knew that I would be able to create something lovely from this fabric.
 
The hat block I used to create this piece is pretty much my favourite hat block at the moment , it's so simple yet versatile and it creates a style of hat which is really wearable.
 
 
 
Well I couldn't let Margo the Poupee have all the fun of modelling the hat so here is a picture of me modelling the end result too.
 
 
Sorry for the terrible selfie, I usually try to avoid taking them all costs but couldn't help myself on this occasion. I really think the best part about making a hat is when you get to try the end result on!
 
Overall I'm pleased with this piece, there are definitely design elements I would do differently and I would like to use a better background colour or texture on the felt. Well I've got 50 more weeks to experiment on so I'm sure designs will develop as time goes on. xx
 
 

Tuesday, 5 May 2015

52 weeks of millinery - A new project!


Hello my lovelies, Hope you all had a super bank holiday weekend.

I'm excited to announce last week I started a brand new personal project. To create a new hat or head piece ever week  for the next 52 weeks ( yep a whole year ) and share pictures of it each week here on the blog.

Now the idea came to me when I listened to an episode of Tiffany Hann's podcast - Raise Your Hand. Say Yes with Jen Hewett and they talked about Jen's project 52 weeks of printmaking. It really captured my imagination and gave me a solution to tackle one of my aims at the moment - how to consistently create more hats or headpieces and stretch my skills millinery.
I kept thinking about this project a for a few weeks, trying to decide if I could really achieve creating and posting a completely new hat or head piece each week on top of  my costume work commitments and my day job, but the idea just wouldn't budge. So on my birthday on 22nd April I decided that my birthday present to myself would be to commit to starting this project the very next week.

So here we are at week one and I have gone back to an idea that has been buzzing around my head for months






I posted about my love for pompom trimmed millinery here and since then I have been meaning to  create my very own creation pompom fascinator and so last week I made the time to get down and do it.








It was really inexpensive to make, I used sinamay I had left over from some millinery projects I worked on before Christmas and the wool I had picked up months ago just because I liked the colours.
Over all I'm pleased with my start, I wasn't a particularly ambitions project but it was fun and it feels good to have realised an idea that I had been thinking of for such a long time.

Anyway it's now time to get cracking on this weeks millinery project, as well as planning out some other posts that will be coming up soon,  oh, and I'm starting working on one of the productions for our local theatre festival this week too, so it's going to be a busy one! Hope you all have a great week xxx

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Historic Hat Wearers - Evelyn Tripp


image source: http://womeninblackandwhite.com
So whilst on one of my recent quest to find new treasure troves of  millinery inspiration I came across this image of Evelyn Tripp shot by Irvine Penn. Now I’m not sure why I had never heard of Evelyn Tripp before but this image grabbed my attention not only because of the wonderful hat Evelyn wore but because her features were so beautifully defined.
image source: http://alexandramodels50.tumblr.com/
 On further rummaging around the internet I realised I had come across a historically great hat wearer!
image source: pleasurephotoroom.wordpress.com


image source: http://www.liveinternet.ru/users/bo4kameda
I know that these beautiful vintage magazine images of Evelyn Tripp wearing an array of gorgeous  swoon worthy clothes will keep me inspired for hours so I just wanted to share a few of my favourites with you.

image source: http://myvintagevogue.com

image source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/53035820@N02/sets/72157624973974153/with/7350955002/

I think what makes the images appeal to me so much is the easy nature in which Evelyn Tripp wore hats. They seem so natural on her. Nowadays so many people say that they don’t feel they can wear a hat and many more just leave them for special occasions and events I love finding images of hat wearers past and present that wear hats effortlessly and feel confident in doing so whatever the occasion.  

image source :https://www.flickr.com/photos/53035820@N02/sets/72157624973974153/with/7350955002/
image source: http://myvintagevogue.com

 I found so many other images of Evelyn that i couldn't share them all here, it amazed me to see the breadth of publications and work that Evelyn did, from being shot by world famous photographers  and appearing on the cover of Vogue to modelling for  sewing and knitting patterns. Somehow I can't see the likes of Kate Moss or Jourdan Dunn doing the same these days.
Anyway I hope you all enjoyed my finds. I'm thinking of putting together a pinterst board of all my other lovely images I found on my search, so I'll post the link if I do.
Have a great week xxx

Tuesday, 10 March 2015

More Magpie Musings



Hello my lovelies, Just thought I would give you all a sneaky peak at some of the work that I've been doing over the last couple of days.

As I mentioned yesterday I have been realy inspired by the Magpies visting my garden at the moment, and thought I would share some of my sketchbook pages and work in progress that I had been creating from this.

The fascinator is very much a work in progress as I'm still adding beads to the sinamay base and the other embroidered Magpie is probably going to end up as either a necklace or on a head band. 


I'm just playing around with combining patterned fabric with playful motifs and beaded embroidery with these pieces and have a few others ( although not magpie related) in the pipeline. I think the techniques still need a bit of envelopment at the moment but I'll keep on playing with it until I get it just right.Let me know what you think, if anyone knows any great beading or embroidery resources out their please let me know in the comments because I could definitely do with a bit of guidance for techniques xxx 

Monday, 9 March 2015

Inspiration round up - February 2015

 
Hello my lovelies, just wanted to give you all a little glimpse of the thinks that have been inspiring me last month.  February whizzed by, and I can't believe we are nearly 10 days into this month already.

[page image]
image source digicoll.library.wisc.edu

1. Vintage millinery books and patterns, oh gosh if I could only get a time machine and travel back to bygone ages and stock up on the lovely manuals and guides written  about making the hat styles of time I would, luckily the internet has come to help me with my quest instead. I have found that online holds a pretty good source of  free pdf copies of old millinery books. Also Amazon, Etsy and Ebay all have stockists that sell reprints and cd's of others at reasonable prices. At the moment I'm  keeping myself happy by working my way though my copy of Millinery for Every Woman ( an Edwardian hat making guide that I got off Amazon a few years ago  and How to make and trim your own hats by Vee Walker Powell which you can access for free here .
A magpie
image source Getty via Telegraph online


 
2. Magpies- One for sorrow, two for joy... I know magpies are a somewhat controversial bird but I love them, yes I know they are a bit of a bully in the  bird yard and are very noisy but I can't help it I love their cheekiness and bright look. We have a few that come and visit our garden ( and in summer months chatter away at any time day or night) and lately I have been attempting to use them as a source of inspiration for some accessory designs.


image source unmistakablecreative.com

3- Unmistakable Creative podcasts.- I cam across these podcasts late last year when I was watching April Bowles Olin's interview for Michelle Ward's Grown up gigs series ( which was also super inspiring too but I digress). I can't quite get over the amount of content that the creator Srini Rao has produced for this project. There are over 400 episodes available and although I have only listened a fraction of these I can honestly say that I have found something truly inspiring in each of them.

Well that's pretty much it for now, hope everyone's week has started well and that you've enjoyed this sneaky peak at what I've been inspired by recently.


Sunday, 1 February 2015

Re-Creating my workspace- Part 1

 
 

So for some time now I've been meaning to have a bit of a workspace revamp- it's always on my to do list but one of those things that I never get down to doing. So as we are now a month into the new year I decided that it was the about time I took the plunge and get on with having a look at my workspace and see how can  improve it..

I'd also been meaning to write about my workspace in ages and in recent times as you may have seen on my Instagram feed it's got the point where my workspace has actually been causing me a bit of bother.

 
This was the image I posted a few weeks before Christmas and lets be honest it's not exactly a sight for sore eyes.

I set up my workspace in it's current format when I started attending KCC college to study millinery, for ages it worked really well and I loved working in the space. However as time has gone on, my projects have grown bigger and my workspace has been getting more and more messy until now I can safely say that it has been in a state of messyness more often than its tidy

Also since switching from a full time day job to part time, in march last year, I have been spending a lot more time working at my desk and think that it's high time it gets a bit of remodelling as my needs have changed quite a bit since I set it up back in those college days.

So my first step has been to seek out some inspiration from other creative people's workspaces and use this as a starting point to think about what improvements I can make. Here are a few of my faves:

image source: bloodandchampagne.com via pinterest

I love the mix of inspiring objects, books and technology of this space and could really use some shelves like these above my desk to clear some more desk space.

image source:fabricpaperglue via pinterest
 
This is such a fab space saving idea, I love the way everything useful is close to hand and then the more visual items like the plant and clock are further up. Although I do wonder if I would remember to water the plants way up there, maybe I could use it to keep Cacti.

image source: everythingetsy.com
 
This is a great space, if only I had a whole  to use, but I love the full wall corkboard and the trolley used for holding books and materials and the ladder for hanging fabrics or prints to dry.
 

 
How I would love such a clutter free space, alas I know it will never happen, I am a clutter monkey by nature. I love the idea of having an all round colour scheme though. Also keeping a simple mood board on my desk, for the project I was working on at the time, would definitely be very helpful. Maybe having a really clear desk is something I can work towards as well.

If you want to check out more of my research hop on over to the pinterest board I've started to keep all my research in one place here.

https://www.pinterest.com/jessiec22/builiding-my-ideal-workspace-inspiration-ideas-and/

My next step is to think about what I need from my workspace, what is working well from it at the moment and what is really causing me problems. Then come up with some ideas on how to change it- I keep you updated on how I get on. xxx