Friday Inspiration: Confetti System

Friday Inspiration: Confetti System

About a week and a half ago, Laelia turned 9 months old, and someone mentioned I should start planning her first birthday party. That was a bit of a shock! I was just thinking about how my baby will be a year old! I’m sort of at a loss of what to do, but I guess that’s part of this whole chapter of our lives. First it was the bridal shower, then the wedding, then baby showers, and now kids birthdays to plan! I honestly don’t know where to start, but I think I just found my first bit of inspiration!

@_@ I like shiny

Confetti System is the brain child of Julie Ho and Nicholas Andersen. Check out their Tumbler. They have been featured all over the web (the selby has some great in-studio shots) and so now I’m feeling very dense for only just discovering them.  I’ve been seeing their work around (and loving it) with out realizing where it came from. They did the j.Crew holiday displays, and that line of party hats and banners that is new at Urban Outfitters? Well, they did that too. I predict this to be HUGE in wedding design. I mean, it’s a lot of work, but it is cheap to DIY! My problem (like many’s) is that I LOVE event design, especially having worked in the field, but I’m also really really into being frugal right now so we can eventually buy a house (*dreams off wistfully into space*). However, I’m no stranger into putting wayyy to many hours into something just to save a penny or two, and neither is the ever growing DIY bride crowd. What I particularly like about this is how it’s made with traditional party decoration material, but it looks beautiful. It is beautiful like, permanent-installation-in-my-home beautiful. This is just tissue garlands, sparkles, confetti, and piñatas, but you can’t find this stuff on any of the 100 aisles at your local party store (seriously, who signs off on the tacky stuff at those places?). It also makes a great prop, which means it will photograph well! Oh, I gotta find a good camera for this first birthday now! And start thinking of invites… and party dresses… and cupcakes. :)

Oh! I just discovered they have a shop. How I wish I could afford to spend $130 on a beautiful garland! For now, I’ll just have to let them inspire me.

(images: Confetti System)

New Pillows in progress!

New Pillows in progress!

New pillows in progress!

So, for the last two days and foreseeable future my living room is covered in sewing fallout. I’ll be quite happy to stock these in my etsy shop soon! I recently made listings for custom portraits and for custom invitations, but stay tuned for some invitation & game packs and some new illustrations and posters! I’ve also been thinking about making another baby quilt. I (finally) made a flickr account last Monday, and Laelia’s quilt has been very well received. I am so entirely flattered, especially because it is my first quilt and Anna Maria Horner herself gave her compliments. (I’ve previously covered my love for all things Anna). Now I’m just kicking myself for waiting so long to start a flickr! It was on my to-do list since October…

I also got a call from my favorite old boss to do some potential freelance plush design. I really hope it works out! Designing plush is something I really miss, almost as much as I miss designing costumes! A few of the items I’ve designed were photoed in the nursery post, if you’d like to check them out. So this weekend I’ll be putting together my plush portfolio, and maybe wash kitty–Kitty has been Laelia-loved-on. Getting my portfolio together has been on my to-do list for a year, and since I’ve been in such a productive state lately, I think there is no time like the present to get that done! Also, in addition to adding a portfolio page to this blog, I’d like to add an apartment tour, hopefully in the next couple of weeks  (but if this freelance works out, it will most certainly be delayed). 2011, I’m feeling good about you so far.

The Wonder of Nature Baby Shower

The Wonder of Nature Baby Shower

Saturday I went to a beautiful baby shower for a very close friend of mine, Becky (whom also happens to be my husband’s cousin’s wife, and as his immediate family are all in another state, he acts as a surrogate brother, which has made her my surrogate sister-in-law). Her awesome babysitter threw the shower, and I insisted on doing the invitations. The inspiration came from some  nature journal artwork the mom-to-be had found, that I then ran through photoshop to delete the text and get some pure whites, and then added some distressing and put at 50% opacity. The script font I used is Alejandro Paul’s (my favorite contemporary typographer) Adios, and the serif font I used is currency which is essentially the font used in U.S. currency. I wanted the typography to posses both a feminine whimsy while still remaining true to the original vintage nature journal inspiration. I added a vignette within a border to anchor the artwork and finish it off.The hostess is going to put together a little scrapbook for her, so she wanted a little card we could all fill out with questions like “How do you know the mother to be”, and “Where did you travel from” and “What are your wishes for (insert names here)”.  I saw a cute example with a space for a photograph of the honoree, and I figured, OH I might as well draw it to stick with the aesthetic. :)  (it kinda looks like the drawings on money, huh?) Since she is having twins (!) and their names are Azalea and Iris, I thought I’d  find some nature journal artwork of those flowers and include them too.

Finally, I made a game sheet with the Disney game I made for Beth’s shower (on a side note, maybe I need to make this easier… way less people know these than I expected! And I purposefully added movies from the 50’s and the 70’s for the older crowd…), and the hostess gave me a game called “twins babble” which was cute. We also did “celebrity baby” and included pictures of the Becky’s three (already earth-side) children, in which she guessed a picture of her son Ocean was actually Laelia, and we joked because it is the exact picture she sent me a few months ago saying something like “Ocean looks just like Laelia here!”. Then we ate yummy lemon cake and drank champange from pretty little glasses, and watch her open presents (lots of socks, outfits x 2, and cloth diapers).

Naturally Inspired

Naturally Inspired

I’ve been working on some stationery for a baby shower inspired by nature journals and Shakespeare’s play, A Midsummer’s Night Dream. Firstly, I’d like to state that I’m not really a fairy person. Meaning, I’m not drawn to images of fairies,  I wouldn’t look twice at a fairy figurine, and tinkerbell is definitely not my favorite Disney character (quite frankly, sometimes she downright annoys me). Usually, when it comes to fairys, butterflies, rainbows, etc. it can get really tacky really fast (just imagine every 11 year old girl’s sketchbook or an array of the worst deviant art accounts you’ve seen). However, that is not to say that it can’t be done right, as I discovered when I was doing some research for this event. When it is done right, as Elizabeth Messina and Tricia Fountaine did below, it is truly understandable why so many poorly made imitations are out there…

I was floored when I saw these images. Every minute detail has been taken into account, everything is gloriously whimsical. It’s enough to make you wish you were a fairy, living in the forest, without a care in the world.

Bookshelf Love: Arranging items by color

Bookshelf Love: Arranging items by color

When I was a child, I would spend hours arranging my things on a shelf. I would play until my ceramic figurines were just right, place my books in order from tallest to shortest, and in numerical order if in a series. This grew into a general love of the book as decorating device–I still think books are hands down the best things to decorate with.

I started organizing my closet by color when I was a teenager (and  by what hanger they were on–luckily, I have only the black huggable hangers now, and I don’t have to worry about the color of my hangers anymore. That was just too much!). After staring at a bookshelf that was thrown together pell-mell from a recent room re-arranging, I decided I couldn’t take it anymore and thought to rearrange them by color. I also did this to my DVDs. Hell, I even arrange our cereal boxes by color, since they sit on an exposed shelf in the kitchen.  Most people think I’m a bit crazy when they notice… usually I get “Who did that?!”, and then “Well, that’s silly… you have to remember the color of a book, instead of the title…”. But I figure I’m looking at these books more than I’m looking for them, so having them beautifully arranged makes much more sense. Apparently, that’s what the staff at Dwell think as well. Senior Editor Aaron Brit says “We organize our books by color here (not terribly efficient, I fear, though lovely to behold)”. And isn’t that the truth!

Bookshelf at Dwell Magazine’s office

Bookshelf at Dwell Magazine’s office

In the Dwell article about this little phenomenon, he goes on to describe how, while he can’t find the book he’s looking for (although he remembers it is yellow), he finds an essay in a back catalog of Design Observer by Rob Giampietro pondering arranging books by color. He confirms my idea; if you have to look at it, it should be pretty.

“Our bookshelves often take up a good deal of space in the places we live and work, and organizing them by color transforms them from a banal backdrop into a poppy, rainbow-colored focal point. Books organized by color are cool to look at.”

The inspiration for this post came from my recent finding of the photoblog bookshelf porn. Imagine my delight to discover I am not alone (31k and counting) in my love of the visual splendor books and bookshelves. Even though arranging books by color doesn’t make sense to most people who see it at my house, I am not alone!

So, in-depth intellectual analysis and musings beside, how do you all organize your bookshelves?

Welcome

Welcome to Visual Vocabularie! My name is Jesyka, and I am a designer, artist, mom to Laelia and Luca, wife to software engineer and UX designer Tyler, coffee lover, and all around enthused person. This is my blog; here I share my personal projects, whether it's a furniture makeover, a new painting, a birthday party, an invitation I designed, or a favorite outfit for my little. You’ll also catch a glimpse into our family life in Los Angeles.

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