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Global Talent Search Finalists unveiled…

Global Talent Search Finalists unveiled... GTS logov21 e1378803188726 GTS finalists logo

What a journey this has been! Over 1500 entrants joined us from more than 30 countries worldwide for our first round, and then 50 semi-finalists battled it out to win one of six coveted spots in the Final.

We are now thrilled to reveal the six Finalists, knowing that one of these artists’ careers is about to change for ever. Five were chosen by our panel of industry experts, and one was chosen via public vote. The overall competition winner will be represented by Lilla Rogers Studio for two years, and win a host of licensing deals from prestigious companies. The assignment was to create a Farmer’s Market Tote Bag with an autumnal theme.

So without further ado, you can find out about our six finalists (in no particular order) HERE.

*Do What You Love is proud to be producing this competition in association with Lilla Rogers Studio, and giving these artists’ careers a major boost… and ultimately providing a life-changing opportunity for one of them!

Thought for the week (28): When I was young…

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When I was young I wrote stories about princesses and castles and faraway lands.

When I was young I used to make up plays and spend hours on my rickety old typewriter, typing up copies of play scripts for my friends. We had carbon paper and tippex on little sheets of paper back then, and I typed with two chubby fingers. I used to direct my friends in the plays, and suspect I may have been a little bossy.

When I was young I loved damming streams, and building dens in the woods, inventing pretend lives for the people whose castoffs we found dumped amongst the trees.

When I was young I remember making a pinhole camera and being fascinated by the blurry images that transpired.

When I was young I spent hours in the darkroom my dad built in our garage, watching in awe as photographic images magically emerged as I sloshed around the trays in front of me.

When I was young I had a calligraphy obsession, and would write swirly words over and over with pointy nibs and Indian ink from a tiny little pot. I even did a demonstration on The Children’s Channel when I was about 10 years old.

When I was young I used to love baking cakes and licking the bowl (and spoon).

When I was young I used to keep a scrapbook every holiday, sharing weird details like what I had eaten for lunch, or what joke my older brother had told me. I stuck everything in – train tickets, postcards, sweet wrappers – and always cut out a pretty header from coloured paper, or drew all over the page.

When I was young I made everyone’s birthday card by hand, with a fistful of glitter and big fat pens. And you should see the state of some of the Christmas tree decorations I persuaded my parents to hang on the tree.

When I was young I was creative without thinking about it. I was free to cut and stick and glue and write and make stuff up and have fun with it all, without being worried about the end result.

When I was young creativity was part of my every day life. Then I grew up, and academia and work took over. It took me many years to find my way back to the creative child inside.

How about you? What were you like as a child? In what ways were you creative? Have you managed to hold onto that? Do you feel differently when you go to create something now? Judged? Pressured? Worried about what it will look or sound like? Concerned about what other people will think?

This month is ‘Love to create’ month on Do What You Love, and we want to inspire you in many ways to JUST CREATE. Whether your medium is drawing, painting, writing, poetry, photography, storytelling, or even creative thinking, we want to encourage you to dive in, get messy and create more for the world to enjoy.

We’d love to hear your creative childhood stories – share them with us on Facebook or Twitter.

Happy creating!

Beth and the team x

Getting some baby practice in

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Totally in love with this little man – my lovely new baby nephew. He is just a week old, and very tiny but just perfect. So lovely to spend some time with family, indulging in the preciousness (and sheer cuteness) of of this new little life. Can’t believe our own baby will be here in just three months!

Baby Zack and auntie Beth

 One happy auntie over here…

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Mr K gets some practice in

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MOYO Issue 5 is here: The Anniversary Issue!


MOYO 5 cover

MOYO Magazine is one year old, and we are celebrating with our biggest ever issue: Issue 5 – the Anniversary Issue!

Since we first dreamt up the concept when on a plane back from a trade show in Paris, we have loved developing, designing and publishing our very own online magazine dedicated to surface pattern design. We are hugely grateful to all our contributors, and to all our readers (over one million views in our first year!), and hope that you continue to find MOYO inspiring and valuable. Every issue we pack in a wide variety of content, from industry interviews and advice through to design briefs and trend information. And in this bumper 100+ page Anniversary issue we have really gone to town. Inside Issue 5 (which is completely free) you can find:

  • An exclusive interview with internationally acclaimed designer Clarissa Hulse
  • Insight into greetings from industry giant Hallmark
  • A DIY Celebration guide (make your party personal!)
  • The UKTI Guide to Exporting
  • Unveiling of our brand new directory site the MOYO Directory!

PLUS: A sneak peek behind the scenes at our weddings!

MOYO 5 Clarissa Hulse

MOYO 5 DIY celebrations

MOYO 5 UKTI Exporting

MOYO 5 Colour blue

MOYO 5 RT wedding

This is the party issue, and you are invited! Check out the latest issue of MOYO here.

SHARE THE LOVE!

MOYO is completely free and we want to delight as many people as possible with the wonderful world of surface pattern design. Please feel free to share the magazine on your blog/social media and tell your friends about it!

Do What You Love Interview – Rachel Hazell

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Rachel Hazell is a book artist who makes beautiful things out of paper and words, and is possibly as obsessed with paper, washi tape and adventures as I am. As you might imagine, we get on pretty well! Rachel splits her time between a book-lined house in Edinburgh and a croft on the Scottish island of Iona, where the sea and seals provide constant inspiration. Rachel also has experience of what I think is one of the coolest jobs in the world – postmistress at the only Post Office in Antarctica, on a tiny island shared with penguins. I went there many years ago and always said I’d love to do that job. I never thought I’d be friends with someone who had done it. Besides being an incredibly well educated (read ‘three Masters degrees’), highly talented book artist, Rachel is also one of those lovely people who laughs a lot, always has chocolate on her person and sends the most beautiful handwritten notes in the post, just because. It is my very great pleasure to share this interview with you today, and let you into a little secret that Rachel and I will be bringing out a brand new online course together later this year entitled PaperLove. You will absolutely love it and we cannot wait to share it with you! – Beth

PS If you ever get the chance to take a workshop with Rachel I urge you to go. You will love it. In fact she has some spots left on her upcoming ‘Personal Geographies’ workshop in Venice in October (details below). Sounds dreamy. If I weren’t quite so pregnant I’d be going myself!

RHazellMalinPortraitPortrait at The Scottish Poetry Library, Malin Widstrand

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Life According to Mr K – Love Life (5) Who are you?

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There is great comfort to be found in the sense of belonging and thinking, “I do that too!” I do hope that at times whilst reading my blog posts you may nod and chuckle to yourself in agreement. In those moments we can relax and breathe a sigh of relief. We are not alone!

Finding common ground with humour can allow us to bond, seek perspective and has definitely helped ‘break the ice’ in varying situations over the years.

I particularly love observational humour. One of my favourite comedians is Lee Evans. I remember one sketch in particular when he demonstrates how we attempt to get into a hot bath. It was priceless. I was in stitches… it was as if he had been spying on me, observing and noting all the ridiculous faces and noises I make. Judging by the audience I was not alone.

We often find great comfort belonging to a group, whether that be family, friends, teammates, classmates, work colleagues or any other collection of people. Safety in numbers if you like. This may be in part dictated by the society in which we live. In Japan, where there is a strong sense of collectivism, there is a famous saying, “The nail which sticks out gets hammered down”. Whilst here in the UK the sense of ‘group-think’ is nowhere near as strong, and individualism (especially in places like Brighton where we live) is often celebrated, in our social groups there is still a tendency to do what your mates do. It can take courage to step away and do your own thing.

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From DWYL HQ: Our kind of meetings

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Last night I was feeling pretty exhausted. Maybe it’s the pregnancy, maybe it’s the crazy week of work (100+page issue of MOYO coming to you next week), maybe it’s the seagulls waking me up at 4am. But my head was fuzzy and I needed a break.

Brighton beach DWYL meeting

Mr K suggested we start Friday with a walk on the beach and breakfast at a little cafe we haven’t been to before. So that’s what we did.

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Do What You Love Interview – Navyblur

Do What You Love Interview - Navyblur thebiginterview

Today’s interview is with the two lovely photographers who photographed the inaugural Do What You Love retreat as well as our very own wedding! Christine and Xander Neal of navyblur (who themselves are Mr & Mrs) have an amazing knack of blending into whatever is going on so they get a lot of great shots without anyone feeling like there is a photographer in their face. They are lovely, bubbly and fun to have around, and we love their attitude and amazing creativity. Here’s their story… – Beth

Do What You Love Interview - Navyblur XC2

 Christine and Xander on their own special day

Hello! We are Xander & Christine Neal, one English boy, one Irish girl, living in Northern Ireland but slowly and surely working our way around the UK and further afield to make navyblur known wherever possible. We are two photographers who absolutely love meeting new people and taking fun, beautiful photos of their faces and everything else that comes along with them. The best part is we get to become friends in the process…

1.     How are you leading a life ‘doing what you love’? 

Every day, we get to work together, which we love. We get to meet new and amazing people, which we love. We get to take photos of them in places and spaces they love, which we love. We get to show people how awesome they look, which we love. We get to be a little part of some big days in people’s lives, which we love. We get to be the people to capture a whole lot of love, laughter and fun for people to keep and look back on forever, which we absolutely love. We don’t know anything else in the world we could be doing that we would love any more than being photographers.

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Life According to Mr.K – Love Life (4): On friendship

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If I reflect on my life to date all of my memories of any significance share one common element – others! My life would be empty without my friends and family to share it with.

This Christmas my life is going to change forever. I am going to become a Dad! I found out 4 months ago that Beth was pregnant. If I am honest when I first found out it seemed so surreal that I just could not comprehend what the statement – “I’m pregnant!” – meant.

This was until the 12 week scan. I sat there expecting to be nothing more than a bystander offering support when requested, until the screen came alive. I was transfixed as a little, tiny person appeared. The clarity of the spine, skull and the heart the size of a pea (most probably much smaller) pumping frantically was amazing. It took my breath away.

It was then only a matter of moments until my heart began to melt. I had heard the baby’s heartbeat! It was quick, strong and rhythmic. It was as if a small drum was being beaten from within, communicating with us. I was in awe. I am sure I just have to fall into the long line of other new fathers who have experienced the same thing. The reason for me being was changing with every beat.

Later that evening I remember sitting in my office gazing out of the skylight lost in my thoughts. I was reminiscing about my own childhood. All the good times with my brothers always pour to the forefront. Yes we fought and we screamed to the world we hated each other, but hours later we would be thick as thieves and up to mischief.

All the places we lived and all the adventures we had flooded my mind. The dynamic between the three of us had changed over the years, as it must. Our interests fluctuated from action figures, computer games and bikes to sport and later on girls and alcohol. But brothers we will always remain.

The wry smile that was associated with the mischief was tinged by the realisation that the roles your siblings and more importantly your friends play when you are young is never quite the same as you get older.

When I was growing up my family lived all over the world – from Trinidad & Tobago, Hong Kong and Iraq to the not-quite-so exotic Liverpool, Manchester and Leeds. This culminated in me going to more than 15 different schools. One thing all this moving around did highlight was the importance of friends.

It was never easy at a new school. I remember always being hugely nervous on the first day, hoping my classmates wouldn’t be too unkind. I found the best way was to stay inconspicuous and not try to force friendships. I used to let time work out the details for me, and it always would. Months later the apprehension was forgotten and life was great – trading stickers, playing football in the park or downball in the quad, depending on the country.

“I never had any friends later on like the ones I had when I was twelve. Jesus, does anyone?” – Stand by Me

I had grown up loving 80’s films. I remember being taken to the cinema for my 10th birthday to watch The Goonies. Stand By Me still remains one of my favourite films. I guess it is the narrative provided by Richard Dreyfuss that always strikes a chord with me. It revolves around the friendship of four boys and what great adventures you can have just a walk down the railway track away. OK the leeches I could do without, but the bond between friends is one very dear to my heart.

Just like my brothers the roles my friends have played in my life have varied depending upon my age and interests – from trying to catch fish and building rope swings to playing football, getting the round in and talking to girls. Importantly good friends are the ones who challenge your comfort zone more than any others.

They instinctively let you know that life doesn’t always need to be quite as serious as you believe it is when left alone. Successes and failures are put into context. You gain character and a thicker skin by taking jokes aimed at you on the chin. Of course you are always waiting for one of them to slip up so you can give it right back!

I have had the great honour of being a best man and an usher at several friends’ weddings, roles which I was humbled when asked to do. The friends who bestowed this honour upon me have all enriched my life more than I will ever be able to express to them.

I have met so many amazing people through the years. Some I know are friends for life. But sadly the reality is that I will never  see the vast majority of them again, simply because our lives get in the way. I now have to plan months ahead to get a date in the diary, which is in stark contrast to hopping on my bike and knocking on the door. I guess this is one aspect of my life I wish had never changed. (Note to any friends reading this: our door is always open if you want to drop round for tea!)

I am transported to present day sat on our roof terrace this time gazing out to sea. I am contemplating life as a father and the challenges that lie ahead. My support now comes primarily from my wife and the prospect of creating our own family. I know my parents, brothers and friends are on the other end of the phone, Skype or a social media site. And knowing they are there is the main point, just like I am there for them.

I am truly blessed by the friends I have. I have continued to make friends throughout my life and great ones at that. As far as I am concerned I have the best friends anyone could ask for!

What aspects of your childhood do you miss the most? Do they have to be lost forever or can you get any of them back?

Until next time…

Mr K