Inspire

Inspiration

As a designer, I've learned not to limit myself to traditional resources for inspiration, but look for images, colors, and shapes in nature, travel, painting, architecture – my complete surroundings. During my graduate studies, I discovered that there is actually a name for this collective source of inspiration. It's called ocular reconnaissance, the visual stimulation of looking, surveying, and inspecting as fertile sources of inspiration for designers (Type and Image, Philip Meggs). Sounds fancy, anyway. Since becoming a freelancer, I find myself alone in my home studio most days with only a few furry apprentices as companions.

For someone who has spent years working as a collaborative person, excited by collecting and sharing inspiration with other creative minds, I now find myself browsing a la web for a lot of my research. My favorite discoveries aren't just visual eye candy, but behind the scene stories of creative people and what makes them tick. What does their day-to-day look like? How did their past shape their art? My latest encounter, "Like Knows Like," is an awesome independent side-project of short documentary films about creative types from all over the globe. Enjoy! And please feel free to pass along any sources of inspiration that you've unearthed via cyberspace.

Like Knows Like Graphic

(My sweet apprentices – Penelope, Casper, and Lily.)

Living ITP

Since moving inside the perimeter, (the part of the city that Atlantans proudly refer to as living ITP) space has taken on a new shape for my family of four, two dogs, and cat. To sum it up, space is TIGHT. 

For the first two years, I would lug my ginormous iMac to the kitchen table to work on design projects. It would get pushed to the edge to make room for dinner and lugged back upstairs when guests came over. A solution, sure. But, for anyone who knows me and my (okay, I'll admit it...) obsessive nature, it wasn't going to pan out as a long-term solution.

Without the luxury of adding to our square footage, I decided to make use of the space we already had. I would create a CLOFFICE! A what? 

I turned our downstairs closet into a compact, yet brilliant office! I can't express how important it is to have a space that nurtures and inspires your creativity. I wish I had taken a before picture, but I can assure you that it was a jumbled mess . . . one of those closets that you open and pray that you don't get hit over the head with falling debris. Now, it is my HAPPY PLACE! 

(By the way, the lovely print of Jane Austen book spines is from artist Jane Mount. She "paints portraits of people through spines of their favorite books." These adorable works of art are super affordable and makes the perfect gift for any book lover!)