Entries tagged with “Spotlight On: Crafters i Love”.


Today’s spotlight is on awesome Oregonian beader and fiber artist, Bobbi Kirk (a.k.a Beadbabe).

I have been a fan of Bobbi’s work for ages and I was so excited when Bobbi graciously agreed to answer a few questions about her art and her creative process to share with ya’ll.  I invite you to check out more of Bobbi’s work at her etsy shop, her flikr siteher website and read more about her creative adventures at her blog, Beading at the Beach.   I think you’ll agree that she is one seriously prolific crafter!

<Pause and Drum Roll>

….And now, without further ado, let’s get to the interview!!

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So, what do you create?
I make bead embroidered jewelry and bead and fiber wall pieces mostly, with occasional side trips into 3-D baskets and vessels.

When and how did you decided to pursue your craft full-time?

I was doing beadwork nights and weekends while working as a graphic artist during the day, and when I got laid off, I just started doing the beadwork (and later bead and fiber) full time. I eventually had about 9 galleries carrying my work, which meant I could focus on making the work and leave selling it to them.

How did you come up with your business name?

In the early days (early 90’s) I used business cards with the name, KirkWorks,  but sold my work in the galleries under my own name, Bobbi Kirk. My etsy shop has the same name as my blog, Beading at the Beach (I live at the central coast of Oregon) and I go by my online name of beadbabe49, since beads have been my major focus for almost 20 years.

What does your “average” work day look like?

I work from a small studio in my home (formerly known as the guest room) and I usually get up fairly early and check my emails while having my coffee there. Then I usually take about an hour to check on updated blogs and my etsy shop.

After that I’m ready to start working on any unfinished pieces from the day before or start working on a new piece. I have lunch around noon and then I either take a walk outside if it’s not too cold or wet or I go to our rec center and walk there…I try to do from 1-5 miles each day.
Then I do whatever household chores I have (grocery shopping, etc.) which gets me home around 3. I go back to the studio for a couple of hours and do some more work on my morning pieces. Or if the weather permits, I take the tray I work on out to the sun porch and bead or sew out there. And if I’m feeling restless, I’ll bag up whatever I’m working on and drive out to one of our ocean side parks and work in my van while enjoying the sun and the sound of the waves.

Then it’s time to fix dinner and spend some time with my husband before going back to the studio to check update my blog and decide what I have to finish and what I can save for the next day. This is also the time I do my research, if I need to, for any special series I’m working on, like my Basho Series I finished last year, which you can see at my flickr site.

What’s the biggest lesson you’ve learned in starting your own crafty business?

For me it was learning that I’m not able to sell my own work. I simply don’t have the gift of being able to talk about my work in a way that makes people interested in buying it. I have friends who make their living at art and craft fairs and saturday markets and I admire them tremendously, but it’s not a skill I have.


What inspires you most?
Water…in all it’s various forms…from a tiny creek to the ocean, it all draws me. I love it’s fluidity, it’s many colors and especially how it breaks sunlight up into millions of tiny points of light. Sitting or walking next to water encourages a meditative state in me that allows me to be in that still, quiet center that I create from. And although I’m not always portraying water in my work, I do try to put some of it’s qualities, the flow and peace of it, into each piece I make.

What’s your favorite tool, technique or project?

Right now I’d have to say my favorite technique is a combination of improvisational bead embroidery and fabric manipulation using hand sewing. I feel I’m a part of the art cloth movement, a sort of sub-category of the slow cloth movement I first heard about on Elaine Lipson’s blog, Red Thread Studio, which honors the process of art/craft making as much as the finished product.

What’s your earliest crafty memory?

I have a photo of me at 4-years old sewing doll clothes with my 25-year old cousin helping me out…and I can actually remember that day.

What the biggest challenge (if any) you’ve had to overcome in pursuing your craft?

Learning the difference between perfectionism and excellence. Striving for personal excellence is a goal I embrace…striving for perfection has kept me from enjoying the process of  making art/craft for many years, and from learning the many lessons of “mistakes”. As I’ve gotten older I’ve often seen that what I initially considered a flaw in a piece is what actually gives it soul and presence.

If you had time, what new medium would you want to learn?

I’d love to have the time to learn how to sculpt my own original faces in polymer clay.

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Thanks for sitting in the hot seat, Bobbi!!  =)

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All of the artists I feature in my “Spotlight On:” series are personal crafts inspirations to me. Seems to me that no crafter can really work in isolation because we’re all drawing off that single creative principal. The first artist I want to feature in my “Spotlight On:” series is Taryn and Jeff’s business, Mystic Orb Talismans.

For the last two years I’ve been vending at the Saturday Market and Holiday Market cooperative in Eugene, OR. These folks appeared one day out of nowhere with a completely magical booth filled with jewelery and other needful things. They are both very down-to-earth people and totally passionate about what they do. Check out the pics below to see what I mean….these pieces really speak for themselves.

Mystic Orb Talismans - Necklace with Abalone

Mystic Orb Talismans - Necklace with Abalone

Mystic Orb Talismans - Tayrn Wearing the Abalone Necklace

Mystic Orb Talismans - Tayrn Wearing the Abalone Necklace

Celtic Knot Inlay Necklace also by Mystic Orb

Celtic Knot Inlay Necklace also by Mystic Orb

Wonderland Box!  Massive Scrimshaw.

Wonderland Box! Massive Scrimshaw.

Another Angle of the Wonderland Box

More scrimshaw. This necklace is built around a metal screw-cap container.

Oooo.  I'm a vegetarian but antler never looked this good.

Oooo. I'm a vegetarian but antler never looked this good.

Tayrn wearing one of their necklaces

Adorable pic of Tayrn wearing another one of their necklaces. Love the carving on this one.

Peace pipe!

Peace pipe!

(Note: This show-and-tell could go on for ages. I spend years in their booth picking everything up and trying it on. It was a struggle to restrain myself from uploading everything onto this post.)

About technique: The little line-drawings are done using an ancient technique called scrimshaw. Jeff scratches the image into bone (or sometimes stone) and then fills the carving in with ink. These images are TINY - he uses a needle-sized tool and a magnifying glass to do it. I never even knew what scrimshaw was before I met him. I guess it’s a sailor thing. (FYI, I strongly suspect these folks were a pirate duo in a past life.)

Jeff also does fantastic wood-carvings and inlays with whatever kinds of rocks he can get his hands on. Lately he’s been using picture jasper in his work which just really gives me the willies! I LOVE picture jasper and the organic shapes in the stone really compliment his earthy designs.

If you want to read more about Taryn and Jeff (and maybe check out pictures of their little goats or their on-going home renovation project!) visit their website, http://www.mysticorbtalismans.com or check out their Etsy shop at http://mysticorbtalismans.etsy.com. They’re new to Etsy and they’re already 70+ listings strong! These folks are truely epic crafters….

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