Archive for August, 2008
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August 31, 2008Use your craft for good!
August 7, 2008Beep Beep Gallery is hosting a benefit show for a great cause! Krystal Woods, an employee of Aurora Coffee, has a degenerative eye disease that requires surgery. Aurora and Beep Beep have teamed up to auction off some art and crafts to raise money that Krystal needs.
The show is being put together this week, so if you’d like to contribute, please do so now! Here is some information from Beep Beep Gallery that tells you when, where, and how to drop off your goodies:
Thanks again for your interest in the benefit show we’re putting
together at Aurora Coffee in Little Five Points. Here’s the deal we
need pieces from y’all anytime between now and Wednesday August 6th
(we’re going to hang the show Thursday morning.) All you need to do
is go by the shop and tell the counter cats that you’re dropping off
art for Krystal’s show, fill out some info, and that’s it.
Or mail it to 468 Moreland Ave NE Atlanta, Ga 30307
There’s no theme, limit of pieces, or size constraints, we just want
work you’re willing to part with for a good cause. There will be a
suggested donation from 50% to 100% of sales going to Krystal’s
surgery and it would be really great if you could all give as much as
possible. Everything will be sold at silent auction. The show will
be up until Friday August 29th and we’ll have a big closing shindig.
Join the Craft Corps!
August 6, 2008Thanks to Toni Martin for sending this our way!
Calling all crafters! I’m gearing up to write my next book, Craft Corps (pronounced Craft Core) which will focus on the community perpetuated by craft and the designers & hobbyists who feed it. As part of the content, I’m hoping to include 50-60 short profiles of crafters of all types. If you knit, crochet, embroider, decoupage, paint, sew, bead, tat, work with ceramics, collage, etc.—I want to hear from you! Whether you’ve found success selling your handmade sock monkeys on Etsy or you crochet chemo caps for charity, I want to know who you are, what you craft and why you do it. YOU DO NOT NEED TO BE PROFESSIONAL CRAFTERS (in fact, it’s preferable as the book’s other content will focus on that)!
I’ve been fortunate enough over the years to receive e-mails from people all over the world, sharing their favorite memory of crafting, what crafting has done for them or what got them started and how they’ll never stop. These stories–from hilarious craft mishaps to touching crafty life stories– have inspired me to collect more to share with the public, handmade community.
If you’re interested in possibly being a part of Craft Corps, please fill out the following questionnaire, cut and paste it into the body of an e-mail, and send it to: craftcorps@gmail.com as soon as possible (but no later than AUGUST 15th.) If we’re able to use your profile, an editor will contact you directly with more info.
Thank you so much for participating! xo, Vickie
Name:
Age:
Location:
Profession (If you’re in school just put what level of student, ie College Student, Middle School Student, ect.):
Craft(s) of Choice:
Memory, Story or Anecdote related to crafting in your life (no more than 250 words):
Age: 64
Location: Lakewood, California
Profession: High School Special Education Teacher
Craft(s) of choice: Knitting, without a doubt.
“All of my life, the most important thing to me was becoming a mother, in the true sense of the word–not just one who gave birth. When my kids were little, my focus was being the kind of mother that mine wasn’t. Back then in my mind, one way to do this was to home-craft. Knitting made the first connection when for my brand new daughter, I made her a pretty, pink Scandinavian sweater and put it on her little body saying, “Mommy made this, just for you.” After that, every year I repeated the sweater in a different color and size. When her brother joined us, every year there were two sweaters knit by their mother’s hands.
As my children grew, there were many crafts we did together, as a family–with mommy’s hands, teaching little hands. And now, decades later, the little girl all grown up, teaches her mother the advanced intricacies of knitting. The circle is complete.”