To give a bit of background into what I'm making, these earrings are made of scraps from Free Cycles; the community bike shop that my uncle Bob owns/ started. They take in bikes and parts from people, sort them, and then let people come for free and build or fix up their bike. Bob lets me come in and have full access to the shop which turns me into a kid in a candy store. Also I haven’t just used my access to make jewelry, last year for sculpture classes I was constantly utilizing bike parts. Once I took an exercise bike that I found there, and converted it into a yarn spinning loom propelled by the pedals. SUPER empowering. below is a video of it, hard to see but better than a picture. It’s ironic that I’ve used all kinds of bike parts to create stuff, but still haven’t built an actual bike out of them.
But back to the jewelry. I mostly use washers because I love circles, but I take anything that inspires me. I load up my pockets, go home, sprawl EVERYTHING on the floor and start putting pieces together and arranging them to make earrings.
In the last few months I’ve been in contact with Upcycled, talking to the owners every once in a while when I'm downtown. They’re a new little sliver of a shop, and center their values on hand made products made with re-used or recycled materials. They’re a hub for all kinds of local craftspeople, it’s kind of like a mini Etsy store, with the rule that everything has to be upcycled, which I totally, 100% stand for. I'm a believer in getting creative with whatever you have lying around before going out to buy new materials.
So I’ve been working hard the last few weeks on getting everything ready to put in the store bythe 7th because they'll have a crowd coming in for their big 1st friday event showing “Recreate Designs”.
My list of things to get done in time was basically;
My list of things to get done in time was basically;
- get price tags
- make a sign with an artist statement
here's my step by step creative process of accomplishing the above:
first, I tried to make my own price tags. Using masking tape. this is how they turned out. Not bad, but I felt they looked a little sloppy/ unprofessional, and would be annoying for customers to remove.
I ended up buying 100 of these white tags for only a few dollars.
and then hated the white so I dipped them in coffee
then I played around with stamps and ended up with the finished product here.
For the sign, I took quite a bit of time to type it up. I messed around with fonts, sizes, backgrounds, paper types, and display. My paper choice was disappointing because it was cloth/linen textured, and then when it went through the printer, the texture just melted out.
This is my end product. I'm not 100% satisfied with my statement display. I went a little crazy on stamps and it's slightly off center in some places but it will do for now.
Nothing ever stops being a work in progress!!!
Tif! I'm so excited about this finally coming together for you! I love the pictures. Your displays ALONE reveal how artsy you are. My mom and I looked through all the pictures, and she thinks you should do some kind of Christmas showing or have some type of sale-thing to just get your stuff out there!
ReplyDeleteAnyways, so happy for you that this stuff is working out! And dipping those tags in coffee was just SO TIF and it made me slightly sad and nostalgic.
Love you!