The Grand Tour
Cutest helper EVER
Cleanest my shop has ever been
Blobby painting was my first piece as a toddler :)
When we go shopping, whether it is online or in a local shop, we rarely get to see how our purchases came to be. What went into it? As a maker, I often get anxious emails from customers who are desperate to get their orders. "WHY CAN'T IT GET HERE TOMORROW?????" It's hard to wait for things we're excited about, especially when we really don't know what's taking so long!
From an artist's perspective, I feel that buying handmade is a wonderful experience. I love knowing that when I shop handmade on Etsy, or in my favorite brick and mortar shop, I'm buying a piece of someone else's imagination and heart. I'm buying an expression of their joy, and that purchase is supporting a real person, who has a real family. It almost gives me chills to think about it! I basically feel guilty every time I shop at a big box store, because I know the environmental and social devastation that mass production creates, and I know my purchase isn't doing anyone a whole lot of good. No one is getting paid fairly start to finish, from the farmer to the checkout woman who'd rather be at home with her family... SIGH. It's certainly not the same fuzzy feeling I get when I buy a handmade organic diaper from an Etsy artist, or a hand-poured candle made with local beeswax. When we don't see these things being made however, it's easy to feel separate from them. It's easy not to worry about the farmer, or the seamstress. We don't see how our things are made anymore, we only see the end result.
With that in mind, I thought it might be cool to write a little blog post about what a day in my studio is like. Every artist's studio and process is different, but here's a glimpse at mine! I attempt each day to balance work and family life, from my little home-based studio in Lafayette Colorado.
With this schedule, I am able to make approximately 7 thoughtfully produced baby outfits a day. I get between 50 and 60 orders in a typical week, so it's very hard to fit every order into my turnaround time of 7-10 business days. I don't take days off, and I do work weekends. Food poisoning? Still working... Snow day? Working! Good thing I love what I do!
LITTLE LOTUS ORGANICS DAILY SCHEDULE
4:45 AM - I wake up, put on the coffee, and turn on the studio lights.
5:00 AM-5:45 AM - I'm basically conscious enough to start cutting patterns out for the tiny outfits I will make that day. I use a rotary cutter to cut each component out one at a time.
5:45 AM - I get my son Alex who has Angelman Syndrome out of bed to get ready for school. I dress him, change his briefs, feed him, write in his daily log to his teacher about any medical or behavioral concerns for that day and answer any questions they left from the day before. I pack his lunch, pack his bag, check that he has enough bibs and diapers for school, and then drag him to his wheelchair, because he's usually not too psyched to leave.
7:20 AM - I make a complete fool of myself dancing to cheer Alex up while he tearfully boards the bus. Driver and I make up Johnny Cash parodies for his entertainment.
7:22-9:45 AM - I continue cutting out patterns
9:45-10:00 AM - I compulsively check my Etsy site and tend to any customer service matters.
10:00 AM - Patterns are all cut! Time to start serging the garments together! I love my serger, it's a Juki I replaced my Janome with last fall, there's a world of difference between them!
9:45-2:20 PM - I serge everything together, weeeeeeeeeeee.
2:30 PM - Alex is home from school! I feed him, change his briefs, do his home exercise plan, and we hang out for a bit.
4:00 PM-5:15PM - I sew the waistband of all the pants made that day.
5:15 PM-6:00 PM - I sort each order, write a note to each customer, wrap the orders, and hand them off to hubby to take to the post office.
6:00-8:30 PM - I make the kids' dinner. We spend time together as a family, do bath time, sofa time, Diaper time, pajama time, and bed time.
8:30 PM - Kids now in bed, I sit down to print the next day's order line-up and shipping labels. Husband and I eat dinner.
8:45 PM - I fall asleep
So as you can see it is a full day of making and care-taking with my favorite people. My studio is really cool in that it is located in the lower portion of our split-level home. This means that it is separate, but open to the rest of the house. This enables me to be working, while I watch my 2 year old daughter Lyra grow up. I sew away while Daddy and baby run and run and run, with the occasional book or coloring break. I can stop what I'm doing to kiss a booboo, or look at her latest drawing. I'm very grateful for that opportunity. Most folks who work as much as I do, have to miss out on all of that! I can be a mother, and a maker, the best of both worlds :)