Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Yarn Balls

 
My new favorite material in our studio is the Yarn Ball

 
Made from scraps of our 100% Organic Cotton Jersey, the scraps are pulled by hand (see page 99 of Alabama Studio Style for instructions) into ropes and then tied together with a square knot and rolled into these beautiful balls. The largest ball is 12” in diameter and weighs about 6 lbs. 
 
Although I love them just as objects just to sit around the studio, Diane Hall – our master seamstress – knitted the beautiful scarf above using this “yarn.”
 
Shown here in Storm Blue, I have worn my scarf everyday in this cold weather as it sits just like a collar under all of my sweaters and jackets. Keep an eye out for this in our upcoming Fall/Winter collection. Or get started knitting now… yes, knitting. (Melanie, are you reading this?)
 
The yarn is also great for making placemats, bathroom or door mats, braided rugs or just tying two things together.

 

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Horses, Rodeos & Commune

 


We spent our weekend dreaming about, looking at and talking about horses…
 
Reminding me of Roman Alonso and the amazing books that he and Lisa Eisner make at Grey Bull Press – including one of my all-time favorites: Rodeo Girl
 
Maggie and I may be getting a horse this year…

 

Thursday, January 21, 2010

A Short Animated History


This is fantastic… via Style.com

I am jealous and want my own film... stay tuned for ladies rocking & sewing.

 

Labels:
Design
Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Marfa, Austin & El Cosmico

Looking forward to organizing a Marfa (and Austin) One Day Workshop with the infamously cool Liz Lambert:
 
 
Will work on those dates this week…
 
Plan your road trip to El Cosmico
 
(*Disclaimer – some of you will remember that Butch has been working on the site as well, so, it also has a special place in my heart.)
 
Be blown away by Refueled
 
And in the meantime, join us in Portland or for one of our upcoming dates.
 

 

Monday, January 18, 2010

Angie’s Fall & Faded Leaves

 
Faded Leaves Fabric
– new to our online store – is made by Wet-Paint Stenciling - one of the new techniques included in our (soon to arrive) Alabama Studio Style. The fabric was first included in our Fall/Winter 2008 Revolution Collection.  At the time, I was looking for new ways to color fabric that did not require dyeing. Faded Leaves was the result and here are a few of the ways that we incorporated it into the collection.

Here is a sample of the fabric before sewing:
 
 
Instructions for Faded Leaves can be found in the techniques section of Alabama Studio Style. However, here are a few fabrics that can be made with Faded Leaves and incorporated into your projects.
 
Quilted & Beaded Angie’s Fall on Faded Leaves Ground:
 
 
Supplies:
 
 
Using instructions for Reverse Appliqué from page 64 of Alabama Stitch Book without cutting the reverse appliqué and then add bugle beads to decorate center of flowers. Beads & Beading Tools on Page 30 of Alabama Stitch Book and Beading instructions on page 68. 
 
Appliquéd Angie’s Fall:
 
 Supplies:
 
 
Using instructions for Appliqué from page 62 of Alabama Stitch Book apply your Faded Leaves appliqué to black ground
 
Make this fabric into a Corset or A-line Skirt- patterns included in Alabama Stitch Book.
 
Or get started on the DIY Tank Dress pattern & instructions from Alabama Studio Style.
 
General Supplies List:
 
 
 
 
 
 
Garment Patterns from Alabama Stitch Book and Alabama Studio Style.
 
*Additional colorways and garments coming soon or sign up for one of our Weekend Workshops to view the full collection in our studio @ The Factory.

 

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Why Is It Worth So Much?

We have been getting many emails and questions about a post that appeared this week on Ecouterre.com entitled “Does the Art of Craft and Handmade Matter in Fashion?”
 
My answers seemed to spur yet more questions… and a few angry emails.
 
After mulling over these questions, I have to think about Gina and Linton Hopkins from Restaurant Eugene along with Holeman & Finch in Atlanta…
 
(Stay with me here: You might remember that we were asking these same questions a few years ago about the food we eat and have seen – at least in my community – a marked difference in how we choose food and how we incorporate the cost of that food into our budget.)
 
Angie Mosier reminds me over-and-over-again (& again this weekend @ Blackberry Farm) about a saying from Gina and Linton: 
 
“It is not why something costs so much; it is why something is worth so much.”
 
I believe – and have seen firsthand – that the fashion industry will also come around and consumers will begin to ask more-and-more questions.
 
Yes indeed: Why is it worth so much?
 
**Photo of Holeman & Finch lifted from the Gourmet (RIP) article by John T. Edge and taken by Gina Hopkins. 

 

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Prosperity & Alabama Chanin


The Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum has announced their upcoming National Design Triennial series for spring 2010.

 
 “Why Design Now?” will be on view from May 14 through January 9, 2011, and will explore the work of designers addressing human and environmental problems across many fields of design from architecture and product design to fashion, graphics, new media and landscape design. Organized by Cooper-Hewitt curators Ellen Lupton, Cara McCarty, Matilda McQuaid and Cynthia Smith, the Triennial will be global in reach for the first time, reflecting the connectedness of design practices and the need for international cooperation to solve the world’s problems.
 
We are incredibly humbled & proud to announce that Alabama Chanin will be featured alongside esteemed designers like Martin Margiela in a section entitled “Prosperity:”
 
Progressive designers and entrepreneurs are building engines of prosperity that enable local communities to use their own resources to create their own wealth, as well as to participate in the global economy. Projects on view include a number of items that address basic necessities, such as a pearl millet thresher and a low-smoke stove developed for use in India; examples of slow design such as hand-made, limited-edition clothing by Alabama Chanin; and works made in collaboration with international designers and local craftspeople like the Witches’ Kitchen Collection, Design with a Conscience Series, manufactured by Artecnica.
 
Read the full press release here.
 
 
The exhibition opens on May 14th, 2010 and runs through January 11, 2011 and will include garments and fabrics from our Alabama Chanin collections.
 
Thanks to all of our supporters who have helped to make this possible…
Natalie and all of us @ Alabama Chanin





 

 

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Recipes, Gravy & Blackberry Farm


Forgive me for taking a vacation just after the holidays; BUT, I am headed out today for my first vacation - on my own - in 10 years (snow permitting)… very excited & for good reason:

 
 
Alabama Chanin donated one of our Textile Stories Quilts to the auction benefiting the Southern Foodways Alliance at Blackberry Farm this weekend. 
 
The quilt – shown above – is called Aunt Mag’s Chicken Recipe - a story from my favorite great-aunt about her secret recipe for fried chicken that she served only for her quilting circles.
 
Our entire series of quilts was inspired by the Oral History program  - a series of inspiring recipes, stories and films that are made, collected and cataloged by the Southern Foodways Alliance. 
 
 
Thank you to John T. Edge, Angie Mosier, Mary Beth Lasseter, Amy Evans, Joe York and a million more who make the SFA Oral History possible.
 
If you are not already a member of the Southern Foodways Alliance, join today - if for no other reason than to receive your printed copy of Gravy.
 
Back next week rested and with recipes and stories for the next decade…
Natalie

 

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Archeology of the Future


 

A photo from Li Edelkoort’s exhibition last year titled: Archeology of the Future
 
A table from Studio Job sits before one of our Textile Stories Quilts – a project included in our new book Alabama Studio Style.

 

*Photo courtesy of Li Edelkoort

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Patterns

Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry.Richard P. Feynman
 
My life tends to run in patterns.
 
Sometimes I dream of patterns.
 
My favorite subject in design school was the study of pattern & repeat.
 
One semester I spent a week just discussing the word repeat (and an entire semester trying to define the word).
 
I have certainly spent the greater part of the last decade working with patterns.
 
I look for patterns everywhere I go and in everyone I meet.
 
Here are a few of my new favorite pattern resources (see the scrolling bar at the bottom).
 
Find a larger selection of my favorite pattern books organized here.
 
And pattern making (stenciling) tools from our online store...
 
 
 
 

 

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Reflect, Rejoice and Renew

 


After lofty plans to post each day about the last decade – and the next, my computer slipped from my hands last Tuesday morning and crashed (literally) to the floor and shattered. Later that afternoon, my Blackberry decided to follow suit. 
 
My deduction was that it was time to take a much needed sabbatical from all things electronic. A week later everything, and everyone, seems to have survived without me. The world is still spinning, I am no further behind than I was last Tuesday and I have had a week to “Reflect, Rejoice and Renew.”
 
So, here we are, a few days later and making a fresh start.
 
Thank you to Kathy Kemp and al.com for this lovely article. And, thank you again to everyone who makes this a wonderful project each and every day…
 
Florence-based designer's skirt creation completes Obamas' Christmas tree
By Kathy Kemp -- The Birmingham News
December 22, 2009, 5:30AM
 
Alabama Chanin, the Florence-based couture fashion design house, has sewn another bead into its weighty crown.

The company created the stenciled, beaded blue and white tree skirt that completes the official White House Christmas tree, on display in the Blue Room through December. Alabama Chanin founder Natalie Chanin attended the recent unveiling -- her latest stop in a series of high-profile appearances.

"We were honored to be asked to do this," says Chanin, who was a Top-10 finalist for the coveted DFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund prize, presented last month in New York City. Vogue magazine featured her in a full-page color spread in November, and she was also the subject of a Birmingham News profile.
In The News' story, Chanin couldn't talk about the tree skirt because the White House had yet to unveil the tree. But now the entire world can see it -- in pictures, at least, or in a tour of the nation's home.

Twenty-two Alabama Chanin artisans, mostly local northwest Alabama seamstresses, spent three weeks sewing and constructing the tree skirt, which measures 14 feet in diameter and weighs about 28 pounds. The skirt features 13 large panels representing the original 13 colonies, and holds about two kilos of Chanin's white satin bugle beads, all sewn by hand.
 
It is made of Chanin's signature fabric, 100 percent organic cotton jersey, in the colors, as requested by the White House, of white, peacock blue, Navy blue and storm blue piping. "We painted the entire piece with our Maggie stencil, then used quilting, reverse applique and reverse applique with beading on different sections," Chanin explains. (She teaches her techniques in her "Alabama Stitch Book," available at www.alabamachanin.com.)

Chanin, like other artists the White House invited to create decorative pieces for the tree, paid for the materials, labor and shipping of her own work. Chanin is already taking orders for custom tree skirts for the 2010 holiday season (contact steven@alabamachanin.com for details).

The 2009 White House tree, a Douglas fir from Shepherdstown, W.V., stands 18.5 feet tall, reaching all the way to the ceiling. Each year, the Blue Room tree is the same height, because the power source is on the ceiling.

"Reflect, Rejoice, Renew" is the theme for President Obama and his family's first White House Christmas. Reflecting the national desire to conserve and recycle, the tree is lit with environmentally sound LED lights and decorated with bows and more than 650 ornaments from previous generations.
Chanin's work fits nicely with this year's theme. She uses local artisans, rather than shipping production overseas. She's long been known for using organic products and recycling materials. Every scrap left over from her clothing creations is used for something else. In fact, she had piles of jersey strips baled and used them to make a sofa for the Alabama Chanin office.

At the White House this month, more than 50,000 people are expected to see the tree -- and its skirt -- while attending parties and other functions. When the tree comes down, Chanin's skirt, along with the tree ornaments, will be archived with the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.

© 2009 al.com. All rights reserved.

 

 


Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Waste Not Want Not

For me, this past decade was about learning to use the resources that I had readily available. My goal for the next decade will be about digging deeper to fully understand all of the resources that I have and then to use those resources wisely and wildly
 
It is my wish that we will use all of our gifts to enrich our lives this & every season of the year and upcoming decade:
 
Make the fabric above – “Waste Not Want Not” – by printing your left-over bubble wrap using a textile airbrush paint
 
Simply lay out your fabric on a clean work table and apply paint lightly to the bubbly side of bubble wrap with any sort of sponge or brush.  Print onto fabric by pressing the painted side of the bubble wrap gently to your fabric. Repeat as desired.
 
We used a taupe color paint (mixing white with tiny amounts of yellow and black) on a white fabric; however any color will work.
 
Let your printed fabric dry thoroughly and do not wash for at least three weeks to allow curing. This resource can be used for paper, wood or any other surface that you might choose to decorate.
 
Wash bubble wrap after use and store for using over and over and over again.


 

 

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Holiday Gift Guide 2009

$40 & Under




DIY Eagle Shirt Kit
$39 

 

Hand Painted Good Luck Journal - $22

 
 
 
 
 
 
$60 & Under:
 


Poncho $60
 
 
$100 & Under
 


Beret $80
 


Sewing Primer $97.50
 
 
$200 & Under:
 


Sewing Kit $135
 
 
 
For that very special person:
 
Choose a One Day Workshop/Retreat or one of our 2010 Weekend Workshops
 
 
 
Or gift an Individual Studio Day @ Alabama Chanin by contacting steven@alabamachanin.com
 
 
 
Order a couture, custom-made garment from our Spring/Summer 2010 Collection – now available online:
 


&
Gift Certificates are always available for the "discerning" friend or family member…
 
Happy Holidays from all of us @ Alabama Chanin
 
Labels:
Design
Thursday, December 10, 2009

Imogene + Willie



If Alabama Chanin had a shop, it would look like this.

Please add Imogene + Willie to my Holiday Wish List

Perhaps to my wish list for the next decade...

 

 

Labels:
Design
Thursday, November 12, 2009

Good Hair Day


Today I am having a good hair day:

 
Ever have one of those?

 

Labels:
Design
Friday, October 30, 2009

Get Lost


It seems that I have been lost for over a week and that I am
just coming up for air.

One more friend from our Bureau of Friends evening at Partners & Spade:

Get lost with Andy Beech @ Reference Library and Stork Bites Man

 

Monday, October 19, 2009

1 Turtle Dove @ Alabama Chanin


Visit our online store to see our collaboration with Allison Moorer and 1 Turtle Dove. 10% of all proceeds from every sale go to benefit Women in Need.

Made from 100% White Organic Cotton and hand-stitched by our artisans in Alabama, Tennessee and Mississippi.

Enjoy!

 

Labels:
Design
Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Chanel Does Country – Really.

 
Okay a small fashion moment this morning, please.  Can we just ponder for a second?

It is a moment courtesy of Garance Dore – my new heroine.

You have to seriously love a girl who writes this about herself:
 
“Seriously though, there’s always this side to me that ends up utterly unorganized, that can’t get its act together to be the perfectly manicured creature of light that I would sometimes like to be.”
 
I have been feeling a bit like that off and on for the last month.
 
I dream to have a tea (or other beverage) with Garance and Scott. I would like to interview and photograph the two of them...
 
I have thought so often about a post that Scott did in August called “So What Do We Think About This.”
 
The quote below has really stuck with me. In my constant berating of myself because extra weight that came with having Maggie at 44, I shy away from cameras and photos like most other women. Perhaps this should be reconsidered:
 
“When I am shooting on the street older women and larger size women often say "no" to my request to shoot them. Actually, much more than any other category of people I shoot. I think they have a real suspicion about how the image will be used. I also think there continues to be a growing disconnect between the fashion community and "average" women in general.” 
  
BUT back to today, nobody captured the mood of the Chanel like Garance. Please go read her post and look at her photos. Karl Lagerfeld does country with Lily Allen singing. Really? I am not sure why this shocks me so… Please tell me what you think.
 
Garance sees a time coming soon when fashion shows will be like rock concerts.
 
Are The Songbirds are singing? 
 

*Photo Garance Dore

 

Labels:
Design
Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Tossed & Found


“Pastry Bag Light,” page120

 
The Meyers’ share surprisingly simple ways to recycle goods from your neighborhood, your home, and your attic back into your daily life.
 
 
 “Home Sweet Home,” page 186
 

“Picnic Table,” page 68
Saturday, October 3, 2009

Heath Red


From Vogue Daily:

Still under the radar, West Coast-based Heath Ceramics is a Vogue editor favorite. Imagine our delight upon discovering that their new color for fall, out today, is this divine shade of red, reminding us of the fall collections (think Prada, Louis Vuitton, and Galliano). “Even though we’re in California, the warmth of red ceramic ware in winter takes the chill off our damp, foggy afternoons,” says coowner Catherine Bailey of the new shade. Heath is a family affair (Catherine owns the company with her husband, Robin), and when asked what they will be serving in this fabulous casserole (of which only 75 were produced), the couple suggest Maryana Vollstedt’s Brussels Sprouts and Baby Onions with Mustard recipe (from The Big Book of Casseroles (Chronicle)).  “Our whole family loves brussels sprouts, and the bonus is that they look great in this red dish.” Another suggestion is a Baked Couscous Pudding with Raisins from John Pawson and Annie Bell’s Living and Eating (Clarkson Potter). “The recipe is simple and the texture is a great surprise in a pudding. I find the leftovers can make a great breakfast as well,” says Catherine. It is no wonder they count Alice Waters’s Chez Panisse among their clients (they collaborated on the restaurant’s dinnerware) and, as they happily admit, they have found solace creating simple, beautiful things. What’s next? A collaboration with Alabama Chanin is in the works.

Heath Ceramics large red casserole, $195; heathceramics.com.

—Virginia Tupker
Photo: Liam Goodman
 
Recipes:
 
Baked Couscous Pudding with Raisins
Serves six
1/2 C couscous
1/2 C sugar
2 1/2 C whole milk
1 1/4 C heavy cream
1/3 C raisins
Pinch of salt
Freshly ground nutmeg
 
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Place the couscous, sugar, and milk in a saucepan and bring to a boil. Add the cream, raisins, and salt. Return to boil and then transfer to the casserole. Grate plenty of nutmeg over the surface. Bake for 35 minutes, uncovered, until pudding is thick and creamy underneath its golden skin. It is at its best about fifteen minutes out of the oven and it is still good cold, although it firms up as it cools.
 
Brussels Sprouts and Baby Onions with Mustard
Serves four
1 lb. Brussels sprouts
1 C chicken stock
1 C small whole onions
1 T Dijon mustard

Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
 
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Cut off stems of Brussels sprouts and any discolored outer leaves. In a medium saucepan over high heat, bring stock to a boil. Add Brussels sprouts, reduce temperature to low, and cook, covered, until tender, about eight minutes. Add onions, stir, and cook one minute. Stir in mustard. Season with salt and pepper. Place vegetables and stock into a casserole dish lightly coated with cooking spray or oil. Cover and bake until flavors are blended, about 25 minutes.
Monday, September 28, 2009

Blue Monday


Back in the studio after what seems months & happy to get back to the business of making beautiful things…

Here is my favorite shot from Spring/Summer 2010. I feel like I can breathe this blue.
 
We will be working on the web catalog and hope to have something to share by next week. 
 
 
Watch one of my favorite filmsBlue from Three Colors Trilogy by Krzysztof Kieslowski


 

Monday, September 14, 2009

The Color of Desire


Red can be a naughty color — red-light districts and bordellos. It is both the color of Satan and the color of the Roman Catholic Church. Stevens notes that red was a color often associated with divinity; medieval and renaissance paintings show Jesus and the Virgin Mary in red robes.

Red is for happiness — Indian brides get married in red saris. Red for good luck — the one-month birthday of a Chinese baby is celebrated with red eggs.

Red is rarely an accident.

"A textile is not dyed red by chance," Stevens says. "No you use red for a specific reason whether it's for love, for fertility, for happiness — you made it red on purpose."
 
 


 

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Barneys New York


 

A Time to Sell Green, Not Greed

By SUZY MENKES
From the New York Times: September 13, 2009
 
NEW YORK — “Fashion’s Night Out” — an evening of open-house shopping last week in New York and other major cities around the world — was designed to brace up nervous customers and convince them that consumption is joyous.
 
But it also proved that there is more to e-commerce than buying online.
 
The key “e” words were “emotion” and “energy” during this Vogue-sponsored fight against retail gloom. After a long period of credit-happy consumers and easy sales, stores and designers are having to work much harder to engage customers and make them feel that their purchase is worthwhile.
“There has to be an emotional connection — we can’t live without it,” says Humberto Leon, co-owner of Opening Ceremony, with stores in New York, Los Angeles and, now, Tokyo.
 
Mr. Leon says the fashion world has changed dramatically since designers and retailers were in control of image and sales. “Fashion used to be for insiders — now everyone sees everything,” he says. “That is the importance of the runway shows. It is the first look the customer sees and then the same emotional connection has to deliver when it gets into the store.”
 
For Julie Gilhart, senior vice president and fashion director at Barneys New York, engaging customers is about far more than producing desirable clothes.
 
“The customers need to be emotionally allied to what they buy — as with a car, with food or architecture,” Ms. Gilhart says. “They want to know the worth in value, craftsmanship and unique partnerships. This is something that is brand new, and there has to be a constant stream of communication.”
The story is told in Barneys windows, where the focus is on sensitive, ethical issues transformed into desirable clothes. So a “Made in America” window, filled with U.S. flags, focuses on labels like Alabama Chanin, where organic pieces are handmade and embellished by local artisans in the Deep South. Or a window devoted to the Loomstate brand offers what Ms. Gilhart calls a “sexy, stylish and eco-friendly collection” that includes T-shirts patterned with endangered species as seen in National Geographic magazine.
 
The idea was developed two years ago as part of Barneys’ “green” projects. They include giving new fashion life to made-over vintage clothes, charm necklaces made from 22-karat recycled gold and Bolivian knitwear created as a nonprofit government project to help maladjusted teenagers.
 
Ms. Gilhart’s commitment to the store, where she has worked since 1992, is passionate and absolute, a “feeling of doing something better as a retailer.”
 
“Everything is changing — you have to keep moving forward,” the fashion director says. “People no longer just buy a blouse for $3,000. They want to know why it costs so much and why it is extraordinary and beautiful. Our projects are vehicles for education. But the bigger picture is about looking at something with different eyes.”
Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Revival of Classicism


I stumble across more and more about Classicism these days.

Stylesight writes about it this month:
 
“Words such as Heritage and Craftsmanship – ones that we have heard much of recently - are more than just the buzz labels du jour. Rather they form a bridge to a past many consumers look back at longingly.”
 
 
 
Saturday, July 25, 2009

Life After Sambo

Great to see Life After Sambo on the cover of Metropolis this month.

We had a chance to visit some of the $20,000 houses last year while at Yancey Chapel.
 
The works are simply fantastic.
 
Plan your road trip: Rural Studio
 
Be inspired to make a difference.
 
*Photo of downtown Newbern by Timothy Hursley
Monday, July 20, 2009

Alabama in the Bronx

From Father Andrew @ Goods of Conscience:

 “Do you notice the corn growing next to the garage?  We have chickens up here too.  I am loving the indigo flag waving Alabama in our midst.”

 Read more about Father Andrew & Alabama Denim
 
**Photo courtesy of Father Andrew

 

Labels:
Design
Thursday, July 16, 2009

2009 CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund Finalist

We are honored to announce that Alabama Chanin has been selected as a finalist for the 2009 CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund. Thank you to our office staff, our talented artisans, family, friends, readers, journalists, editors, stylists, our stores & a host of supporters around the globe.  

 
Dance with us today…
xxx from all of us @ Alabama Chanin
 

*Photo Russ Harrington

Monday, June 22, 2009

Pie Lab

John Bielenberg and Project M are serving up good pie in Hale County, Alabama this summer. 
 
I love this blog post from John: 4 Steps To Idiocy (And 1 Step To Sheer Genius)
 
Get involved with Project M this summer:

Open Sourcing Project M

The Project M 2008 Team, in collaboration with HERO, has created a permanent Design Lab space in Greensboro, Alabama. This light-filled studio building is situated on the HERO campus which includes a bunkhouse for up to 10 people and lodging for visiting advisors. Greensboro is also the center of Hale County where the Auburn Rural Studio has been building wonderful structures to benefit the community since 1993.

However, the Design Lab is only an empty building without passionate young designers to inhabit it on an on-going basis. This is where you come in.

We encourage both Individuals and groups to
contact us if they are interested in using the Project M Lab space to work on meaningful projects in Hale County. We guarantee that it will be an intensely satisfying experience.

 

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Style Ethics

Thanks to Tonne Goodman, all the folks at Vogue and Jessica Alba for this lovely piece about Alabama Chanin and style ethics in the July 2009 issue!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Genius

Thank you to Maria for sharing this story. Visit www.ted.com for more ideas worth spreading.

Elizabeth Gilbert on nurturing creativity:  http://www.ted.com/talks/elizabeth_gilbert_on_genius.html

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Carlos Falchi

 

Every time I turn around these days, I run into the work of Carlos Falchi.
 
Sarah Lewis brought the beautiful little evening bags for Brooklyn Decker and me to carry to the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund dinner late last year.
 
Then, this recently ran on Style.com: Carlos Falchi: Made in the USA
 
And the CFDA is not hosting Mr. Falchi for the inaugural “CFDA Member Chat” this week.
 
Wish that I could time travel to New York…
Labels:
Design
Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Heath Again

I returned home from my travels last week to find a box from Cathy and Robin @ Heath.

Inside the box was my new, and now favorite, book for inspiration.

The colors, textures and beautiful simplicity take my breath away:

Heath Creamics : The Complexity of Simplicity

A heartfelt THANK YOU to Cathy and Robin for making a difference.

 

 

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Suzy Menkes

 

Another article I had saved on my computer and was reminded of recently...

A call to arms from Suzy Menkes:

Suzy Menkes’s Opening Speech at the IHT Luxury Conference in New Delhi March 2009A

Bravo!

Monday, May 4, 2009

Bags for the People

 

Great organization doing a really good thing:

Bags for the People

Get involved & use their inspiration to make a difference in your own home, school and community.

 

Saturday, May 2, 2009

My Maggie Thanks You

I keep thinking, over and over again, about this quote that I read on Treehugger.com in the midst of the Earth Day celebrations:
 
Writing in Mother Jones, Joel Makower waves the white flag.
 
Green consumerism, it seems, was one of those well-intended passing fancies, testament to Americans’ never-ending quest for simple quick, and efficient solutions to complex problems.
 
It’s only a matter of time before… the public recognizes that for every pound of trash that ends up in municipal landfills, at least 40 more pounds are created upstream by industrial processes – and that a lot of this waste is far more dangerous to environmental and human health than our newspapers and grass clippings. At that point, the locus of concern could shift away from beverage containers, grocery bags, and the other mundane leftovers of daily life to what happens behind the scenes – the production, crating, storing and shipping of the goods we buy and use.
 
Read the whole story here.
 
It also reminds me of The Story of Stuff and that, as designers and consumers, it is our responsibility to consider the impact of each and every decision in the design, development and manufacturing process. 
 
As I told a group of students in Savannah this past week:  “For a very long time, designers have been at the core of the problem, creating product, after product, after product without regard to the consequences.  It is time for us as designers to solve the problem and design the solution.”
 
My Maggie, pictured above, thanks you…
 
Thursday, April 23, 2009

Heath Ceramics

Bravo to Cathy and Robin @ Heath for their commitment to quality, exceptional design and community. 

From The New York Times:

April 23, 2009
A Label of Pride That Pays
By TRACEY TAYLOR

In a timeworn factory in Sausalito, Calif., 67 workers turn out Heath ceramics, doing everything from mixing the clay to applying the finishing glazes. Twenty miles away, a Japanese robot called Ziggy works day and night in a converted brass foundry in Berkeley, making precision-cut office furniture.

What the two neighboring factories demonstrate is that it is still possible to manufacture high-quality products in one of the most expensive locations in the United States — even in the grip of an economic recession.
And while both are being forced to adapt to the tough times, the two businesses have been helped by the fact that their products are made in America.
 
“In hard economic times, a slogan built around ‘Buy American’ is going to resonate a little more,” said Steven J. Davis, a professor of economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. “People read stories about unemployed Americans and they want to feel good when they make consumption decisions.”
Professor Davis said manufacturing was generally moving outside wealthier countries like the United States. “Only an outbreak of protectionist policies or a sharp rise in international shipping costs could slow or temporarily reverse manufacturing’s declining share of employment in the United States,” he said.
 
Still, there still seems to be an appetite for products from high-end, craft-based manufacturers in America. That proved to be the major reason that Robin Petravic and his wife, Catherine Bailey, bought Heath Ceramics six years ago even though competition from abroad had forced most artisanal potteries across the country to shut down.
 
They said that when they first walked into Heath’s factory in one of Sausalito’s former shipyards, they decided that Heath’s idiosyncratic way of doing things and its geographical roots could prove to be its salvation. They said they were struck by the fact that every part of the manufacturing process was under one roof. “Many of the employees had worked there for decades and knew everything, including how to fix the machines if they broke down,” Ms. Bailey said.
The company was founded in the mid-1940s by Edith Heath, a ceramicist and creative spirit, and her husband, Brian, an inventor. The company quickly earned a reputation for durable, finely crafted tableware and tile whose clean, modernist lines signaled a break from the more fussy designs of the past.
 
It would seem at first glance that little has changed at Heath’s dusty, 30,000-square-foot factory in the time since — the tableware and tile are made in the same sustainable, labor-intensive way they have always been. Some lines, like the Coupe pattern, have been in constant production since 1948.
 
But change has come with the need to make the manufacturing more efficient, cater to the current design aesthetic and respond with agility to the economic downturn. New production systems have been introduced, and dusty pink has been removed from the palette in favor of more contemporary glazing hues like persimmon and cocoa.
In January, Heath introduced a line of less expensive tile. While previously all of Heath’s tile was made to order, the Modern Basics line can be bought off the shelf in a limited selection of colors and shapes. It is about 40 percent cheaper than the custom tile.
 
Heath’s mix of sales channels has also been adjusted, with wholesale taking a backseat to more direct routes, like the company’s Web site, its factory store and a new retail outlet, which opened in December in Los Angeles. “That’s where we can be most effective and react most quickly,” said Mr. Petravic, a former product designer who developed the business plan.
 
The factory store, he said, helps them learn which new designs work and which ones do not. It has also reinforced the couple’s commitment to manufacturing in the United States. “We can test the market and avoid suffering from our mistakes,” he said. “If we try something that turns out not to be popular, maybe we have made 100.”
In 2008, Heath’s sales increased fivefold and its profit margin was about 8 percent. The company increased its employee roster to 67 from 25. This year the goal, Mr. Petravic said, is simply to stay flat.
 
Reinier Evers, founder of Trendwatching.com, which tracks consumer habits, agreed that Heath seemed to be benefiting from consumers’ renewed interest in homegrown products. How products are made is on consumers’ radar, he said. “There’s a story that consumers can tell themselves, or better, the ‘status story’ they can tell their peers to gain recognition.”
Michael Goldin, an architect and industrial designer, has also tied his company’s fate to that trend. For the last 14 years, Mr. Goldin has been contributing to the rejuvenation of a light-industrial district in Berkeley. He transformed an abandoned model airplane motor factory into his office and has designed and outfitted streamlined, open-plan office spaces for lawyers, architects and dotcom start-ups in Berkeley and neighboring Emeryville.
 
Mr. Goldin’s company, Swerve, has also been making furniture, seeking out the technology required to produce precision-cut aluminum taper joints and machine-tooled, eco-friendly work surfaces for the desks, workstations and shelving systems.
For Mr. Goldin, outsourcing was never an option. “Ever since I was at grad school I have felt very strongly about having my hands in what I am making — actually feeling materials and how they work,” he said. “It all started with my desire to make things and to have a shop where I could do that.”
 
Outsourcing, he said, would also make it difficult to ensure high design and craftsmanship standards. “How do you keep track?” he asked. “How do you make sure your product comes to you as you specified it? Overseeing the process would require constant traveling back and forth.”
 
In any case, having Swerve’s pieces made overseas would compromise the company’s just-in-time manufacturing model. “We always make our products to order. We can’t afford to keep items in stock,” Mr. Goldin said. “If we went overseas we would have to order huge inventory ahead of time. And we’re not ready for that.”
 
The company’s labor costs are kept low because of its reliance on computerized cutting machines, including a new canary yellow robot from Japan, nicknamed Ziggy by the employees, which works 24 hours a day. Of Swerve’s 15 employees, only four work on the shop floor.
In the last few months, Mr. Goldin has had to make some hard choices to ensure that Swerve rides out the economic crisis. A recent order for 500 aluminum-framed chairs will be completed at cost.
 
He and his administrative staff have vacated the factory’s sleek offices and some income-generating tenants have moved in. And his employees have all agreed to salary cuts. But he believes more strongly than ever that outsourcing would be the wrong choice. “Of all times, we need to do what we can to keep jobs here,” he said.
 
Both Mr. Goldin and the owners of Heath say they hope what they have achieved will stand as a model for other small- and medium-size businesses facing the critical question of whether to locate production locally or in low-cost offshore sites. As Ms. Bailey put it, “The craft of manufacturing has to a great extent been lost as a value in American culture, and we are striving to retain it.”

 

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Happy Earth Day

In celebration of Earth Day, we would like to honor our farmers – stewards of the land – who strive to grow cotton that sustains the earth and enriches our lives. To Green Textiles, our knitters, who support the work of those farmers and create the most luxurious fabrics that are the basis of our couture garments.
 
Thank you to our artisans, the heart of our company, who use their wondrous talents to create our garments one stitch at a time with needle and thread
 
A thank you to STC, and Melanie, for providing us a platform to share our philosophy, history, techniques and products through Alabama Stitch Book and our upcoming Alabama Studio Style (February 2010). We are grateful for the wonderful process of learning to share and having the opportunity to teach how to make your own garments.
 
A hearty round of applause to our crafters and sewers who work to recycle items from their closets (and local thrift stores) into their own lives and who support our efforts each and every day… 
 
What better way to celebrate the bounty that is our earth.
 
Happy Day…
Thursday, April 16, 2009

Antique Kimonos

Antique Kimonos via 2 or 3 things via Neville Trickett

Beautiful.

 

Labels:
Design
Saturday, April 11, 2009

Quilting

What can be said about quilting?  It is a process I love: the history, the stories, the fabrics, the people.  (I even made a documentary film about old-time quilting circles.)  At Alabama Chanin, we even take vintage quilts, refurbish them and add the oral histories of textile workers, collected from my community.
 
I am in love with The International Quilt Study Center, as the pieces there tell a history of women’s work that cannot be seen anywhere else on the planet. The now-famous Gee’s Bend quilts and their simple magnificence rooted in a complex history have long been an example of beauty sprung from necessity. I cried the first time I viewed the Gee’s Bend exhibition at the Whitney.
 
It has been said that our collections are based on quilting.  This is only partially true. Alabama Chanin garments derive from a basic quilting process of the straight stitch, and we tie layers of fabric together with quilting stitches. But our garments are not quilts.
 
I have never really been a great fan of contemporary quilting (Although I LOVE it when the subversive finds its way into the contemporary).
 
That is until I learned about Julie Floersch.  Julie’s pieces are stunning, refreshing, contemporary and inspiring. And, friend and colleague, Denyse Schmidt adds such beauty to the realm of contemporary quilting.
 
Ultimately, the quilting process influenced the foundations of Alabama Chanin and will be with us as we continue to grow.


Wednesday, April 8, 2009

It's Getting Easier Dressing Green

From Style.com:

As WWD pointed out yesterday, eco-chic hasn’t fallen prey to the recession. Yes, green fashion stays viable by being partly a marketing kick. (Last year one publicist told me point-blank that she had her client do a couple organic cotton tops just to get into every magazine’s now-inevitable Green Issue.) But keeping the trend alive surely has some merit, and considering that fabric manufacturing, especially cotton, can pollute heavily, it must make a difference that companies like Loomstate, Koi Suwannagate, and even Jil Sander and Yves Saint Laurent are offering stylish sustainable options. The article also mentioned that the French customer in particular is fed up with how quickly clothing falls apart, another reminder that the most eco-chic clothes are the ones you don’t toss in a season. As Earth Day looms and green press reaches critical mass, there are a few other things worth mentioning, like Yoox.com’s new initiative Yooxygen, which will, among other things, offset the carbon footprint of its courier services. Yooxygen’s main focus is, of course, shopping. Set to launch on Earth Day is an exclusively eco-friendly boutique (dubbed by Yoox CEO Federico Marchetti as ECO-mmerce) with product like Ilaria Venturini Fendi’s recycled material accessories line Carmina Campus, vegan Stella McCartney accessories, and organic tees from Katherine Hamnett, a.k.a. Henry Holland’s spiritual mother. Meanwhile, HBO asked Natalie Chanin of Alabama Chanin to do some “up-cycled” T-shirts—essentially reworking old T-shirts from shows like Flight of the Conchords and Sex and the City with Chanin’s homey-chic signature hand-stitching and appliqué. They’ll be sold at the HBO store in New York and at www.hbo.com/store. And finally, T-shirt line Alternative Apparel (which has some of the best colors I’ve seen lately) has created a magazine called Think Earth with contributions from eco-minded celebs like Adrian Grenier and Leonardo DiCaprio posse member Lukas Haas. You can download the magazine at www.alternativeapparel.com starting April 14, and they’ll be celebrating the issue next week with a party at the Sunset Marquis. Hey, just because you’re green doesn’t mean you can’t be fabulous.

 

—Meenal Mistry
 
Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Wedding Belle


 

Thanks to Venessa Lau at Women's Wear Daily for this great piece:

Wedding Belle:  Alabama Chanin Launches Bridal

--April 7,2009, WWD, Venessa Lau
It’s not often that a bridal designer will liken her dresses to pajamas — but, then again, not many bridal designers are like Natalie Chanin of Alabama Chanin. “You need to feel beautiful but also comfortable,” says Chanin, who launches her first bridal collection, The Wedding, this week. “You shouldn’t be afraid that your bra’s going to show or be picking at your dress while you’re standing in front of everyone. It should be something that sits on you like a pajama.”

That comfort-driven mind-set is nothing new, of course, for those already familiar with Chanin’s work. In 2001, she launched Project Alabama, famous for its cotton garments handmade by artisans in her hometown of Florence, Alabama. And she didn’t skip a beat when, in 2007, she split with her partner and lost the rights to the label’s name; later that year, she launched Alabama Chanin, which works with the very same quilters and stitchers. “We’re already set up for custom orders,” says Chanin, who is also holding a trunk show for her signature collection at Barneys New York on Wednesday. “Every piece we make [for the main line] is cut and sewn by hand, whether we’re making one piece or 200.”

Still, entering the bridal market wasn’t an obvious move for the designer. “I’m not sure why it took us so long,” she says, noting it was her recent spring lineup that put those nuptial gears in motion. “Spring was inspired by ceremonial dresses, so we did a lot of white looks. It just kind of developed from that.”

The 50-piece Wedding collection, which includes long V-neck gowns, tunic dresses, skirts and tanks, as well as matching vests and jackets, continues in the same folksy vein. Everything comes cut in her trademark organic cotton jersey and, Chanin proudly notes, is machine washable. But she doesn’t sacrifice elaborate design for ease of care (and wear). The garments, priced from $150 to $4,000 wholesale, are embellished with visible stitching, reverse appliqués, beading, stencilwork and embroidery galore — the artsy-craftsy techniques core to her clothes.

“When you’re looking at the wedding market, I think we have something truly different to offer, something that’s outside the norm,” says Chanin. “The dresses we make, they’re heirloom pieces.”

She adds that clients can also customize their own garments — pairing a silhouette with an embroidery pattern from the Alabama Chanin archives — or rework them into similar styles for bridesmaids or flower girls.

And yet another bonus: In keeping with her sustainable sensibility, Chanin is able to overdye the pieces after the big day. “I know a lot of people save their wedding dress for life,” she notes. “This way, they can wear it more than once.”



 

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Seasons Change

As we know, the fashion industry (along with many others) has spiraled out of control.  I have recently spoken with many colleagues and it is my belief that this is the time to work hard(er) to make it better - rather than to sit and wait for something to happen.  I saved this article from Bridget Foley for a few months now and ran across it again today.  It feels pertinent and real to me as I navigate towards the future.

May we all strive towards making the right changes for our wardrobes, our families and our futures.

A heartfelt thank you to WWD, and Bridget, for striving towards that future:

"Tis the Season. Or is it?"
Posted by Bridget Foley- Executive Editor at Women's Wear Daily
7:52PM EST, December 9, 2008
 
Pre-fall?

To the rest of the world, pre-fall, the time before fall, is late summer. You know, the days are still sticky; lucky two-residence types resign themselves to spending less time at the beach; and kids, to going back to school. Back in the day, that's when most people started thinking about fall shopping. Just the thought of that new chilly-weather wardrobe brought a rush of excitement, the promise of crisp days that one would greet bedecked in cozy tweeds and cable knits.
Nostalgic enough for you? Well, let's go a wassailing with the ghost of autumn present. Technically, we're still in fall '08, which according to the calendar doesn't end until Dec. 21. But the fashion world knows better. This fall at retail was over long before the first tree leaf, or the first investment house, Lehman Brothers, fell. It ended back in May, June and July, when pre-fall and fall started hitting the stores, and those shopping throngs who allegedly love to buy early never materialized. Yet here we are again, the world as we know it having gone to hell in a handbasket, and pre-fall is proceeding seemingly business as usual. Oscar de la Renta, Calvin Klein and Zac Posen have already staged full-on shows; Donna Karan, Carolina Herrera, Isaac Mizrahi, J.Mendel and numerous others have opened with showroom appointments, as will countless more, both here and in Europe, from now into January.

For what, exactly? A fall '09 redux of 70 percent off by Nov. 1? Or perhaps these extensive pre-fall collections are in-house exercises, since retailers are slashing inventories to shreds. Might not this be a moment for a massive communal reevaluation of that beloved but seriously flawed behemoth, "the fashion system"?

Everybody knows there is something drastically wrong, starting with way too many clothes, and that was back when consumers consumed. Then, there's the strident adherence to absurdly early deliveries. Fashion house executives blame retailers. "The department stores make me deliver early," said Mario Grauso, president of Puig Fashion. "Now the markdowns. We're training the customer to buy on sale." For Donna Karan, it's a familiar motif. "I've been on this for years," she said. "We're teaching the customer that it's a white sale business."

Perhaps in some fairy tale past, the oft-cited cliché that the pre-seasons sell best because they're on the floor longest had some validity. But the dearth of store sales prior to the current economic train wreck has rendered that premise flagrantly anachronistic.

And what of the emotion of fashion? As an industry we're all trained like Pavlov's dogs to rush with passion to what's new, what's next. How about a little time spent celebrating the joys of fashion right now, rather than ignoring fall -- once everybody's bread and butter -- in anticipation of resort?

"We should as an industry take a deep breath, look at what's going on, and try to fix it," Karan said. "It's got to be everyone -- retailers, designers, press."

Or, we can wait for total industry Armageddon, à la the financial and auto industries, to step back and try to set things right.

Business as usual? We all know it's anything but. Let's deal with it.
Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Alabama Chanin Living

THANK YOU to Rinne Allen for these beautiful pictures of our new interiors collection:
 


 

Labels:
Design
Friday, December 5, 2008

View on Color

“As we abandon long-established notions of the past and truly embrace this young century, the agricultural community will become the planet’s new elite, dominating our essential needs and inspiring years of farmer styles. After all, the farmers of the future will clothe us, house us, feed us, fuel us and hopefully even heal us. Ultimately they will be able to engineer design and grow furniture in a symbiosis of technology and biology, and therefore rural and urban lifestyles will merge and become one; resulting in an inversed social landscape with a greener city and a more contemporary countryside.

We will see vertical farming in the inner cities and the return of smaller luxury farms in the countryside to handle the market for fresh niche products, while arid areas of the globe will be used to power solar plants and farm new kinds of bio fuels. The farm will even become a destination for beauty and learning as well as a cradle for new retail strategies and marketplaces for the future.

This rural revival will sustain far into the future, influencing our habitations and interiors….”
 
Li Edelkoort - an excerpt from View on Color – A World of Folk, page 67

Copies of The World of Folk issue can be purchased by contacting Ragna @ EDELKOORT INC - $95.00 + $ 7 shipping

Tel: 212 420 7622 or ragna@edelkoortinc.com
& learn more here: Edelkoort, Inc.
 
 
Thursday, November 13, 2008

Green Fashion Glossary

I found this very straight forward and informative post while jumping around this morning.

& the site boasts many other intersting tidbits. Enjoy!

Green Fashion Glossary:

 

 

 
Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Marfa, TX

Butch has been in Marfa the last few weeks working on Liz Lambert’s El Cosmico with Jack Sanders and crew. I love this photograph which shows how something so simple can be so beautiful.

See more photos from Jesse Hartman here: El Cosmico in Process

 
Wednesday, August 13, 2008

The Curiosity Shoppe

Love this site: The Curiosity Shoppe

And don’t miss these perfect knitted coffee sleeves.
Labels:
Design
Thursday, August 7, 2008

Warm Glass

Friend and designer Robert Rausch, has an astounding array of talents (not to mention being both photographer and designer of Alabama Stitch Book.) After watching him experiment and perfect technique for two years, I am happy to see that he has officially launched his Etsy shop with the beautiful Warm Glass Bowls.
Labels:
Design, Design
Thursday, August 7, 2008

Warm Glass

Friend and designer Robert Rausch, has an astounding array of talents (not to mention being both photographer and designer of Alabama Stitch Book.) After watching him experiment and perfect technique for two years, I am happy to see that he has officially launched his Etsy shop with the beautiful Warm Glass Bowls.
Labels:
Design, Design
Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Homage to a Teacher


Occasionally in our lives, a person comes along who changes the course of our destiny and makes us a better person, simply by having touched our lives. One such person in my life was a teacher who believed in me before I knew that one could believe.

I came to his studio as a naive, wounded young woman and his quiet guidance opened a path for me that I never knew could have existed. I am the designer, business owner, manufacturer and person I am today because of the commitment of a teacher/professor and friend: Michael Pause.

Here is a portion of an email that I received from him today:

… Speaking of which, on 30 June I resigned from the faculty, after 33 years. Cleaned the office, put my keys in an envelope, put the years in a box, ribboned it and put it up on a shelf. It was a fantastic run; every student was a gift in some way…

I mourn for the legions of students who will miss his quiet guidance, commitment to pure design and his struggle to keep a sliver of Bauhaus alive in education today.


Let’s take a moment today to thank all of those teachers along our way who have helped to shape us into men and women we are proud to be, walking paths we are proud to walk.

Thank you Michael… may your days be filled with family, joy, good work and laughter.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Alabama Denim


Launching September 2008:

100% Organic Cotton
100% Hand-Sewn
100% Collaboration
100% American Tradition

In fact, Alabama Denim is grown–to-sewn in the USA. Garments use the Alabama Chanin artisan-sewn, double-layered cotton jersey techniques which are then garment-dyed in indigo through collaboration with Goods of Conscience.

While most of indigo dying today is accomplished with synthetic materials, Alabama Denim is dyed with the true indigo plant in the basement of a church in the Bronx. Each piece is a limited-edition labor of love that comes to you through collaboration with the best of intention.

Wear and be Proud: The nature of indigo is that the color blue will rub from the fabric and slightly color the skin of the wearer. In many cultures, this process of coloring was considered a blessing of the body.

Goods of Conscience was founded by Father Andrew O'Connor, a Catholic priest in New York City, to help the poor both in Guatemala and New York in a way they want, not with a hand out, but with a job that pays them a living wage.

Visit their website to learn more about the Social Fabric and their mission at: http://www.goodsofconscience.com/.


From the Goods of Conscience Website:

Spreading the word about a new way of taking the misery out of globalization requires your voice. Help us let the world know there is a better way to gently share the goods of the earth. Please pass on these bits of good news about goods of conscience. Send us your own.



Alabama Chanin is a lifestyle company that focuses on creating and array of spectacular products through adhering to principles of slow design and sustainability.

We produce limited-edition products for the individual and the home. Our products are crafted by hand using new, organic and recycled materials. Each individual piece is constructed with care by talented artisans who live and work in local communities. Our office, design studio and the bulk of our production take place in and around Florence, Alabama. Visit our website to see more: http://www.alabamachanin.com/


For appointments, contact: jessica@alabamachanin.com




 

 

Labels:
Design
Tuesday, July 15, 2008

The Gift

Blair brought me this beautiful bowl to Atlanta as a present (as if her posts were not present enough.) The bowl came wrapped in a pretty box and tied with an orange ribbon that was affixed with masking tape at the bottom (her son Jess’ art material of choice.) As I opened the box, Blair talked about the McCartys and how they sign their work with a piece of their home: Mississippi mud. Their signature slides down the front of my bowl.

I have proudly placed this bowl on my kitchen counter as a reminder of how something as simple as dirt can become a treasured vessel when you talk to it with your hands.


Visit: McCartys Pottery

Thank you Blair…

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Earnest Sewn Presents “A New Hive”

Shining a spotlight on this catastrophe is Earnest Sewn with the latest in their ongoing installations: “A New Hive.” Bee-inspired works by Derrick R. Cruz, Caroline Priebe, Natalie Chanin, Cory Gomberg, Monica Byrne and others will be included in the exhibit at Earnest Sewn’s flagship store in NYC’s Meatpacking District. The hope is to bring attention to this extremely pressing issue, because as Cruz puts it:“Curiosity leads to contemplation, internalization, and then to genuine concern.”

Read all about it here: http://threadtrend.com/2008/07/02/earnest-sewn-presents-a-new-hive/

And be sure to check out: http://www.anewhive.org/

Monday, June 2, 2008

This Week is Garden Week

I am inspired by my garden. These small beds that run around and behind my little house will feed my family this summer.

Thanks to our compost, we are pleasantly surprised by all of the volunteer tomato plants that have sprung up in every spot that we spread this luscious soil.

Maggie and I watch as flowers mingle with the rogue tomatoes, sunflowers and cantaloupes willy-nilly.

Our backyard composter and worm bin, the Biostack:

http://www.composters.com/compost-bins/bio-stack-bin_91_1.php

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Yancey Chapel

Last weekend, I had the pleasure of being able to visit the Yancey Chapel in Sawyerville, Alabama. A part of the works from Rural Studio, this chapel has been closed to the public for some time.

In a beautiful ceremony, our friends Carol Mockbee and Jake Fussell joined their lives. It is fitting that Carol and Jake chose this place which so reflects the mission of Carol’s father to provide “shelter for the soul.”

The work and life of Samuel Mockbee is a yardstick for us to hold up to our lives each and every day to take measure of the road that we walk on this planet. Learn more about Samuel, his life and legacy here:

Sambo Mockbee

Rural Studio Mission

Rural Studio: Samuel Mockbee and an Architecture of Decency
 
 
Friday, May 23, 2008

Tyler Hays - BBDW

The American Craft Council is now hosting a 'Summer in the City Salon Series' which I had the luxury to see last week in New York.

However, for those of us who do not live in the city, they now post the series in podcast form from their website:

http://americancraftmag.org/zoom-entry.php?id=2311

Tyler had a lot of great things to say about how he started and now runs his business.

From Andrew Wagner at the Craft Council:

Tyler Hays is the founder and owner of the unconventional furniture and design company BDDW. On May 15th he helped launch the American Craft Council’s “Summer in the City Salon Series” with an engrossing look at how the company got started and what the future has in store for them. Along the way the capacity crowd learned about BDDW’s unique approach to design and how that has shaped the culture of the entire company and in the end, help create a business model that reflects Hays’ life philosophy of always figuring out how to “make cool shit” no matter if you’re making a chair, jewelry or a million-dollar company.


In our first pod-cast of the season, Hays walks you through his wildly twisting paths that got him and BDDW where they are today. Be sure to join us for our next two salons on July 24th and September 18th in the historic American Craft Council library and if you can’t make it, you’ll find the pod-casts here. Looking forward to having you join us either way!

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Small Things


From Paloma's Nest:

http://www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=8374876

"Do small things with great love."
Labels:
Design
Friday, May 16, 2008

Consumption Part 2 – Eight Belles

I grew up riding horses with my father and grandfather on the family farm. And although I still bear the scars from my first pony, to this day I have a deep, spiritual love for these majestic, beautiful, powerful creatures.


An excerpt about Eight Belles from “The Last Lap,” Time Magazine, (May 19, 2008), Page 13, by David von Drehle:

…”But it's only fair to point out that breeders aren't a solitary priesthood. They flip horses the way real estate speculators once flipped condos. With dollar signs in their eyes, they savor 2- and 3-year-old horses, exactly the way the fashion industry looks at long-stemmed 14-year-old girls, exactly the way the celebrity culture gazes on Britney and Lindsay and Miley, exactly the way shoe-company reps scrutinize boys on basketball courts. Horses, fashion models, teen stars--they're all produced for maximum profit.


Every market needs buyers as well as sellers, and that's where the rest of us come in. If horse breeders have stopped raising animals that are sound for the long run, it's because the audience for mature racehorses--like the audience for maturity in general--has vanished. Seabiscuit, over his 89-race career, drew huge crowds season after season. By contrast, this year's Derby winner, Big Brown, will command the public eye for two months at best, retiring after the Belmont Stakes in June. Provided he lives that long.”


Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Industrial Revolution

This idea of our future from Caroline Priebe, ULURU:

I believe the United States is about to have a post industrial revolution, industrial revolution. I hope for this, despite the majority of my knitwear production occurring in china and potentially being out of a job.
I looked to China not simply because labor was so cheap as everyone assumes, but because I had no other choice if I wanted to make fine cashmere knitwear. China was the superior producer, they invested in the technology/machines, the “linkers” (skilled craftspeople) for fully fashion garments, the yarn, they were vastly easier and friendly to work with, and gave me landed prices.
Not to mention, the US knitwear industry was virtually extinct.

Things have changed since July 2004 when I opened my doors and “the party” is over in China.
Today, current economic, political, cultural and environmental forces are illuminating the unsustainability of our outsourced production and more importantly our consumption habits.

-New labor laws (which I welcome) that increase the cost of labor, lead times and minimums. At the same, time US retailers are looking for lower prices, shorter lead times and are placing smaller orders.
-Chinese government is discouraging labor intensive manufacturing.
-Weak US dollar
-Inflation
-Rising fuel and food costs
-Dwindling/aging worker population

I am optimistic that this perfect storm of events will force US producers and consumers to move into more sustainable business models, lifestyles and make us question our consumption habits.

http://ulurunyc.com/

 

 

Monday, May 12, 2008

Tuscan Chevre

I briefly mentioned Belle Chevre in a post from a few weeks back and feel compelled to talk more about this company today.


I had the opportunity to meet Tasia recently and fell in love with her story, her passion and the Tuscan Chevre that she so kindly left at our studio.

 


Last night, in a hurry to eat, read books to Maggie and generally manage life with a two-year old, I threw together a dinner from the fridge which was one of the best I have had in awhile. It literally took about 15 minutes and serves 4.

Natalie’s Tuscan Chevre Salad
Ingredients

4 handfuls fresh green salad mix from the garden
1 cup cherry tomatoes– our local farm has a greenhouse and already has delicious tomatoes
2 left-over grilled chicken breasts
Tuscan Chevre from Belle Chevre
One-half lemon - juiced
Salt and Pepper
Crackers

Place jar of Tuscan Chevre in hot tap water to warm
Slice cherry tomatoes in half, lightly salt and set aside
Slice chicken breasts into one-eighth inch strips and set aside
Wash and dry greens


Fill one-half of a plate with greens and add salted cherry tomatoes
Fan chicken slices on other half of plate
Spoon warmed goat cheese on to top of each slice of chicken centering the cheese on each slice
Remove remainder of goat cheese from jar, leaving oil and place the cheese in bowl to be eaten at the table.
Spoon oil & “goodies” from the jar and drizzle over the chicken and cheese slices

Dressing

Add juice from one-half lemon and pepper to taste to remainder of oil in jar. Close lid and shake

Pour dressing over salad and eat.

Put crackers on the table to enjoy the remainder of your Tuscan Chevre.

Enjoy

 

 

 

Photograph from Southern Living - April 2008
Friday, May 9, 2008

Memoire Liquide

Recently at Fred Segal in Santa Monica, I had the joy of learning about Memoire Liquide (thanks to Jeannine.)



It is an amazing and somewhat overwhelming experience to stand before their counter of hundreds of smells, beautiful little bottles and expert sales staff. I was asked questions about my favorite perfumes: Shalimar, "the flagship perfume of the House of Guerlain, and about my favorite smells: vanilla and cinnamon, two kitchen staples.


I felt at once exhilarated and terribly intimidated standing at the Memoire Liquide counter. I wanted to smell and try all. I wanted to have the entire day to start over and experiment with building my own scent. I wanted to take the entire counter home. But, truthfully, while I have always been drawn to certain fragrances, I am really not knowledgeable about the bases and ingredients.


In December, I was lucky enough to meet Michelle Krell Kydd and discover Glass Petal Smoke. My experience of Memoire Liquide reminded me of my many conversations with Michelle and filled my mind with memories of life. I was suddenly reminded of being a little girl in the bathtub and mixing all sorts of lotions, shampoo and cream to formulate my own “perfume”. I told Michelle that I was once asked if I had to “choose only one sense, which one would it be?” My answer, at that time, was the sense of “smell.” And while I am no expert, I know immediately my likes and dislikes. Michelle introduced me to the Tonka Bean by mailing me my very own with the instructions to” place in a sealed glass jar and smell only after two weeks.”

Thinking of scent always reminds me of the beautiful short story from Anais Nin’s, Delta of Venus, about the lover who lost his love because he changed his scent. I believe that smell is so ingrained into our whole being that such a simple thing can change a person forever. Point in fact: I once broke up with a boyfriend because I woke up one morning unable to bear the way he smelled.

I love this quote:
Memoire Liquide Bespoke Perfumery
Remember….Be Remembered….


Standing before the counter at Memoire Liquide, I finally settled for a beautifully packaged set of 3 scents:

Sensual
Joie de Vivre
Fleur de Coton

Their website reads that they will be “complete soon for your shopping pleasure.”

 
Friday, May 2, 2008

Tiny Buildings

I love these Tiny Buildings from Sharon at http://www.tinybuildings.com/

They remind me of my eternal desire to have a small, sustainable, country Mini-House

Monday, April 28, 2008

Consumption

We have choices in what we purchase, consume and choose to support every day. We vote with our dollars for the brand of clothing we like, for the types of food we want to eat, for the toys we buy for our children. This letter, from a former colleague, reminds me to think before I spend. The impact of our dollars cannot always be measured by what we bring home in our bag:

I work as a designer for a large corporation and recently had the opportunity to travel overseas to see production of some of our products. This was my first visit to India and first time being in a factory this size. It was mind blowing to see the amount of consumption that takes place on a daily basis. I had no idea the number of garments being produced. The company we do business with operates around 46 factories in India and constructs 3 million garments every month! This is just in one country.

We were also able to see a large wash house where garments are washed with enzyme finishes and other chemicals to give a softer hand feel to the fabric. They are capable of washing 100,000 pieces every day with a variety of chemicals and finishes. Inside, stacks of pants piled in to huge bins were waiting to be washed in oversized washing machines. I can’t imagine the amount of power and chemicals used to accomplish their daily quota.

This trip changed my view of how much we consume. Seeing every size of every garment that’s going to every store really put this industry in a new perspective for me. At the company I work for, we move so fast and produce so much that we don’t take the time to ask ourselves what the customer really wants or needs and more importantly how much power and material we consume every day to make our products. For me, I will take from this experience a new outlook on consumption and begin asking myself how I, in my own way, can try to make a difference.




Tuesday, April 15, 2008

10 Creative Ways

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Stain Removal Wisdom to Live By

My mother taught me that it’s important to use the beautiful things in your life every day. She gave me her first set of china with the one direction that I should use it and enjoy it, not store it in a closet. I have taken her advice to heart with all of the things in my home. However, when you use textiles to enrich your everyday life (especially with a two year old), you’ll also need some of the old-wives’-tale wisdom my grandmother shared with me:


Old Wives’ Tale & What It Means

Don’t rub it in; dab it off -- Blot; don’t rub it in more
A stitch in time saves nine -- Get to it as quickly as possible to avoid more work
Out, then in -- Start on the outside of a stain and work your way in


Strategies:



Absorb: Use cornstarch or talcum powder to blot stain

Bleach: Use 1 part lemon juice or white vinegar to 1 part water

Dissolve: Use all-purpose household cleaner as solvent for grease

Soak: Use 1/2 cup salt water per quart of soapy water

Wash: Use all-purpose cleaner like dish or liquid laundry detergent

And how to use them:

Protein Stains: Soak, Bleach & Wash


Coffee and Tea Stains: Flush with Bleach, Soak & Wash


Tomato and Sauces: Dissolve , Soak & Wash


Oils Stains: Absorb, Dissolve & Wash



My new motivation for everyday cleaning are these great products from Mrs. Myers Clean Day. Aromathrapuetic Household Cleaners - how good is that? I love all the Lemon Verbena products and now sell them from our small in-studio store.


Visit their website to get your own: http://www.mrsmeyers.com/

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Spring Green

The folks at Yee-Haw Industries do amazing letterset printing. Each piece is designed, set and pressed by hand. I posted these beautiful cards by by Bjorn Rune Lie in the blue color way at holiday time; however, they are now available in a beautiful Spring Green.

Get the color of your choice here: http://www.yeehawindustries.com/
Labels:
Design
Sunday, April 13, 2008

Higher Grounds

My morning cappuccino just got better with the discovery of Higher Ground Coffee. Fair Trade, Shade Grown, and featuring Non-Profit Blends. Their motto: Better Beans by Fairer Means Get yours here: http://www.highergroundroasters.com/

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Chocolate Chip Cookies & Little Girls Aprons

My two year daughter loves everything about cooking and the apron is her new favorite kitchen accessory. This Little Girl Apron beautifully sewn by Jane and the Ducks arrived last week in a lovely little package, complete with our own Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe.

We play in the kitchen now every day.


Chocolate Chip Cookies from Jane and the Ducks


2 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup (2 sticks) butter, softened
3/4 cup granulated sugar
3.4 cup brown sugar, packed
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 eggs
2 cups semisweet chocolate chips

Preheat oven to 375F. Combine flour, baking soda, and salt in a small bowl. Beat butter, granulated sugar, brown sugar, and vanilla extract in a large bowl until creamy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.

Gradually beat in flour mixture. Stir in chocolate chips. Drop by rounded tablespoon onto ungreased baking sheet. Bake for 9 to 12 minutes or until golden brown. Let stand for 2 minutes: remove to wire racks to cool completely.

Makes about 5 dozen cookies.

Monday, March 17, 2008

The Hand Meets High Tech

The American Craft Council has done an amazing redesign of their magazine, American Craft, which is stunning. You can join the Craft Council and subscribe here:

 

 

 

 

 

 

In the newest issue, they have included a piece about Evolution/Revolution at The Rhode Island School of Design Museum of Art:

americancraftmag.org/article.php?id=1614

 

 

 

And don't miss the Exhibition Notes by Joanne Ingersoll which I posted a few days ago:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Evolution/Revolution – The Arts and Crafts in Contemporary Fashion and Textiles

William Morris said, “Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.” This is the essence of the Arts and Crafts Movement.




 


Joanne Ingersoll and The Museum of Art at the Rhode Island School of Design have put together an amazing show called Evolution/Revolution – The Arts and Crafts in Contemporary Fashion and Textiles which runs from February 11 – June 15, 2008.

We are honored to have two pieces included in the show (a detail from one of our “Textile Stories” quilts is below.)




But, more important is that the Exhibition Notes are a wonderful document of the work that is going on today. While they are extremely beautiful, they are also beautifully poignant for the times in which we are living and working. Joanne has done an amazing job of addressing a difficult theme which could have easily lost its way and, consequently, given us a clear vision of where we are headed in the future.

Download the PDF version of the exhibition notes here thanks to RISD:

http://www.alabamachanin.com/Articles/EvoRevo_exhib.NotesF


And read a review of the show by Greg Cook here:
http://gregcookland.com/journal/2008/03/evolutionrevolution-at-risd.html


I am hoping that the show will have legs and travel…
 

 
Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Paint-by-Numbers

My dear friend Sara Martin made the most amazing presents for her yearly holiday party. Everyone at the party received their very own Paint by Number portrait, painted by Sara and her husband Kory.

Sara shared this software with me which would be great for embroidery and needlepoint too: Paint By Numbers 2005

And here is a history of the Paint by Number phenomenon from the Smithsonian Institute: Paint by Number

Be sure to read "Every Man a Rembrandt "

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Handmade 2.0

I always love the selection of Etsy products that Holly Becker at Decor8 edits together.

And, I really LOVE that The New York Times ran this article by Rob Walker today in the midst of holiday shopping season.

Have a read: Handmade 2.0 and take the Handmade Pledge.

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Future Fashion



Future Fashion White Papers

This is the next volume in the Earth Pledge Sustainable Development Series about improving our future through architecture, food and, now, fashion.

Here is what Earth Pledge says about their mission in publishing the books:

Sustainable Development: White Papers Series
Dating back to 19th century England, white papers have long provided a forum for the exploration of important social and political issues. Today, we’re publishing a book series based on this idea. It’s proving to be a great way to get the word out on sustainability issues.

There are some great essays from great people included in the book and I am honored to have an essay included in Section 4 called "What Does Planting Tomatoes Have to Do with Fashion?"

Get yours here: Future Fashion White Papers

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Deluxe: How Luxury Lost Its Luster

This book was recommended to me by a good friend in the fashion industry. In the book, Dana Thomas traces the origins of luxury from the mid–nineteenth century to today. It is a straight forward look through the walls and a must-read.

Deluxe: How Luxury Lost Its Luster

Monday, October 1, 2007

By Hand

This is a great volume about the variety of hand works that are being created today by a wide range of artists and artisans. The images are fantastic and each page makes me want to get started on a new project.

Get your copy here: By Hand: The Use of Craft in Contemporary Art
 

Monday, October 1, 2007

Historical Fashion in Detail

Historical Fashion in Detail is another great source of inspiration for all of our hand work. The photographs are beautiful, detailed and a reminder of a time when articles of clothing were truly works of art.

Get your copy here.

 
Monday, October 1, 2007

Art School Girl

Art School Girl specializes in one-of-a-kind hand made paper goods. Expertly crafted from recycled materials and often sewn or printed by hand, each piece is artisan quality. They have great items available online.

Visit their website: http://www.artschoolgirl.com/



Sunday, September 30, 2007

Louise Dahl-Wolfe

I have been inspired by the life, times & work of Louise Dahl-Wolfe since I can remember. I go back to this book over and over again and always find something new.

Get the book here or the film: Louise Dahl-Wolf: Painting with Light... she exudes a rare form of beauty.

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