I Need a Balloon
>> Thursday, February 25, 2010
I decided to give myself a bunch of virtual balloons - and share them with anyone else out there who needs a lift. That one up there? It's one of my favorite new prints from Helen Dardik. I've had this in my Etsy Favorites since she released it and I'll be buying it for Jo for her birthday later this year. Isn't it great?
This is a wall sticker from Cosas Minimas. I love it.
Matte Stephens is one of my favorite artists and I love his Monsieur Hulot series. Here's Monsieur Hulot in the Park.
How about these cute little fabric-covered buttons from Show Some Button Love?
I like this little mini painting from Pinkrain. Volo via means "fly away" - exactly what I'd like to do right now. I'll have to settle for stepping away from the computer and settling in with a good book. I'm in the thick of His Majesty's Dragon and loving it.
I'll have my butt planted in this chair again bright and early tomorrow morning. We've got a chance of sun tomorrow afternoon - after more snow in the morning. I'm keeping my fingers crossed. . . Read more...
Life Lesson #3
To give our daughter Jo every advantage I can, I'm passing along to her the accumulated tips and tricks I've learned from my 38 years on Earth.
Life Lesson #3: Don't worry; Worf isn't really going to die. The main characters on a TV show never die unless they posed in Playboy or pissed off the producers.Read more...
SCBWI-Carolinas Spring Retreat Deadline Approaches
>> Wednesday, February 24, 2010
I just saw that the deadline for the SCBWI-Carolinas Spring Retreat in Chapel Hill, NC is fast approaching, and I wanted to throw in my recommendation to attend for anyone writing for kids who lives close enough to go. I went two years ago (I think?)--the year Martha Mihalik, Sarah Shumway, and Krista Marino attended as editors--and had a great time. You get a personalized critique from a major editor--precious one-on-one time in which you discuss the book sample you submitted in advance--plus group sessions with each instructor, in which you learn writing tips, techniques, and trends. It's like going to the fall conference, only there's just a couple dozen of you there with the editors!
What I really valued most about the experience though was meeting all the other SCBWIers and having dedicated time to work on my manuscript. When not in the general instructional settings, the attendees are free to pull up a rocking chair or a table in some quiet spot and write. It was really inspirational to sit laptop to laptop to laptop with other writers and work, occasionally sharing successes and asking for help with challenging bits. There was a real sense of camaraderie, and I made a great many friends--particularly as I had just moved to North Carolina, and was meeting Carolinas SCBWI members for the first time. (Waves to his fellow attendees.)
The time I was able to spend on my manuscript was super valuable, and the advice I got on it from editors and fellow workshoppers helped me understand where my story was, what it needed, and how to fix it. I can't recommend the experience highly enough--and I would be going again this year but for my trip Japan!
Information about the retreat can be found here, and the registration form and further information about the instructors can be found here (opens as a PDF). If you've got the wherewithal to go this year, it's well worth it. But hurry--the deadline to register is March 1st! Read more...
Book review: Still Sucks to Be Me
>> Tuesday, February 23, 2010
In Louisiana, Mina gets mixed up with an overbearing boy of the human variety who won't take no for an answer, the boy's uber-jealous ex-girlfriend, and a mysterious vampire boy who may or may not be allied with an evil clan of vamps known as the Carters. (He also may or may not be hundreds of years old.) But lest you think this is just Twilight redux--more vamps and high school drama--Pauley really stakes her own territory with her particular brand of humor. The best bits come in her development of the elaborate, bureaucratic world of vampiredom, which has a helpful brochure for just about every conceivable situation vampires might face.
Mina's voice is at once vulnerable yet sassy, and she's a heroine you pull for. The plot with the renegade clan of vampires takes a while to get going, overshadowed by Mina's relationships with her long lost BFF and her new, possibly-evil love interest, but things pick up speed at the end, and Mina's life returns to some sense of normalcy. (Normal, that is, for a girl who drinks pig blood, changes shape, has super-strength, super-senses, and can mesmerize people.) The end promises more adventures for Mina and her friends, making it a sure bet that Mina's life will keep sucking. But in a good way.
Still Sucks to Be Me by Kimberly Pauley goes on sale in May 2010. Read more...
Interview with Holly Keller of Chez Beeper Bebe
>> Monday, February 22, 2010
Where do you find your inspiration?
My primary sources of inspiration are vintage toys, nature, fine artists (love Miro, Caulder, and Girard), and my biggest influence is, perhaps, the creative interests of my son.
How do you balance your making with your family?
I forgo a whole lot of sleep. But aside from that, I have the great fortune of being married to someone who wholly supports what I do and does more than his share around our home so I can have time to design and support my little business. I did recently move to a part-time schedule at work too—cut back from full time to a 3-day work schedule—so I now have more time I can devote to the Beeper Bebe space, as well as to my son. And I have to admit, that has been the most glorious change in my world—I could break into a triumphant song and dance just talking about that change. I mean, Virginia Woolf talks about the need to have a room of one’s own, but you also need to have the dedicated time of one’s own—especially as a mother. While I did plenty of work on Beeper Bebe prior to going part-time, I always felt guilty for it and like I was short-changing everyone in my family (including me). But now that I have this dedicated time every week that is just for me to create—time that was freed up with the explicit intent of allowing me more time to devote to Beeper Bebe, well, I am liberated from my guilt for those hours. And that alone has been inspiring—not to mention crazy-happy–making for me personally.
Can we peek into your work space? Show us where the magic happens!My work space is a work in progress.
I actually did some significant re-organization on it last year, and now want to redo the whole color and feel of the little space I have—make it lighter, less crowded with supplies, more unity in its feel. The space I have is a what I suppose was intended to be a small bedroom in our 1920’s era home—so it is upstairs—but the best feature is the little balcony off the room—so I have my own door I can open to the outdoors when I am in there during any time other than winter (which is 1/3 of the year in Minnesota, but no matter…).
There are trees just outside, so during the summer I can hear the birds singing, smell the lilacs when they are in bloom below, sometimes I get squirrels on the balcony chattering away, or I can listen to the happy laughter of my husband and my son playing outside in the back yard.
I love that you list vintage Fisher Price Little People as one of your loves. I love them too! Have they ever directly influenced your work?
I have given my son several vintage Little People sets as gifts (you know, the sort of gift that is for him, but is really for you). I just find the 70’s era design from Fisher Price to be so damn cool. It was really plugged into the American Dream of the time—the A-Frame House, the jeep with the pop-up camper, the airport. They were mini-versions of the 70’s era family-dream. I don’t feel like any big toy maker is well tapped into today’s American dream. I mean, there are some toy makers who have some lovely, modern designs, but no big mainstream makers are doing anything really modern that is also affordable, like the stuff Fisher Price made. I wish Fisher Price would hire me to redesign their Little People for today. And I suppose there is part of me that wants to design my own Beeper Bebe version of that…watch this space?
What about other vintage toys? What were your favorite toys as a child? Do you still have them? Does your son have a favorite toy?
Aside from my own Little People, my other favorite toys as a child were the dolls and plushies my mum made for me, and anything that was an art supply. I loved to create and draw my own monsters when I was little. I actually grew up in poverty, so I did not have a lot of toys when I was little, really. But I cannot say I was ever bored because I lived so much in my imagination. Dime store trinkets were very loved by me—something I got for a nickel out of a gumball machining was as a good as something more substantial from a store—and I do still love little trinket-y toys to this day. And yes, I do still have some of my toys—certainly, all the dolls and plushies my mum made for me, and a few other things in an old toy chest. I also have a few toys that belonged to my grandma as a child, and a doll that was my dad’s. As for Beeper, my son, well his favorite toys, hands down, are his super hero figures, and his HUNDREDS of little plastic animals that he likes to sort by reptile, mammal, amphibian, sea creature, or whatever new category he creates. We pick up the little plastic animals at the thrift store—they seem to self-proliferate there. Personally, I love to buy him beautifully designed European toys, stuff that will endure—like the Shapemaker set from Miller Goodman or AutomoBlox - but he still plays with the plastic-y toys the most.
I'm completely in love with the Beeper Bebe in a Box. The details are just wonderful. Can you tell me how that evolved?
This is kind of a funny and sad story. I had this little doll when I was about 6 that is called a Pee Wee doll—it is about 4 inches tall and had its own little clothing. It was cheap and probably came from the local dime store but I loved that little doll. I kept her in a little plastic zip pouch, along with some other little trinkets that I guess were my accessories for her—so it was like a little play set of my own assembly. Anyway, one day while I was waiting for the school bus, for some reason I do not recall, another little girl got mad at me and punched me so hard in the stomach it literally knocked the wind from me and I fell down (I probably said something smart-alecky to her). Anyway, I must have dropped my Pee Wee doll because it was forever lost after that—and I was devastated. I never forgot that little doll and her pouch of stuff—and I think the Bitty Bebe is my version of it now. I have since made a little Bitty Birdie version of it—which people are way more nuts about—but I, personally, still love the little doll version best.
What's your favorite thing you've ever made?
I love my Kindie Garden Plush dolls that are designed after a drawing I made in kindergarten.
I also loved my little Chicken Coco doll I made—it was this little chicken made from a recycled tweed suit coat, with a little dress and matching pillbox hat with feathers.
I do love chickens—especially ones with style.
Is there something you made that you would love to sell but it would cost a fortune? Like a $600 teddy bear?
I have always had this idea about making a nature-inspired doll, with nature inspired wardrobe—things like a kilt that looks like it is made from leaves, a simple dress made from vintage linen that would have teeny wildflowers and herbs embroidered on it, and bear-like fur wrap she could wear around her. I think I will make it at some point—but with the amount of labor that will go into it, who knows what it would need to be priced at…
What inspired you to add drawings to your product photography - like the stem on the new Rainbow Sunshine Plushie? And the backgrounds for the Kindie-Garden dolls?
Really, it was just an inspired moment that occurred in the middle of photographing the first set of Kindie Garden plush dolls I ever made. I mean, they are made from childhood drawings, so it seemed natural to incorporate child-like drawings as background to their photos.
What are your favorite materials to work with?
Recycled, reclaimed, thrifted. Still. There is no better inspiration than just finding something spontaneously at the thrift store that you know could be redesigned into something else entirely. I love old wool tweed suit coats in particular, but I also thrift and use wool sweaters (that I later felt), cashmere sweaters, towels, sheets, fleece and vintage sewing notions.
I recently began collecting stripey cotton tees and I am still not sure exactly what I am going to do with them, but I know there is a plushie in there somewhere. Of course, I also feel good about the fact that I am making something new from something already out there—using what is available rather than buying more.
Can you tell us about your day job?
I do have a day job—the one I am now working part-time at. My day job is completely disparate from what I do with Beeper Bebe. I work for one of those ginormous companies with businesses in almost every country in the world—I am an organizational development consultant for them. What this means is that I advise leaders on how to more effectively run their businesses so they are better aligned, their employees will be more engaged, and they will ultimately deliver better business results. I recognize how weirdly different it is. And honestly, I sometimes cannot believe that any of these big shots in suits listen to me—often inside I feel like, Really? You want to pay attention to what I have to say? Because I am just a girl who likes to make toys and drink whiskey—what do I really know about how you should execute your strategy? But I do get to travel the world for my job, and tell men in suits what to do, so there is no denying that it is intellectually interesting work
What are your goals for Beeper Bebe? Are you trying to grow your business? What steps are you taking to make your goals a reality?
I am also inspired by the Habit blog - the photography is lovely and real and I find the text so authentic and poignant.
What are your favorite children's books? Either your favorites as a child or your current favorites to read with your child - or both.
We all love books at our house—there are stacks and shelves of them all over. I think they are the source for so much imagination—the jumping off point for creative play and your own artistic creations. My favorite books as a child were One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish by Dr Seuss—because all the creatures in that book were so cool. I wanted them all as pets.
We do have loads of children’s books—and I definitely have my favorite authors, like Mo Willems, Leo Lionni, Eric Carle, of course. And I love the Toot and Puddle characters, as well as Charlie and Lola. Skippyjon Jones is a big favorite with Beeper—and so are the Harry Potter books. We have been reading our way through them—we are just finishing up The Order of the Phoenix. Honestly, I believe the Harry Potter books are some of the best books being written today. The characters are so well developed and have a lot of emotional complexity. Plus, I totally have a secret fantasy about being a student at Hogwarts. Seriously.
You sell patterns as well as finished items. I do that too - and I've gotten a lot of questions about why I do it. So why do YOU do it?
Well, I get a lot of inquiries on many of my designs from people who would like to make their own. At first I was of the same mind as those you mention—well, why would I do that? Over time though I have realized, making a given plushie design runs its course for me, and it becomes less inspiring and fun to make after a while…and also, making plushies is pretty labor intensive without a very high financial return for all the hours it takes to make one well.
So, while I love to make the toys, I also recognize that in order to run a business that is lucrative in any way, I need to offset my actual plushie-making with a few things that are less labor intensive—the great thing about patterns is once you put in the time to assemble it, it is DONE and then all you have to do is keep mailing out pdf’s when someone purchases one. Easy. Also, I understand the desire to make your own—and especially the desire to do it without ripping off the artist, even though I am sure you could figure out how to make some of my plushies without my pattern.
Now that I have designed a pattern, and have been doing more tutorials on my blog, well, I just really like being able to share that with others. I like that when you give someone a pattern they will modify it and make it totally their own—cool.
Any advice to other makers out there?
As Henry David Thoreau said, Pursue some path, however narrow and crooked, in which you can walk with love and reverence. That is what it is all about—finding your own path, your own passion, and going on that journey with it. Do that above all other things. It is the source of true happiness, which in turn will flow to other people and areas of your life. Do what you love, people.
Thanks so much Holly! It was great getting to know you better.
Now that you've met her I know you'll want to stalk her too! You can find Holly online here. . .
blog: Chez Beeper Bebe
shop: Beeper Bebe
Flickr: Beeper Bebe Read more...
Book review: Here Lies the Librarian
Jake's and Peewee's lives are turned on their ears when a carload of young women from a nearby university's library program descend on the town and decide to reinvent the local library. Jake falls in love with one of them, then finds his heart really and truly belongs to another. Peewee, meanwhile, may have a future not in a grease pit, but among the stacks in a library.
Things happen in the story--dead bodies are unearthed by a tornado and end up in the trees, a rival car shop goes to war with Jake and Peewee for opening up a shop of their own, and Jake builds a car of his own which he enters into a big race at the end--but you're never quite sure if this is Peewee's story, Jake's story, or one of the librarians' stories. There is resolution, but it doesn't feel tight. It feels, in many ways, like real life--interesting things happen, things don't always turn out like you think they will, people get older, and the story ends. Perhaps all too common in life, but not in fiction, and it all left this reader feeling a bit like I'd missed something at the end.
Peck is a great writer though, with a great ear for dialogue, and a light, easy touch with humor, making Here Lies the Librarian a worthwhile read despite its loose plot. Read more...
What's New in My Shiny Happy World
>> Sunday, February 21, 2010
I added some more Shiny Happy Bunnies to my Etsy shop. . .
More Shiny Happy Bunnies and some of my girls are now available for sale at the Toe River Arts Council gallery in Burnsville, NC. Woo hoo! If you're looking for Abigail Esther or Lucy Dee you can find them there. They've also got my newest girl - Becky Alice.
Meet Becky Alice. Her favorite food is strawberry cupcakes and her favorite color is buttery yellow. Her favorite book is A Kitten Tale. Isn't she sweet? I love the pattern on the fabric I used for her body - it's a super-soft bedsheet with a great floral pattern on it. You'll see a Shiny Happy Bunny soon made with the same print. Makes me think of spring. . .
And that's all the news from my Shiny Happy World! Hope everyone is having a great weekend! Read more...
Getting Ready for Japan
>> Saturday, February 20, 2010
She spent most of yesterday pretending to be a samurai who was pretending to be a merchant so he could investigate a murder and a stolen ruby. Awesome! She built a kago (an enclosed litter used for travel) out of pillows and an umbrella. Her kago had the extra twist of also being a traveling toy store. (She was disguised as a merchant because nobody respects merchants and so nobody pays attention to them. Clever!)
When the sun went down she had to stop traveling "because all the checkpoints are closed at night" but she continued to investigate by questioning potential witnesses.
Sensational Sea Salt Caramels
>> Thursday, February 18, 2010
But now they're gone - all gone. I've been working on losing weight so I limited myself to just one a day - and that only on days when I didn't eat any other dessert. It turns out that was the best way to savor them. Each caramel was three delicious bites - not to be eaten while watching TV or reading a book. Oh no - I ate these when I could devote 100% of my attention to the deliciousness. Sigh. So good. . .
Mermaid Sea Salt Soft Caramels available on Etsy from Mermaid Caramels. Read more...
Life Lesson #2
To give our daughter Jo every advantage I can, I'm passing along to her the accumulated tips and tricks I've learned from my 38 years on Earth.
Life Lesson #2: If you're going to eat one glazed doughnut and one chocolate iced doughnut, eat the glazed doughnut first. That way, it doesn't just taste like another chocolate iced doughnut.Read more...
Red Velvet Cake - Recipe and Math Lesson
>> Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Tip: If you do this at home, measure large quantities into a separate bowl so if you lose count of all those 1/4 or 1/3 cups you can start over. We figured that out after a bad batch of cookies. We got to chatting while Jo measured out three cups of flour with a 1/4 cup measure and lost count.
It's a fun way to learn fractions, conversions, and also estimating. Sometimes I like to really throw Jo a curve ball - like make her use a 1/3 cup measure in a recipe that calls for 1/2 cup of something.
We made this red velvet cake for Valentine's Day and I thought I'd share the recipe. It's absolutely fabulous! Nom nom nom nom nom. . .
Grandma June's Red Velvet Cake
1 1/2 cups vegetable oil
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 eggs
1 cup buttermilk
1 teaspoon vinegar
1 oz. red food coloring
1 teaspoon vanilla2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons cocoa
Beat together the sugar and the oil. Add eggs and beat well. Add the rest of the wet ingredients and beat well. Sift the dry ingredients together. Add the dry ingredients to the wet and beat well. Pour into greased cake pans. Bake 30-35 minutes at 350 degrees.
My Mom always uses three pans but I only have two that match in size so mine is a two-layer cake. It works well both ways.
Cream Cheese Frosting
1 stick butter
1 8-oz. package cream cheese
4 cups powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup chopped nuts (optional)
Cream together the butter and cream cheese. Add the vanilla. Add the sugar and beat well. Stir in the nuts if you're using them. I love walnuts or pecans in the frosting, but Jo doesn't like them so we left them out this time.
Enjoy! Read more...
Hello from the road!
>> Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Just finished up a GREAT event at the Joplin Public Library! I have pics...but they're on my phone. And did I bring the gizmo that gets them off? No I did not.
Tomorrow, lots and lots of presentations at Joplin High School!
Pics to follow...
Fancy and Fanciful
Valentine's Day, Schmalentine's Day. Bring On the Bunnies!
>> Monday, February 15, 2010
It's been a bunny factory here at Gratz Industries. I've been tweeting about cutting bunnies (ew), surrounded by bunny parts (ew), embroidering bunny faces, sewing bunny bodies, and going through several big boxes of stuffing to make my bunnies plump and happy. And now I have baskets and baskets of Shiny Happy Bunnies making me smile. I sent off a shipment to Little Shop of Stories in Decatur, GA and now I'm slowly listing the rest in my Etsy shop. Here are some of the newest. . .
The Picture Book Report
Hollywood Greg Bunch sends us this fantastic link to Picture Book Report, wherein fifteen illustrators take their favorite books and "create wonderful pieces of art in response to the text that has moved them, shaped them, or excited them." Not all of the books are children's books, but many of them are. Among my favorite interpretations:
Still Snowing, Still Sewing
>> Sunday, February 14, 2010
I've got lots of new girls to introduce to you - and some bunnies too - but I'm still editing pictures. For now I thought I'd give you a little sneak peek at the girls in progress.
More snow forecast for tomorrow [aargh!] so more sewing in my future. Read more...



































