Pages

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Original Art vs Prints



I've been writing for another blog about the benefits of buying handmade. Tara over at Scoutiegirl had a wonderful blog post about why she buys handmade:

"... but I feel pretty good when I walk out of the house wearing something that no one else in my county has in their closet. No amount of Louis Vuittons or Chanel suits or t-shirts plastered with chain store logos make up for the sameness that the rest of the world lives in." - Tara from Scoutiegirl

Well said! Do you like to be 100% original? I get tired of seeing the same things everywhere. I hate walking into someone's home and seeing the exact same print that was available at Pier One, or Pottery Barn, or Ikea, or, or, or. Trust your instincts, be yourself, have an opinion and be original!

So what is the difference in between a print and an original painting? Well, a print is a reproduction of a painting. Virtually all of the artwork that you see available in chain stores are prints. This means that at least one other person, if not hundreds of other people, have the exact same thing hanging on their walls. On the positive side, if you absolutely love a very popular artist and their artwork is super expensive, prints are an affordable way to have something of theirs hanging on your wall.

An original painting is exactly what it says that it is - original. You can smell the paint, feel the texture, see the brilliant colors and brush strokes in a way that is impossible to capture with a print. You can feel the hard work and energy that went into creating the painting. Sometimes you can even see the process that the artist had in creating the painting when you look at the original. Many of the Great Masters even have brush bristles that got caught in the painting. Can you imagine having a brush bristle from Monet?!?! (But then again, I can't quite imagine owning a multi-million dollar painting by Monet either).

Perhaps the best part of owning an original is the feeling that nobody else has the same thing that you have. You, and only you, have that one piece of artwork, and you don't have to share. Others may like that artist as well, but no two will be exactly the same.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Giveaway!


Congratulations to Alisa Toth! You won (3) Mixers!
(Please contact me bsartstudio [!at] gmail [dot] com to set up shipping]

Thank you everyone for such wonderful participation. Aaaand, just for being so awesome, I'm having free shipping for all the entrants now through May 22nd!

Just visit my Etsy store here.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Giveaway

Hey Guys!

The Giveaway is now closed, thank you for the awesome response! I had a friend's birthday yesterday, so I will be putting everyone's name into random.org later on today and posting the winner of the Giveaway. Hope everyone had a wonderful weekend.

Best Wishes,
Shelby

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

The Buyers Guide to Handmade


When we were 7 we were getting in trouble for doodling in the margins during class.  Our feet were tapping, dreaming about getting home and opening up the craft closet to make friendship bracelets, crocheting, collaging - just creating - anything.  Some of us took a detour through the corporate world, others figured it out earlier - but we all have learned to make a living doing what we love.  It isn't easy, a thread running around our email chain is currently talking about how one of our members works from 12am-12am.  Last time I checked, that was 24 hours.  Another member counts it a lucky day when she gets 1-2 hours sleep.  Me?  I'm starting all over again, so the challenge is getting my store back up and running.  Almost from scratch.  

We do this full-time because we love it.  We would have it no other way.  If we were back in the cubicle, we'd be getting in trouble for doodling in the margins again.  Daydreaming about creating when we should be filing a TPS report.  

Handmade.  It is what drives us.  

So what makes handmade stand out from mass-produced items?  It has to do with the individual vision of the maker.  The care that goes into the entire process, from design through crafting, the hard work that we put in to ensure our product is made with the utmost care and quality.  We don't ship our idea off to someone else to complete.  You won't see our items in Target or Ikea or in every other person's house.  That is a totally different market.  

And yes, there are some casualties of things being handmade.  But there are casualties of things manufactured everywhere.  (Chinese drywall anyone?)  Over the next few months I'm going to be working with our team (Full Time Etsy Crafters) to help educate everyone on how to be a smarter buyer - how to tell the good from the bad, the original from the mass produced.  

But in the meantime, I'd love to know - why do you buy handmade?  What is the value you see in it?

By the way, the image above is one of my teammates whose work I am currently drooling over - JPatPurses

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Artistic Inspiration


I have so much fun making these contemporary art Mixers. One of my favorites things is color. Give me a Sherwin-Williams fan deck and I am a happy camper. It is pretty gross. Buut, I do know that I use some different color combinations in some of my artwork, so I thought I would share the inspiration from my Curry and Ginger series. Just because it is red and green, does NOT mean it has to be the holidays!

Here are some examples of Ginger from the Singapore Botanical Gardens. Who knew it was such a versatile and beautiful plant?




Saturday, May 1, 2010

Just keep swimming...

There is something so awesome about having friends over and being able to entertain. We had a great group of friends over last night (I'm still cleaning up all the fun we had!). Having everyone over really made my husband and I appreciate everything that we have. Amazing friends, health, happiness, a good home...

original blue encaustic art

As I look back on the past two years, it has been quite a ride. I remember when Hurricane Ike hit and we lost power for 3 weeks. Then the stock market crashed, and I had to go help my parents with some things for three months. In the middle of all of that, my husband got a new job and I put him on a plane to Asia while I packed up our home, and tried to sell just about everything we owned. Etsy fell by the wayside as I put our entire life in a self-storage unit. I wasn't sure where we were going to live, how reliable our internet connection would be, if I'd have space to make work, if I could get supplies... the list goes on.

But with a dash of optimism mixed with lots of fact finding and hard work, I've got BS Art Studio up and running again. Life. Is. Good.