Mint

in the studio: bella figura 2012

December 23rd, 2011 · 4 Comments

It seems fitting to end the year with one of my favorite projects — my 2012 collection for letterpress invitation company Bella Figura. This is my third year working with them, and designing the collections in the summer/fall is always really fun (and hard to keep secret). The new collection launched yesterday, and here are my designs!

Thanks for reading Mint! It’s been a wonderful 2011 and I’ll see you right back here the first week of January. Happy Holidays!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

artist interview: mia christopher

December 22nd, 2011 · 1 Comment

Mia Christopher is a multi-disciplinary artist and student from San Francisco. Although we only recently discovered her work, we have quickly fallen in love with her expressive use of color and every single one of her mixed media pieces. You can check out some of her prints for sale on here, here and here. We asked Mia if we could learn a little bit more about her and her inspiration and she happily obliged!

1. When did you first identify yourself as an artist?
I’m still getting comfortable with saying I’m an Artist without feeling super self conscious. I’ve only been exhibiting work for about two and a half years, but I don’t think that is what makes someone an artist because you can be an artist without anyone ever seeing your own or thinking of you in that way! I am also going to school, so I am a student, as well as other roles. Artist means different things to different people. I think it is a very lucky thing to be able to be, and growing up I did not realize that being an artist was even in my realm of possibility.

2. Do you have a favorite piece of work you created during your childhood?
The thing that sticks out in my head is my bedroom door from ages 7-10. My parents were really generous with letting me be expressive, and they allowed me to cover my entire door with stickers. Now that I think about it, I may have just started sticking them on one day and they let me continue. I’ll have to ask them sometime. I collected tons of stickers, mostly Mrs. Grossman’s and Lisa Frank, and other free stickers family members would pick up for me from various shops and concerts and so forth, and stickers from the vending machine at the bowling alley. At first I would put them on office paper and staple them together to make books, but it was so much fun to be able to cover a huge space like my bedroom door. It was so satisfying and I remember kind of getting lost and making up stories while sticking stickers all over the door. Of course, once I turned 12 I felt too cool or angry for cute stickers and I painted over everything with thick, black paint. I wish I had a photo from before I painted over it. I still fight the urge to collect loads of tiny, decorative stickers and stick them all over things. I could see this playing into my work some time in the future.

3. Who/what are the biggest influences of your work?
Right now I am completely enamored of Monique Prieto’s paintings from the 1990′s. I love the work she is doing now with text as well, but those big shape paintings are really exciting to me. San Francisco artist Leah Rosenberg makes gorgeous paint confetti and stacks of acrylic paint peels that are so visually pleasing, I am very intrigued by her practice.
Other than artists I think the biggest influences of my work are probably just day to day occurrences and watching environments form and relationships shift and settle and change and my mood and the weather, both mundane and personal moments.

4. Many of your works are mixed media. What would you say is your favorite medium to work with?
I’m partial to working with acrylic gouache on paper, and drawing with colored pencils and graphite. I also like markers that are really bleedy and have been utilizing them a lot lately. I like playing with flat, opaque colors and transparencies in my surface and materials.

5. One of my favorite pieces from your latest collection is the one with the beautiful colors stacked on top of each other (above, right). What can you tell me about this piece?
Thank you! This piece is part of a series of stacked colors and shapes as objects that keeps coming up in my work and kind of represents the bare bones of what I always seem to be investigating; color, shape, relationship, space, and mark-making. I’m very excited by color as it’s own subject, and am interested in playing with balance and relationships within the frame of formal painting questions such as color, scale, shape, and so on. I like the idea of a color or a shape as an object or form that has a life of it’s own and how it relates to the surface and whatever else may be in it’s environment.

6. Do you have any future projects in the works? If not, what are you up to currently?
I’m currently working on my BFA show at California College of the Arts which is going to take place in March 2012, as well as an upcoming installation for a group show at Empire Seven Studios in San Jose in January of 2012. I have several different drawing and painting series’ that I am working on for these, as well as exploring some sculptural elements and working with some new materials. There may be more textiles work in these shows as I have just been learning how to silk screen and have been making felted sculptures.

7. Three things you never leave the house without?
pen, chapstick, keys

8. Favorite part about living in San Francisco?
The views, weather, hills, microclimates, delicious food, eucalyptus trees, the architecture, having new things to see all of the time- it is my favorite city! I love it here so much. I love being in a beautiful and interesting place, it has a plays a large role in my mood and motivation.

Thank you, Mia! 

All image credits: Mia Christopher

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

maptote dopp kits

December 21st, 2011 · 1 Comment

Love these dopp kits, just released from Maptote!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

this week’s recipe: scallion and goat cheese muffins

December 20th, 2011 · 1 Comment

If you’re entertaining guests over the holidays, this week’s recipe from Confections of a Foodie Bride is a perfect quick breakfast that can feed 6-12, or could even work as a dinner roll substitute!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

limited edition tea towels now available online!

December 19th, 2011 · No Comments

We have a few tea towels leftover from this weekend’s craft market, and they’re now in the shop. Hurry before they’re gone!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

west elm and shane powers

December 19th, 2011 · 3 Comments

I love those vertical plant walls and have been looking for a way to bring something like that indoors (without needing to hire someone’s green thumb to keep it pretty). Along the same lines, West Elm and Shane Powers will launch this collection of ceramic wall planters the first week of January, and I can’t wait. They’ll range in price from $19-$69, and it will be hard not to buy a few for each room!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

happy friday!

December 16th, 2011 · 5 Comments

On Saturday I’ll be at Rock & Shop in Durham, NC from 12-5! There will be 100+ designers and crafters selling their wares, not to mention food trucks, live music, and beer. I can’t imagine a better way to finish up (or, uh, start) your holiday shopping. At the last minute and just for fun, I had some fabric printed with four of my patterns at Spoonflower, and then had them sewn into tea towels! Today we’re busy ironing, ribbon-tying, and tag-hanging. These are limited edition, so come on down to the market to get yours! I’m looking into options so we can hopefully add these to the online shop at some point. We’ll also have the full selection of our everyday and holiday notecards on sale, as well as our invitation book to flip through (the online shop will be closed on Saturday, but will be back on Sunday). Also pictured above… a sneak peek of my collection of  new Valentine’s Day Invitations, launching on Paperless Post soon! Yes, I was working on Valentine’s Day this week.

Tonight, be sure to stop by Golden Belt, which is an old textile mill turned live-work-shop-eat space (and where I moved my studio this fall). Golden Belt has an entire building dedicated to artist studios, and the artists have been super busy getting ready for tonight’s 12×12 show. Each participating artist created 12 original 12×12″ works of art, all of which will be sold for $200, with part of the proceeds benefiting The Center for Child & Family Health. Above, some artwork found in Chapel Hill this week — wall tessellations by Leigh Suggs at the Ackland Museum Store and a close-up of Lauren Salazar’s installation at the Hanes Art Center.

And lastly, a few close-ups of our home. The mobile is a new addition to our sunroom, and we finally hung more pictures on the walls (the one on the left is in our retro seafoam-tiled bathroom). It’s hard to believe we’ve been in our house for over a year! We’ve done lots of improvements — small things to most people probably, but big things to us, and are slowly collecting furniture and artwork we love. The house to-do list is never-ending! But, I’m learning to accept that most projects can’t get done in a weekend, and maybe next year I’ll have more courage to share our attempts at improvement on Mint! There’s something nice about the year coming to an end, isn’t there? Fresh starts, new projects… onward and upward.

Related Posts with Thumbnails
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Older Posts »