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Showing posts with label craft spaces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label craft spaces. Show all posts

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Craft Space Update

Hello my lovelies,

Sorry I haven't posted in awhile, we've been moving.

You may remember some of my Craft Studio posts, in which I showed photos of my studio space in the house that we were renting in Los Ranchos de Albuquerque.  It was so lovely and spacious...sigh...


I had room enough for 9 people to sit and work!

Well, the good news is my house in Downtown Albuquerque finally sold so I was able to buy a nicer newer (and smaller) house in the North Valley of Albuquerque.  

The bad news is my craft room now looks like this

I would probably be one of those tiny house people if it weren't for all of my craft supplies

Not sure what I'm going to do with my paper packs (the bags on the floor)

I did manage to find this awesome bookshelf!  It's really tall and spacious

And it's made out of old shutter doors <3


In addition to its size, I'm also sharing my craft space with this eyesore
...must find a way to cover those pipes that doesn't cost a fortune!
I'd love to put some cabinetry up there that would serve as storage for my cleaning supplies, as well as cover those water heater pipes.  Hopefully soon.


I'm just going to keep chipping away at my mess and hopefully I will have it cleaned and organized soon!  I have donated quite a bit of supplies to the OffCenter Arts thrift shop, so stop over there for great deals on gently used art materials.

I've also decided to part with some of my favorite vintage and antique things, which I put up for sale at my booth at Antiques and Things, Booth #19.  I'm currently having a 50% off sale to boot!

Wish me luck!  Feel free to tag me on social media if you see any useful decorating/organizing ideas on the cheap.


Love,
Myria

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Mad Tea Party AND Needle Felting Class Part 2

Hello all!

Well, yesterday's party was wonderful!  The ladies in my meetup group are just beautiful inside and out, and it was a pleasure teaching them how to make these cute little latte art needle felted pin cushions.

In honor of the mad tea party theme I wore a fascinator that I got at St James Tea Room

Here is a final photo of the tea party setup

I LOVE these blooming flower tea bombs.  
I got them on Amazon and I need to see if there is a tea shop in town that sells them.

A tea party would not be complete without french macaroons.  These are from L'Amour Baking Co.  
A french bakery that just opened up a few weeks ago in the village and I must say - they are amazing! 
Flavors are pistachio, lemon meringue, coconut, coffee, lavender, and neapolitan. 
A little tip - if you go into their bakery and like them on Facebook while you're there, they will give you a free macaroon.

Dianne and Jenny looking all cute working on their projects 

Luna's coffee before adding cream 

Sherry decided to add a swirl of creme to her demitasse cup 

Margarita working on filling in the creme heart 

Dianne making us laugh while she worked 

Barb's beautiful teacup and her cute pincushion!

Jenny chose a floral demitasse cup and saucer

Luna and her nephew working away 

And in between the instruction I worked on this pin cushion.  Still not done yet - I'm going to add felted roses and leaves.

I'm totally bummed that I didn't take photos of everyone with their completed pin cushions but we just got lost in conversation!

Thank you for reading!  Until next time -
Love,
Myria

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Mad Tea Party with A Fanciful Twist AND Needle Felting Class

Hello My Lovelies,

I have been eagerly waiting for this day to arrive and it's finally here!  My Mad Tea Party and Needle Felting Class.  The tea party is hosted by Vanessa Valencia at A Fanciful Twist.  Be sure to visit her blog, as well as the blogs of the other tea party hosts.


I'm waiting awhile to prep completely for my tea party.  I want the tea to be hot and the macaroons to be fresh!  But don't worry - tomorrow I will post all of the photos of the tea party and needle felting class.

Meanwhile, I thought I would share my collection of tea/coffee/hot chocolate ware with you.
In my kitchen, above my cabinets, I have a nice space to display my sets.

I'm pretty much obsessed with Alice in Wonderland

Yup

Here is my Bavarian Hot Cocoa set that I inherited from my grandmother. 

I picked up this coffee pot, tea pot, and creamer at various thrift shops 

Here is another set that I inherited from my Grandmother.  A biscuit jar, cup and saucer, creamer cup, and coffee pot.  It's not all one set but they compliment each other nicely.  
Perfect for spoiling yourself on a chilly morning.  

It's chipped - like most things that are well loved - all the more reason to use it!

Love! 

My mom bought this set for my birthday this year.  We got it at an Antique Shop that is in an old school house in Arkansas.  I fell in love with it when I saw it.  It is hand painted and signed.  The woman who did this did an excellent job!  

My 2 of my handmade tiered party plates, and 1 vintage one.  I'll be using the one on the left for my tea party so you'll see better photos of that one.

I picked these Bailey's Irish Coffee cups, sugar, and creamer up at Things Etc., an indoor flea market in Albuquerque.  Got a screaming deal on these.  I have 4 cups total plus the sugar and creamer.  I was so excited that I was able to complete the set during one shopping trip!  A couple of different vendors had all of the pieces that made up my set.  
It was meant to be!

So cute! 

Here is my party setup.

Upcycled tiered party plate - made by me! 

I'll be serving the flowering green tea in a clear teapot.  I have a nice tea cozy that I swapped for at a craft show.  It works great!  I highly recommend getting a tea cozy. 

My creamer cup that I a fellow vendor at Antiques and Things gave me - not the same pattern as the tea set that I'm using but VERY close. 

My cups and saucers.  These also used to belong to my grandma.  
The pattern is Haviland Apple Blossom

My craft studio - it has enough seating for 9 people. 

The needle felting class kits. 

I'll be showing my students the various needle felting tools and how to use them.  
Plus show them how to craft on a budget.

Each student will get to choose a cup and saucer with which to make their pin cushion for the class.
(The swan one is mine)

And this is what we'll be making.  Needle felted latte pin cushion.
A photo posted by Myria (@mandellphotos) on

Thank you for reading!  Stay tuned for tomorrow's post.  I'll be sharing photos of the party and the final products of the craft class.

Love,
Myria

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

So I Bought a Planner

Hello readers,

After much thought, and attempts to use the SNote on my Samsung Note 4 to journal/scrapbook, I've decided to go to paper.  My decision was primarily based on permanence of my art journal - with the SNote I could loose my journal if I didn't have it backed up properly.  Also, I have a TON of washi tape, fancy paper, embellishments, and stickies so it just made sense.

In anticipation of my planner's arrival, I got my little planner station ready.  I purchased this cute little craft caddy used for $7.  It is really practical!  I have all of my kawaii sticky notes in there, stamp pads, and my pink paper stitcher.

I purchased most of my washi tape, cute sticky notes, and this cute little stamp set from http://www.yozocraft.com

My bear basket is holding more items for me.

The back side of the craft caddy has a spot for fancy tape or ribbons

And I keep my 6-hole punch in the little drawer

In my next post I will reveal the planner that I selected.

Thank you for reading!
Love,
Myria

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Interview of D Davis Antiques

Hello everyone,

I am so excited to introduce you to my favorite store in the town that my mom lives in - D Davis Antiques and Health Food.  Their storefront lives in a charming old brick building.

 When you walk in you are greeted with a gorgeous grandiose lamp.
It is so big and so beautiful that you just want to hug it.

During my visit I got to chat with Diane, and she agreed to let me interview her.

Myria - What is the name of your store?

Diane - D. Davis and Company

M - What is your name?

D - My name is Diane Davis


M - How long has your store been open?

D - This store here has been here for about 12 years but I've been in this business since the 60's

M - Oh wow. And how long have you been doing lampshades and restoring lamps?


D – 1971

M - What got you interested in doing it?

D - I like nearly everything that comes from that era, and anything that has to do with textiles. And when I first came across my very first pattern, a totally decayed and ruined antique lampshade, I just thought it was the neatest art form that I'd ever seen in my whole life, and it took me about a year but I finally figured out how they were made, and it was just one stitch at a time.

M - So how did you actually figure out how to do it? Did you look at any books?

D - There weren't any back then. There were no books and there was one other person I knew that covered lampshades but no one was going to give up their secrets. It was just a matter of stacking them up in the bathtub of the antique store, and looking at this pile of rotting lampshades, and going “how in the world did they do that?” And then it finally occurred to me that it was strictly a matter of sitting down and sewing it one stitch at a time.


M - So, the fabrics that you select, I love the fabrics that you select. Have you always used these kinds of fabrics?

D - The fabrics that I use are the same type of fabrics that were used on the originals. Not everybody is real well versed in that, but since the first ones that I bought were back in the 60s and 70s, there still were examples of the originals, and then you can find old old catalogs like Larkin catalogs, and sears catalogs and all, with shades in them, and you can still see the descriptions of the fabrics that were used, and it was the same thing that was used in high grade evening wear at the time. Exactly the same fabrics went into the evening wear, all of them from Europe. Really nice silks, embroidered silks, metallic encrusted silks, and Chinese embroidered silks. Cut velvet was a big big fabric back then.



M - Right. I heard you mention earlier that the cost of the lampshades - labor is not much of a factor, its the fabrics that are involved are just so high quality, and they cost you so much money, and you have to factor that into the final cost of the lampshade.

D - Right.

M - Yeah. Which is...I mean they are just amazing. I've never seen...


D - The trims are real expensive

M - Yeah.

D - Because they are real woven brass from Europe, from the same mills that made the original old metallic trims in the 20s


M - Wow, so you are ordering from Europe too? Wow. And then the pulls...because you can purchase pulls separately, and you can use them on your own ceiling fans, or your own lamps at home, and they are very reasonably priced at $12 each. Do you make those as well?

D - I do.


M - Yeah, those are nice. They're really beautiful. Do you sell anything online or take special orders?

D - We do a lot of custom orders but I don't have a website

M - Ok, so what is your phone #?

D - 501-337-1225 or 501-337-3543

M - So if anybody wanted to call you to place an order, you would take the order, and just ship the shade?

D - Yes


M - Ok, great! And what made you start to make the pulls?

D - I had a customer a long time ago that thought it would be really neat to have pulls, and a lot, not all of them, but some of the old ones had pulls, so I thought “ok I guess I need to figure out how to do that.” So that was the next project, and I found that I could use the leftover remnants of the fringe that I had, and sell the pulls separately for ceiling fans. So we used to have a HUGE tassel business.


M - Wow

D - That has died out with... actually I guess in the late 90s, a lot of that kind of thing got really popular, so they started importing a lot from India and China, and flushed out that market

M - Like everything else

D - Right.


M - Yeah, because the pulls you can easily use them as a curtain tie-back or for your lamps. They look really really pretty. And the antique clothing that you have. Do you restore any of that stuff, as well, since you can sew?

D - I don't. There's not really a market for it. I was one of the first vintage clothing dealers on the west coast back in the early 70s and so I had a lot of that type of thing. And that was actually what gave me the backlog of textile knowledge, and fabric knowledge for the lamps, which was really good. But since I moved here to the south there it no market for that type of thing.


M - For vintage clothing and antique clothing?

D - There is, but much more modern, not antique, but much more modern. And it needs to be in the $2 to $3 dollar range, you know, because we have a lot of consignment stores here in town, and they sell a lot of used clothing, not really vintage clothing.


M - And just so my readers can have a reference, this town Malvern, Arkansas has just over 10,000 residents so this is a pretty small town, and you know I can verify that the clothing prices are pretty cheap so… Which is one thing that I like in shopping just for regular everyday clothes. But vintage clothing, I would think that there would still be a need for good quality vintage clothing. That there would still be a market for that.

D - People don't understand that. It's too kind of hippy eclectic you know...they don't do that kind of clothing...outside the box things.


M - In Albuquerque there is a huge culture for Rockabilly, you know 1950s type look..pencil skirts or flared skirts and pinup heels and jelly rolls. There is a huge culture for that...or subculture, so yeah they are always interested in those kinds of clothes. And there is another subculture of people that are really interested in Jackie O, pillbox hat, 1960s and that is what they look for.

D - We'll get that here in 20 more years after all the original stuff has gone off the market, and then people will think that of course nobody ever bought it, they are the first person that wants it. They don't realize that they really should have started on that 20 years earlier.



M - Yeah! It's funny…

D - In NM it's interesting because you've got Santa Fe, Taos, and you know lots of little different pockets of people that are kind of known around the country as artisans.

M - Yes, that's so true. So your lamps, I noticed in your room, your craft space that you have there...your workspace, you have a lot of finials and conduits and wires, so you just sort of take them all apart and re-assemble them?




D - A lot of times there will be broken parts and they have to be replaced, that means you have to keep everything! 


D - Sometimes I will find something that has the world's most incredible bottom plate and the rest of it is either destroyed and ruined or gone, or somebody took it apart years ago and attached it to something that was hideously ugly. 


D - You know, so I'm not opposed to buying parts and pieces that are really neat parts and pieces, and putting them back together the way that they ought to look.
 

M – Cool. Very cool. I think it is wonderful what you do, and I'm just so happy to meet you, and to just come in and enjoy your store every time I visit! So, it is definitely my favorite store in town.


D - Thank you!

M - And it was a pleasure to interview you!

D - Can you come in and visit more often!?!

M - I actually am – I'm going to start coming to visit every about 3 months. So, aside from your lamps and your antique furniture and décor items, what I love about this store is your amazing collection of Jewelry. I just absolutely love it and I see some of the brands that you have are Grandmother's Buttons and Jan Michaels, Patrice...and how did you get involved with these artisans?



   

D - How did I come across them?

M - Yeah, how were you introduced to these artisans? Because their stuff is just amazing.

D - The first piece of Patrice that I found I found the year after my mother died and I was out in Humboldt county California and found 2 pieces in a gift shop, and had to own them. And then I found out that they came with a health hazard because people that are total strangers on the street will come up and grab you by the shoulders and spin you around and just gawk and gasp and go “What is that?!”

M - They are amazing. They are spectacular!

D - It was definitely a home run. It is definitely just a little too pricey for this area. But now Jan Michaels has been very good because her price point is just excellent. She is a California designer, and handcrafted, and very nice.



M - Yeah, the last time I bought a big druzy ring which I absolutely love, and people do comment on it a lot. And then, Grandmother's buttons, I'm really into buttons myself, and I do make button jewelry using my mom's button collection that she gave me.

D - Most of these pieces are Grandmother's Buttons.


M - Where is she from?

D - Louisiana. And, these pieces over here, and these earrings, are built around old buttons, but I did those.


M - Oh they're Beautiful! Good job! Love them. So I'm also assuming that, since I'm going to post pictures on my website, that if anybody wants to call up the store...if they see something, that you would take the order and ship it off. Right?


D - We can do that. And then we have vintage jewelry. We have very antique, vintage, middle aged...that's what I call it, it's “middle aged”. Older but not really Old Old, you know which is good. We make several things here and then we have quite a bit of silver, old turquoise, that type of thing. Not as much really killer old Turquoise as you would find in NM of course



M - Yeah...of course, lol.

D - But I have more than anybody around here does. 


What a treat it was to talk with her!  Here is some more eye candy of the items in her shop. 

 In addition to having the Antique store, they also have a health food shop under the same roof, in the back.  

I am pleased to say that they have a great variety of essential oils for adding to food or for making your own massage oils, lotions, and soaps.  As well as a large vitamin and supplement section, which is not pictured.


Thank you for reading!  I hope you stop in to visit Diane and Terry if you're ever in Malvern.
Love,
Myria