On Saturday 20th October I
left the busy city behind and went into the beautiful autumnal Nottinghamshire
countryside to the Hope and Elvis Studio for a workshop with Samantha Bryan. Hope and Elvis is run and
owned by textile artist Louise Presley and is situated on the idyllic Welbeck Estate. The Hope
and Elvis studio is spacious, light and airy and is a treasure trove of textiles ephemera old and
new. I went on a bag making course there a few years ago and have been eager to
return to such an inspirational and welcoming space ever since.
Samantha Bryan is the creator of wonderfully
humorous fairy sculptures. Louise had organised for Samantha Bryan to help us
produce ‘fairies’ in her whimsical and quirky style. Her work is inspired by ‘victorian gadgetry
and invention’ and is constructed with great technical skill and attention to
detail. The sculptures are fashioned out of ‘wire, leather, found objects &
collected materials’. Some of my favourite features of her work involve tiny
roller skates made from buttons and ear muffs made from acorns! Samantha took us step by step through
her fairy making process and was happy to let us work at our own pace, giving
extra tuition whenever it was needed.
It was a fantastic day and I relished
the opportunity to work with a contemporary craft practitioner. Both Samantha
and Louise were extremely generous with their ideas, materials and time. The
atmosphere was relaxed throughout and it was brilliant to see a range of
different ages happily working together. There was even the added luxury of tea on tap and easy access to
delicious confectionery – a must for keeping creative minds going!
I documented the experience throughout
the day in the hope that it will give you an insight into Samantha’s methods of
working. Samantha’s fairies usually take her around three days to create and
she works on lots of different fairies at the same time going from heads and
hands to wings and feet.
I love the fact that my fairy evolved organically from
scraps of leather and found natural materials. I had a loose idea of what I
wanted to make at the start of the day but let the materials on offer and the
making techniques lead the design.
I didn’t manage to complete my fairy at the workshop but
have thoroughly enjoyed finishing her off each evening this week. My favourite
part of the whole process was working with such soft and richly coloured
leather. I also loved accessorising her and have got carried away with knitting
tiny leg warmers and weaving a
miniature scarf complete with pompoms.
WOW Clare your blog is a true refection of you creativity, it is so beautifully laid out and wonderful graphics. Thank you for the mention and for being part of the day and making it so enjoyable. Your fairy is cute a a button! x
ReplyDeleteThis is brilliant Clare I too really enjoyed the day and i can now pop back for a visit I mounted my Fairy on al ovely piece if drift wood i found on the beach in Devon a few years ago and never really knew what to do with it. I think it was waiting for my fairy :) x
ReplyDeleteWish I'd gone now... ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks for your lovely comments. In Hong Kong on honeymoon this weekend, bit of a contrast to the tranquil Nottinghamshire countryside last Saturday. I can feel another post coming on!
ReplyDeleteThis is excellent Clare and you worked so hard to finish your fairy !!
ReplyDeleteThanks Samantha, it was a brilliant day. I loved it.
Delete
ReplyDeleteexcellent submit, very informative. I wonder why the other experts of this sector don't notice this. You must continue your writing. I'm confident, you have a great readers' base already! outlook 365 sign in