Showing posts with label artist showcase. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist showcase. Show all posts

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Artist Showcase-23..... Virginia Njeri Kamau











Please welcome my guest ---Virginia Njeri Kamau!!!

Virginia is from Sweden. She is a fab surface pattern designer.
Her mission is to ''design patterns that will warm your heart at a glance!''
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Enjoy your read---

How would you describe yourself and your working style...
I would describe myself as a very down to earth person. My style is quite playful and influenced quite much by the environment at time of motif creation. When it comes to medium, I hand draw do the next steps on AI CS6.



What do you like to do when you are not designing ?
Socializing the old school way verbally and thanks God to viberApp I find myself bubbling with the the whole world now.  I am quite spontaneous and would find myself liking doing this and that.

You manufacture your own products too... When and how did this came in your mind?
Well I don't literally manufacture, but I order own fabrics and sew own selling stuff, mostly pillows and Toiletry bag. Hmm when and how it came to mind? I would say it was pretty much out of inspiration by other successful designers.

 I started off with bespoke, step by step and aiming my way up to selling lots at ago from markets and the like in future. My success are pretty much on licensing. My failures that I normally see as a learning has been being with right products at wrong place, but as I said it's a learning and I have a long way to enjoy paving through.
The major failure has been stationery stock....o boy, wrong place or is card market fading off.








Your favorite color is... ?
I never get enough of mustard yellow.

Tell us about your first collection and your first show ?
I have been pretty much on one offs, but my one absolute worked on collection is, QUAINT coming soon at Modern Yardage. The idea was absolutely spontaneous based on my longing for light and sunshine during the winter gloom.
First show of this collection, coming soon so do stay tuned via my FB page.


When did you get the idea that 'designing' was the thing you love ?
I was actually doing research on a client work on a design firm over my Graphic Design internship and I landed in a Surface pattern website and that very second, I got hooked. Oh, I recall how I wanted more than ever to come home for some quality time with this webpage.




Anything you want to share to your readers about setting up his/her own business ? 
I am quite new and learning lots along the way, best advice is to have well set goals. I must add on, that fear will never take anything that you do not give it! So, do not be afraid to get the ball rolling in a step you want to take to move you forward.

Who is your dream client ? Is there anyone 'special' for whom you would like to design ?
Two Swedish companies indeed, IKEA and the next one is a local one that I would love to keep dark for now.

Tell us a bit about your biggest challenge in your career, and the way you handled it ?
A day after a wonderful welcome interview with Modern Yardage, I came to learn that our 8yrs of relationship had come to it's end. This did affect my design mojo of-course for a couple of weeks, but nothing I can not handle.  After all, it's just a challenge.
I have pretty much kept my focus on getting started with Modern yardage and concentrating on what's important on what's next in the moving on and so far, the going is pretty good.




Your greatest inspiration is ?
Greatest inspiration is Designer Heather Dutton of Hang Tight Studio.

How would you describe your work place  ..?
Very well organised, but it in just seconds I can turn it look chaos (a thing of creative people haha). I would be glad if you skip that picture but here is one with work place at it's best.




Where can people contact you ?
For bespoke pillows, info@njeridesigns.com with subject "bespoke pillows".



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Thanks Virginia!



Monday, April 7, 2014

Artist Showcase-22.... WHITE CHAMPA by Anjana Das





   WHITE CHAMPA    White Champa is a distinctive women wear brand cherished by a growing clientele of sophisticated Indian and foreign women living in India. The collection is completely handcrafted in the brand’s own manufacturing unit in New Delhi by a small team of dedicated and specially trained tailors and embroiderers, ensuring that each piece is completely unique and of the highest quality standard.

Read about Anjana's dreams and all the hard work done to achieve her brand label - White Champa...
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Describe your work in 3 words.
Pure, versatile and stylish

How would you describe yourself
I would describe myself as a global nomad. Born and raised in Germany to Bengali parents, I was always keen to explore the world. Educated to be open to new experiences, seeking exciting encounters led me to travel the world, extensively. I have lived for many years in Southeast Asia and India. Before that I had lived and worked in Europe. At the moment I divide my time between Berlin, London, New Delhi and Manila.

White Champa, my clothing label, is situated in New Delhi (India), and to me it feels like the source that I am always returning to from my wanderings and where my creative inspirations come together to find a form. There I have a team of tailors and hand-embroiderers headed by my longstanding master tailor and my trusted and wonderful assistant and store manager.






When did you decide to start your brand? 
White Champa was started in 2006 in New Delhi , India. Earlier, I had been working for the French embroiderer Jean Francois Lesage. I had been designing for him and represented him in Germany and Thailand. My work with Lesage has taught me a lot about embroidery and the translation of historical embroidery techniques to a more contemporary use. With him I had worked mainly in the field of interior design.
After some years with Lesage, eventually, I wanted to use my ideas for clothes and this is when I started White Champa.

Are you into creating a new niche in crafts with new technologies and textiles?
I am convinced that one of the challenges of fashion design in India today is to build a bridge between the incredible skill in the manual craft sector and the demands that women of the 21st century have on the aesthetics, functionality and technology of garments. Issey Miyake said it beautifully, ''The joint power of technology and manual work enables us to revive the warmth of the human hand''.
A lot of the craft sector in India today resembles industrial production insofar as craftspeople often have to mass-produce craft items. At the same time many of these craft products have lost their functional meaning and use. This leads to detachment. From my point of view, crafts should work more in the way that we do – keep the value of crafts and it’s artisan character! At the same time the product must mirror our time and lifestyle and should offer what a client is looking for in this day and age.

Someone looking at our clothes does not have to know exactly which techniques were used and how traditional designs of ways of working were modified. However, the garment should evoke emotion and communicate with the person who is looking at it or wearing it. It is a silent dialogue between the person making the clothes and the one wearing them...




Are you in some ways reviving any art/technique/craft that might die soon?
The danger of the fast pace and growth of fashion collections is that more time consuming complex techniques are abandoned for quick and cheaper solutions. As much as I am for growth in the business I am convinced that we want to keep to these techniques and hence am all for a slower pace and quality versus fastness. The mere fact that we are still working with the age old techniques of Indian embroidery and other tailoring techniques is keeping the art form alive for us and our workers.

What is the ratio of hand v/s machine work do u prefer?
At White Champa we only work with hand-embroidery and the finishing of the clothes and a lot of the surface ornamentation as well is also done by hand. Of course the main stitching is done with machines. You feel the difference between hand and machine embroidery for example, even if you don’t know anything about the techniques. The touch of a hand creates a special signature on a garment that the wearer ideally should feel when wearing the piece.






Who are your clients.
Our showrooms are in Delhi and Berlin but clients come from New York, Paris, Berlin, New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Jaipur or Tokyo…….
White Champa clients are women of all nationalities and ages. If I should describe a representative customer I would say that ''she is an educated, working woman who wants to be stylish but is not a fashion victim''....  She likes to wear beautiful yet comfortable clothes that subtly reflect her originality and discreetly say something about her. Often, she is slightly bohemian and interested in art and the world around her. She is conscious of the environment and prefers ethically traded products.
White Champa does not advertise, White Champa needs to be found. Our customers are adventurous and like to discover for themselves.
I love to design for people who are having a strong sense of their own individual style and so I have done stage costumes for people like Susheela Raman and Sonam Kalra. They are women who epitomize the essence of our work.






What kind of people do you want to work with/ creative collaborations?
A very lively, honest and harmonious team spirit is one of the the most important aspects of success. In order to get to the best results you need to listen to the ideas of your team members, be able to give and take criticism and also offer solutions for problems.
Of ultimate importance for me is the fact that we all share a spirit of curiosity, humour and pleasure in our work together. In the people that I like to work with, it is these characteristics that I’m looking for.

I cherish team work with strong and confident individuals and so have started a series of creative collaborations to expand my vision.
We have just started a small men’s collection which is designed in tandem with Karan Singh Parmar.
Secondly, I have started a collaboration called HAYATE with German artist Claudia Spielmann. It is a collection of shawls and stoles, uniquely inspired as it seeks to combine and celebrate the eye of the artist with the skills and traditions of textile crafts and through that creates timeless pieces. We use digital printing, hand painting and hand embroidery.
Lastly, I have recently started my latest venture “White Champa traderoutes” with Natasha Mukherjee. This is the accessory part of  White Champa and at the moment we are trying to revive the old trade routes between India and the Philippines by creating products that use banana fibre ikat, Indian embroidery and bring them together in new ways.





What kind of places do you show your work ?
Private exhibitions:
Olive, New Delhi
Aman Hotel, New Delhi
Design One in New Delhi and Mumbai
Several private locations in Delhi, Berlin and London and New York

Retail:
Delhi Showroom in Shahpur Jat
En Inde, New Delhi
Ogaan, New Delhi
Melange, Mumbai
Ensemble, Mumbai and Delhi
Berlin showroom in Germany
Benaresstore, Singapore
Lori Casanelli d’Istria, Nice/France
Saaya, Tokyo

Online:
Facebook
Constanci.com
Japanese online magazine




What is your main target market?
Our main focus lies in India/Asia for the time being as this is a very vibrant, energetic and growing market.

What is the philosophy behind your brand?
The starting point of my own thought process resulted from an observation that a lot of fashion is very restrictive for the body and does not always allow a woman to be comfortable and does not further the feeling of being at ease with her body. As women go through life they continuously feel the need to “work” on themselves in order to fit the visual image that is created in the fashion world.
If you look in comparison towards traditional Indian, Japanese or Thai clothing for example, they allow for more variation in the bodily form of a woman. They can beautifully drape around any body shape. They don’t necessarily force you to buy new clothes if you loose or gain some weight or are pregnant
However, these forms don’t always meet the needs women have with their current way of life. Clothes also mirror your lifestyle and are representative of changes in society.
When conceptualizing clothes, I incorporate these factors into the designs. We combine elements of European tailoring with the ease and beauty of traditional Indian textiles. The clothes follow the body contours without obstructing movement. In fact the movement of the body should be enabled and enhanced by the garment.
Many of the designs are recalling elements of traditional clothes through the way of draping or touches of embroidery for example. However, their attitude is contemporary.

Another firm belief of mine is that clothing should have it’s own intrinsic aesthetic value and not only be designed to follow ephemeral fashion. When I am designing clothes I often need to go back to the concept of slowness so that we can re-capture the sensuality and spirituality of clothing. Clothes communicate a host of signs and symbols about their wearer; they are a visual language that permits us to communicate with one another before we even speak. The fast pace that fashion has, often, makes it very difficult to live up to that. Slowing down is essential to further the silent dialogue between the creator and wearer of a garment.

What influences your work?
Anything from my surroundings influences my work. It might be the colours around me, art, music, sounds and scents.  Also I get very inspired by people that I meet and by conversation. Also, I get inspired by my love for researching architecture, the history of textiles, old costume patterns and historical textiles.
In my last collection I translated architectural patterns into embroideries!







Which other designers do you admire?
Issey Miyake, Dries van Noten, Nagara, Sabyasachi Mukherjee

Outside India, where have you studied and worked?
Studied in London at SOAS and at Goettingen University in Germany, Worked in Thailand, UK, Germany and India

What is your most favourite place in the world for inspiration?
My home which changes location with my nomadic life around the globe provides a lot of inspiration and is a source of calm, energy and dynamism at the same time. Over the last 20 years I have constantly moved around and travelled a lot. These changes of place and journeys I try to bring back to my own space and I surround myself with them depending on my moods. All these things speak to me when I’m sitting in my atelier to conceptualize the next collection.

How would you describe the word ' COLLECTION 'in fashion?
A good collection always tells a story and evokes emotion. Also it should speak for itself. The central theme should be running through it like an invisible ‘red thread’ connecting the individual pieces.

How has the brand grown over time? and Where do you want to see it in the next 3 years?
White Champa has grown very organically over the years. When we started, we gave ourselves the space and time to grow in a way that allowed me to continuously develop and fine-tune the product. I spend a lot of time trying out new things with the master tailor and the head embroiderer. Through this way of working the group of tailors and embroiderers also grew into a consolidated team. Ever since we started working together we only had one embroiderer change his workplace – something that reflects the value and spirit of our work together.

White Champa is growing fast now. We are growing our team, as well as branching out to increase our distribution in India and other Asian countries. However, we will continue to work in our way.
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For more info please mail   anjana@whitechampa.com
Facebook:   WHITE CHAMPA

Thank you readers... enjoy your shopping!



Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Artist Showcase-21..... Nika Martinez





Hello!

       Please welcome my new designer--- Nika Martinez---  in the 'artist/designer showcase' series. Nika is from Spain.

 I am in love with her ''Ethnic-Tribal'' style that is often found in her works! She uses beautiful colours to go with that style to give each of the patterns a unique touch...

Why don't you meet her yourself and know something more about her...

Enjoy your read!

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How would you describe yourself ?
I´m extremely curious since I was a child, my family says i´m like a cat!!!





What do you like to do when you are not designing ?
Reading books, take photographs, go to beach, and studying.


Describe your style ? 
Haha, good question I'm still finding my style, maybe I will find it someday.




What's your favorite color ?
I think  I'm one of those pinky girls.

Tell us about your first collection and what was the idea behind that theme... and your first show!
Well, I'm still looking to finish my dream collection.

My first show was a collective exhibition of urban arts, one of my artprints was printed big on wood during an international skate contest (3 days full of concerts and artistic events). It was my very first illustration, I thought I was floating.


When did you get the idea that 'designing' was the thing you love ?
When they accepted me with my very own personal design in the Ibiza exhibition.





Anything you want to share to your readers about setting up his/her own business ? 
Well, I truly believe there is a “place” that will fit everyone, the hard part is to find which one.
My best advice is trust in your thoughts and follow your dreams, even if all the other people around you are disagreed.






Who is your dream client ?
My dream client would be a design agency, I will love to design all day instead looking for freelance works, you know….. such a dream.. !!!








Tell us a bit about your biggest challenge in your career, and the way you handled it ?
My biggest challenge was when I was contacted early this year by Fab.eu, they wanted 30 of my artprints for a flash sale. I couldn´t believe it, but they are very professional and helped me thru the way, it was a great experience.







Your greatest inspiration is ?
Ethnic patterns.


 How would you describe your work place  ..? 
My work place is an very minimalist in white and orange, and my walls are yellow, I have some photographs and illustrations around me to get inspired, my paper notebook, my Epson printer, my phone, my ipad and my Wacom tablet.






 Where can people contact you ?

I've just create my own site www.nikamartinez.com
But the best way to get updated is thru my Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/nikastudio

My society6 shop: www.society6.com/nika

And some licensed works with these companies:
For home décor:
Kess InHouse   http://kessinhouse.com/pages/nika-martinez/

Electronic devices:
Keka Case    http://www.kekacase.com/designer-cases/nika-martinez.html/
Artscase     http://www.artscase.com/artist/Nika-Martinez.html





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Thank you Nika, thank you so much for sharing your lovely patterns with us!
Love your ethnic style very much.

Have a lovely time... See you all tomorrow!


Monday, January 13, 2014

Artist Showcase-20... Victoria Varela

Hello MONDAY,

       Today I'm starting  my journey (once again) with some talented artists/designers whom I met last year (on Facebook !!! ), and they are my friends, colleagues, and most importantly, a great part of my online life.

Once again Happy New Year to my beautiful readers.




Introducing  Victoria Varela, a textile designer from Argentina!

In her own words,'' I was born in Mar del Plata, Argentina, a beautiful seaside city, an open horizon and the fresh salty air. I studied a degree in Physics for three years and I did not finish my studies. I moved to San Carlos de Bariloche and started a family that I dedicate myself completely. I am a mother of three beautiful and energetic children (7, 6 and 3 years old) They are my Kirpa, the grace of God raining down on us, always.''

Happy reading...

How would you describe yourself?
Usually introverted and shy, but when I'm drawing, I'm free and a bit salty and stormy  as the sea.




What do you like to do when you are not designing?
Well, actually, I would have to change the question slightly and would ask: What do you like to do when you are not taking care of your  kids? Then I would answer: design!

Describe your style.
I don’t know if I have yet a style but I always look that my designs have some of these ingredients: hand drawn, geometric, soft, spicy… and a nice background.




What’s your favorite color?
Aqua and red, dark blue and pink, I love the colors, not only to watch but also to touch and taste them!

When did you get the idea that “designing” was the thing you love?
Since young I really liked to sew, my mother taught me. A few years ago I started to learn how to make quilts. I realized that for some projects I could not find that special fabric I had imagined and so I discovered Spoonflower. I was delighted when I received my first fabric and started sewing with them!





Tell us about your first collection, and your first show ?
My first collection was Mandorla, and I still have to work hard on it! I tried to represent the feminine energy, their movements and dances in praise to God. I made a cute bag with these fabrics and I'm very happy with it!

Anything you want to share to your readers about setting up his/her own business ?
I haven’t yet set up a business, I tell myself that I’m in the learning stage and that's a mistake. Being shy is not a good strategy to run a business! But that's me and I'm working hard on that! Every day I try to find the time to design or sew. I am persistent and I let myself be guided by my Lord.





Who is your dream client ?
My client is a dream dreamed yet! I love to design for those who need a special fabric for a quilt or a very personal and appreciated project.

Tell us a bit about your biggest challenge in your career, and the way you handled it ?
The biggest challenge is, at this time, continue to work without neglecting quality time shared with my children. And finish my sewing projects!





Your greatest inspiration is ?
Mother nature, the flowers, the energy flowing into me, my dreams, my senses.

How would you describe your work place ..?
My workplace is defined by the energy of my children at different times of day. I like to draw and sew when they play and talk near me, and working on the computer when they sleep. I recently was able to get a beautiful furniture where I could organize my drawings, my fabrics, and my two beautiful sewing machines.




Where can people contact you ?
My web site is http://kirpa79.wix.com/kirpa#

You can also see her work on Facebook  https://www.facebook.com/victoria.varela.980?fref=ts
You can buy her beautiful fabrics from her Spoonflower shop  http://www.spoonflower.com/profiles/kirpa 

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Thanks Victoria for this wonderful interview... The one thing I loved the most is the way you twisted the question to show your love towards your kids! I really appreciate this for I am just like you---  FAMILY FIRST !



See you all very very soon...


Saturday, December 14, 2013

Artist Showcase-19 ..... Majo B V



Hello friends,

         Today I have a wonderful person in my blog  Maria José Bautista V, who is a 'Fashion and Surface Pattern Designer in love with whimsical, bright, and fun design.... She is from Columbia and currently lives in Milan, Italy.

A peek into her life as a super SPD--- surface pattern designer!
Happy reading!!!


How would you describe yourself ?
An eternal dreamer... I've always believed that with hard-work, enthusiasm and passion you can conquer whatever you set your mind and heart on !


What do you like to do when you are not designing ?
I'm a big of a TV addict... I watch TV when I'm designing and when I'm not, hehehe. I also like to spend time with my family, friends and dogs (especially at the farm). I like going out for dinner or a simple bike trip.
I also LOVE travelling... it is actually one of my passions.

 Describe your style ?
My work is refreshing and playful, colourful  and free. It is filled with layered textures and suave shapes. I’m influenced by the eclectic craft and cultural Colombian heritage as well as by my enthusiasm for both Scandinavian and Folk art.







What's your favorite color ?
I LOVE colours, especially bright ones... but often I'm attracted to pinks: from barbie pink, to fuchsia and neon pink.


Tell us about your first collection ( what was the idea behind that theme...) and your first show ?
My first SPD (Surface Pattern Design) collection? Well... I designed a very cool one when I was in college but never finished it (oops!) Then, when I decided to get back to textile design in 2010, my first collection was Hazelnuts.


When did you get the idea that 'designing' was the thing you love ?
Ever since I can remember... I don't know exactly why or when, but I do remember being a very little girl (a toddler) and telling my dad I wanted to move to Paris and become a famous Fashion Designer (now a famous SPDer, hehehe)








Anything you want to share to your readers about setting up his/her own business ?
I'm still setting up my business and feel I still have a loooong way ahead of me. However, I should have had it set by now if it wasn't for two huge mistakes I constantly make: I'm a huge procrastinator and a '90% Artist. I keep leaving things for later when I should do them now. I think that's my biggest defect. I'm like that in every aspect, not just work. I'm trying to get better though. What about being a '90% Artist? well... that's a term I recently learnt in Be A Successful Artist ecourse and the minute it was mentioned I realised that was me: I start many many projects and designs and things in general, but then leave them unfinished when all I need is a little more time or energy. Another horrible defect I'm doing my best to correct.


Who is your dream client ?
Mmm... this is a complicated question. All I have are dream clients, hehehe. Let's divide them by markets:

Fashion: I'd like to design a minimal and bright fabric collection for Jil Sander. I'd also like to design some quirky and whimsical prints for Marc Jacobs and Stella McCarney kids.
Interior: of course IKEA! Marimekko
Stationery: Paperchase, Papersource, Tigerprint, Hallmark :)
I have many more brands in my client wish list, but lets not disclose them all!







Tell us a bit about your biggest challenge in your career, and the way you handled it ?
I'm living it right now--- my Dad's passing away earlier this October. It's been really hard to pick up where I left when everything happened. I'm doing my best, but it is still extremely hard.






Your greatest inspiration is ?
I’m inspired by everything around me, anywhere I am. Daily life is filled with exciting ways and forms that light my creativity-bulbs. I’m fascinated by colors, shapes and textures found in nature; enchanted by children's drawings and handwriting; fond of all things “cute”, animals (especially furry ones), textiles, sewing, all kind of DIY projects, costumes (firm believer that any occasion is good to dress up!), childlike things, gelato, chocolate and Nutella, my mom and grandma's food, and have also a peculiar obsession for fake eyelashes.






How would you describe your work place  ..?
MESSY! I can work wherever I am... all I need is my sketchbook, a pencil, rubber, 0.2 Staedtler Pigment Liner, my MacBook Pro, bamboo wacom, and a camera.


Where can people contact you ?

website
blog
facebook
google+
twitter
pinterest
instagram
shops

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 Enjoy your weekend !




Saturday, November 30, 2013

Artist Showcase-18.... Silvia Raga





Hello dear friends,

          Today I would like to introduce a wonderful paper-cut artist--- Silvia Raga.

 Silvia was an illustrator of textbooks and fictionbooks for children for over 10 years. She is now working as an illustrator, graphic designer, crafter, papercut artist. She is a self-taught photographer too! She is based in Italy. In her very own words,'' I love nature, crafting, fun, friendship and, of course, paper...''

A peak into her life and work, and some secret tips about her fabulous paper-cut techniques too...
Enjoy !

How would you describe yourself ?
This question always makes me a smile ... I like not to take myself too seriously!
I am optimistic, positive ... I like to dream, but I can also be concrete. I'm curious, and I love to learn and learn new things.






 What do you like to do when you are not doing any new project ? 
When not working I like to browse and read books, cooking, make sweets with my kids or spending time with them outdoors, take care of my plants, walking with my husband .
I like traveling and getting lost in the streets of a city.

Describe your style ? 
My style .. is a bit difficult to define, because I like many things, often conflicting with each other ...! Then I would call an eclectic style! I have a very infantile side, is the most colorful and tender, which translates with simple and synthetic shapes. I have a very feminine and hyper decorative side... I'm always searching for my style, to try to blend in an image all of these aspects of my personality.







 What's your favorite color ?
I love the colors and I like different colors ... Maybe alternate depending on my mood or the change of seasons! So now I like the combination of white-grey-pink-orange ... But I also love aqua, emerald green next to the lime green! And as if the color would send me an emotion, so I choose my colors also based on the feeling that I want to try looking at a picture!





 When did you get the idea that 'paper cutting' was the thing you love ?
The paper I've always liked ... I love all that is paper: magazines, books, stationery, greeting cards, wrapping paper ... When I was a child I loved to cut, paste and draw. I have cultivated this passion in school and then in the work by children illustrator, but mainly done digitally.
So, after so many years I felt a strong need to re-use the hands, to make a drawing that I could touched with the fingers ... Through the internet I have met many artists who use paper as a medium, and I quickly realized that for me that was the way to go! I was very fascinated by paper cutting, by its elegance, and I thought: "I want to make these wonders!"
And so I started!






 Anything you want to share to your readers about setting up his/her own business ?
Work on their own has many positive aspects, including flexibility, and the ability to carry out  new projects ... However, it is also important to set rules! For example, to better organize the time, devote a part in the promotion of what you do, set goals to be achieved, however, always be critical of their own work without mortification.
Be patient and above all, be yourself!

Who is your dream client ?  
I do not have a name of a specific client with whom I want to work ... But my dream would be to illustrate a book with paper cutting!

Tell us a bit about your biggest challenge in your career, and the way you handled it ?
The biggest challenge of my career was to leave for a year my profession illustrator of children to start from scratch with something new and never before experienced. Some days my thought was: "Why did I do, will do some good all this?" And I felt a little crazy for leaving my secure job for something so uncertain. I worked a lot and I still needed to reach my goals, but in the meantime now I know what makes me happy!







 Your greatest inspiration is ?
My greatest inspiration is nature, always! Pattern of leaves, berries, organic shapes, flowers! Aww, the flowers, I love them so much!

 How would you describe your work place  ..?
My workspace is a small room with a large table and a wall full of books! I like the order, but when I work I find myself inundated with cardboards and sheets of various kinds ... To which are added the designs of my children!
It 's a space full of objects, memories, is a place for me essential.







Where can people contact you ? 
Here there are
 my blog


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Thanks Silvia for sharing such delicate paper-cut artworks!!!

See you all next week! Enjoy your weekend...