CREATIVITY + INNOVATION Page 11 of 50

How it all began

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This weekend we celebrate the 4th birthday of our partner site, Make It In Design, a collaboration I established with designer Rachael Taylor back when e-courses were almost unheard of. We met with our lovely team for an awayday, to reflect on times past and to look ahead, and I felt incredibly grateful to our whole community for being part of this adventure of business and life.

Personally I am always fascinated by how businesses start and evolve, and collaborations are even more interesting to my nosy-parker self. How did they meet? Whose idea was it? Who does what? How do they make it work?

Well if you are a curious type like me, you might be interested in this interview with me and Rachael, all about how Make It In Design came about and how we have grown it to incorporate a design school with over 5000 students (who have created more than 100,000 designs) and a digital design magazine that has had over 2.5 million views!

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We also wrote a heartfelt open letter to our community recognizing that we can only do what you love because of you. We are truly grateful and committed to providing ongoing support to help you do what you love. You can read that letter here.

If you are a budding designer yourself, you might want to check out the 2016 Make It In Design Scholarship which has launched today, in partnership with Print & Pattern. It’s worth over $2000 – find out more here.

On a personal note, I am coming to the end of my maternity leave and am preparing for reentry in the next couple of weeks! I look forward to taking back the reigns of this weekly email, starting next week with quite a story.

Until then,

Beth

Our sister site Make It In Design is 4 years old – read the interview with our founders here

Celebrating Make it in Design’s fourth birthday, co-founders Rachael Taylor and Beth Kempton share their story of where and how it all began…  ~ By Lisa Moncrieff, Sales & Marketing Manager at Make it in Design

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Let me set the scene…

It’s five years ago in 2010. Beth Kempton is living in Leeds with her boyfriend, Paul. Beth has recently left the corporate world to set up her business, Do What You Love, which is going from strength to strength helping people all over the world to make positive changes in their lives. Beth is winning awards for her entrepreneurial talent and her online business is attracting the attention of key influencers, companies and media. Behind the scenes she is also working on a host of other exciting passion projects, including a first-of-its-kind creative and enterprise retreat scheduled for May 2011.

Meanwhile Rachael Taylor’s surface pattern design career is soaring. Enquiries, interviews and licensing deals are coming in left, right and centre. She’s proudly becoming a household name and is licensing designs to popular well-known brands around the world. Whilst building her own studio in Leeds, she’s busily preparing for two major shows, marketing her brand and forever living up to her name as the happiest person in the country on Twitter!

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Fast forward to present day and you’ll find two very remarkable ladies, now both married with children, living in opposite ends of the country, managing multiple businesses as well as their own special collaboration, Make it in Design.

The first ever course from Make it in Design—Module 1 of The Art and Business of Surface Pattern Design—kicked off on November 14, 2011. Since then over 5,000 creatives from 62 countries have graduated from Make it in Design e-courses, the online design magazine MOYO, co-founded by Rachael and Beth, has been viewed over 2.5 million times and there’s a dedicated team of five full-time staff working hard to make the magic happen.

Rachael and Beth’s journey has been fuelled by big dreams, passion, bravery, hard work, synchronicity and seized opportunities. Today, on Make it in Design’s fourth birthday, they share how it all began and what Make it in Design means to them…

Where and how did you two meet?

Beth: “I first came across Rachael when I bought an original screen print of hers at the Bowery, a café gallery in Leeds. I loved her work and wanted to know a bit more about the person behind them.

“After a little bit of research I saw how Rachael had bravely followed her creative dream by setting up her own label in 2008 and how happy and positive she was. It was a great fit with the Do What You Love ethos and I contacted her for an interview.” (You can read it here, the interview came out in December 2010)

Beth's first Rachael Taylor pieceThe original Rachael Taylor piece of art that Beth bought at The Bowrey

Rachael: “After I’d done the interview, Beth invited me to speak at the Do What You Love creativity and enterprise retreat she was hosting in Yorkshire the following year. We arranged to meet up to talk about it as we both lived in Leeds at the time. Although I didn’t have much experience of speaking in public at that point, I’ve always loved meeting new people and I knew that opportunities like this would raise my profile and stretch me as a designer. I jumped at the chance to be involved.”

Beth: “The creativity and enterprise retreat was a great success. Ahead of her talk Rachael pinned some of her early designs up on the wall alongside her physical products, to help illustrate the design process and show people how you go from sketch to shop floor. Everyone was fascinated to hear about the process. She also showed a small selection from her range of beautifully designed greetings cards, cushions, t-towels and other homeware pieces, which everyone loved. Everyone left feeling inspired, eager to create and wanting more information about becoming a surface pattern designer themselves. Somewhere a light bulb came on for me.”

Rachael: “Yes, it was so great. I remember it like it was yesterday! It was at the retreat we met you Lisa.”

(Who knew after attending the Do What You Love retreat, where I met Rachael and Beth for the first time, that three and a half years later I’d be Sales & Marketing Manager at Make it in Design!)

RT&BETHS-MUM_DWYL-RETREATRachael also joined in the delicate wax and wire sculpture class with Priscilla Jones at the retreat

What inspired you to start Make it in Design and how did the name come about?

Beth: “I’ve always had a secret desire to one day have my own line of stationery. I’d been considering doing a surface pattern design course myself and had even gone along to an open day at Leeds University to learn more about it and explore my options.

“But my options seemed quite limited. To do the degree course I would need to be in one place to attend classes, and would be required to work to a fixed schedule. With a business to run and a lot of travel on my plate, this wasn’t ideal. The course was also very expensive, as are all degree courses these days, and I wasn’t sure about making such a huge investment. I looked around for other alternatives and drew a blank. I parked the idea for a while, until I heard Rachael talking at the retreat and suddenly it made perfect sense. To create the exact course I wanted online, combining design and business, in a flexible way, with a much friendlier price tag than the cost of a degree. And so the idea for The Art and Business of Surface Pattern Design was born.

“It was June 2011, about two or three weeks after the retreat, that I contacted Rachael to see if she wanted to do something together. I knew how to set-up, manage and market e-courses, Rachael had the surface pattern design know-how, and we complemented each other perfectly. From my own experience I knew there was a big gap in the market for something like this, which had also been validated by the responses of those in the audience at Rachael’s talk at the retreat.”

Rachael: “I don’t think I even knew what an e-course was at the time and I’d certainly never written one before. I remember sitting with Beth at her kitchen table brainstorming the curricula for Modules 1-3, and planning to launch our first course just a few months later in the November of that year.

“I reflected on my own experience of all the things I’d learned through the years, from my early creative days, time at university and out in the real world. As Beth was new to the industry, she asked a lot of great questions—just the kind of things the students would want to know. You often don’t realise just how much you know and have picked up with experience. Before long there was so much content we both knew it was something that couldn’t be learnt in just a few weeks. That’s how all the different modules came about.”

Beth: “With regards to the name, the e-course was always going to be The Art and Business of Surface Pattern Design, it just seemed perfect for what the course covered—both the design side and the business side.”

Rachael: “Beth came up with the name, and I loved it, so that was it from the start. Make It In Design actually came a year or so later, when we decided to incorporate other elements of design into our resources.

“The more you can do as a designer the stronger and more confident you become. We knew that we wanted to support designers at all stages of their career, from those who were new to the industry to those who were already enjoying flourishing careers. We were keen to offer practical tips and advice to help them overcome any issues and raise their profile. And we also wanted to share their experiences and successes, and take all the lessons learned to inspire and motivate others on their journey to success.”

What was the first thing you did when you decided to collaborate and how did the first year go?

Beth: “The first thing we did was agree why we wanted to the course, then we developed our ideal customer avatar so we knew exactly who we wanted to support with our courses, and then created the curricula that would give them those results.

From then on it was a crazy journey of writing more material for each of the courses and networking with other relevant design industry professionals to balance the course material out. We were keen to share as much information, practical how-to guides and way forwards in the industry – things that have worked for others too.

“In the first year we ran Module 1 starting on November 14, 2011, and then Module 2 in February the following year and Module 3 in the April. The test really was in the first round of courses, if people weren’t securing jobs and felt ready to take on the world we knew we hadn’t done our job properly.”

Rachael: “We went on a work trip together to the Indigo and Premiére Vision trade shows in Paris in that’s where we met Stylesight (now WGSN).

“I remember walking out of that show and Beth saying to me “Let’s invest in Stylesight to give our students access to the best trend information in the world.’” And so we did! It’s now an invaluable part of our Module 3 and The Ultimate Portfolio Builder courses, as awareness of trends in this industry is so important – even if you don’t design to them being aware of them certainly is.”

Beth: “It was on the way back from this show that we had the idea for MOYO magazine, born out of a desire to raise general awareness of and interest in the world of surface pattern design. In August of 2012 our first issue was launched. Suddenly we were editors and publishers of an international design magazine.”

Can you name-drop some of your students?

Beth: “We’ve been so lucky from the start. Within a couple of hours of the first course going on sale we had 30 people sign up. By the end of the week we had more than 100. We knew then that we were offering something new and unique to the market, and that the demand was there. The feedback we’ve had ever since from the thousands of people who have passed through our virtual classroom doors has been incredible.”

Rachael:I remember nearly all of our students. Some of the names that stand out, including a number from the very first course we ran, are; Wendy Kendall, Mel Smith, Faye Brown, Katy Clements, Bonnie Christine, Deborah Valesquez, Susan Driscoll, Elizabeth Olwen and Mary Tanana.

We’ve had so many amazing students over the years and seen many unique styles. You know, in this industry, there really is room for everyone. That’s what I love about it.”

What’s the key to your partnership?

Beth: “We massively trust each other which is hugely important. Equally we both play different roles in the collaboration and we trust each others’ judgment based on our skills. We are always looking for the next opportunity, regularly update our courses so they are always fresh, and don’t stop learning. And we have had an official contract from day one. That’s really important.”

Rachael: “We also respect that we each also run other businesses too, and that time spent learning about other subjects, technology and ways to do things play a strong part in our future success.”

What have been your defining moments?

Rachael: “Seeing Wendy Kendall win the Wallpaper Design of the Year award, which was presented by Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen, was a huge highlight for me.

Beth: “And I remember walking into Paper Tiger in Edinburgh and seeing cards on the shelf designed by Elizabeth Olwen. I immediately recognised the name and thought: ‘Wow! This is where the artwork from our students is going’. It was an incredible feeling.

I think for me, I am incredibly grateful that four years on we are still going strong, and continue to see outstanding still results from our graduates. Every student success story is a reminder of why we do it.”

Of all the feedback you’ve received what’s stood out for you the most?

Rachael: “I feel so lucky that we’ve enjoyed such wonderful feedback over the years. I remember in the early days someone fed back that there were too many exclamation marks in the course material and so we frantically went through every post in every course deleting them all!”

Beth: “Getting feedback is so important and we ask for this every time we run a course to make sure we’re delivering the right material, in the right way. We read every single comment and often make changes as a result of what we hear. We feel honoured and grateful to have had so fantastic feedback. I can count on one hand the complaints we’ve received. To have that few when we have worked with over 5,000 students is pretty remarkable. We really do listen and we really do care.

“One of the major things that helped the business grow further was feedback from students coming out of Module 3 saying they wanted more. So out of that demand The Ultimate Portfolio Builder was born. We’ve really put our heart and soul into it and attracted new teachers and partners to help deliver exclusive and incredibly valuable content. It’s still relatively early days for the course but early indications show that people are loving it!”

Rachael: “Our courses are constantly evolving as a result of the feedback we get and also as I am a working designer, when I learn new tips or techniques we update the course. We never stand still, as we want our courses to be the very best available, and always current.”

What have been the key things you’ve learnt along the way?

Rachael: “Ideas! I have so many it’s like I’m cheating on my husband with them! I get so excited by everything and so I’ve had to learn how to prioritise and realise that I don’t need to do everything at once, right now.

“I also think:

  • Push myself but be realistic
  • Better myself and be happy
  • I am just a normal person, like you. I can do anything I set my mind to if it inspires me.”

Beth:Celebrating and being thankful for all of the successes however big or small along the way is really important. And the power of community. The generosity and support in our private class groups never ceases to amaze me.

“Also, early on we realized that Rachael offers a particular doodle, fun and quirky style which wouldn’t be for everyone. So we tapped into Rachael’s design network to bring in a host of talented contributors to offer a balance. This was a valuable step to take and really added to the course.”

Rachael:As the business grew, we knew we couldn’t keep doing it all ourselves. Opening up the doors to new team members was pretty daunting but if you’re at capacity you have to accept that you need help.

“I first met Kelly when I was delivering a seminar at Leeds University. She came up to me at the end and asked a few questions. Kelly had distinctive and beautiful red hair and stood out from the rest.

“When Kelly finished university later that year, she emailed me to see if she could work with me in anyway. She’d received 1st class honours and when she emailed me she introduced herself as the red headed woman – I remembered her instantly. Kelly was the first one to join the team where she helped with the growing number of email enquiries and issue 3 of MOYO. She’s been designing with us ever since and she’s super talented.

“I met Vic (who’s now our Education and Resources Officer) several years ago when I was freelancing at Tigerprint. Vic was a Creative Technology Assistant Manager which involved looking after the website, blog and design competitions. I used to sit opposite her and she was so lovely.

“Vic used to support and promote our Make it in Design initiatives and she actually photographed some of my products in the early days. It’s great having her on the team now.”

What’s your biggest challenge?

Rachael: “Numbers! And I’m allergic to Microsoft Excel!”

Beth: “Staying current in a world that changes so fast. That’s why we invest many thousands of dollars in WGSN for our students, and are always looking into new ways to deliver content to bring our students the very best.” 

What has the business enabled you to do that you couldn’t do before?

Rachael: “At times I have been pushed further towards my limit and have faced fear head on. I’m constantly telling students to be fearless and just go for it – and I need to take my own advice too. I think it’s really important for me to let our students know just how much I learn from them too; it’s not just a one-way street. I’m constantly learning and adapting as a designer and picking up new techniques and design tips.”

Beth: “It’s really helped me to understand what creative women want which has helped my other business, Do What You Love, hugely. It’s helped me to be able to reach out to untapped talent, bring people together as a community and help move them forward when they feel stuck.

“Also, for me personally, Rachael has helped me to bring colour into my own life. Seriously, I used to wear black all the time, and now I hardly ever do. You’re much more likely to see me in lime green or coral!”

You both run other successful businesses in addition to Make it in Design. Many people wonder how you do it… how do you?

Rachael: “Surround yourself with positive people. Talk with your friends. Enjoy the little moments as well as the big successes and make sure that you’re always happy with everything you’re doing.

“Before having a baby it was really easy. I was super organised, focused and spontaneous. Now I have Blayke it can get really stressful. I often feel like I’m spinning too many plates and that I’m all over the place.

“I’ve learnt how to be more business savvy and strategic from Beth and I love this quote which I use at every opportunity: ‘You can do anything but not everything’.”

Beth: “Follow your instincts, trust your gut and go with the things that really matter.”

 

 

Do What You Love interview – Johanna Basford + a FREE page from her new colouring book!

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Feeling stressed? It’s time to grab your Crayolas!

The craze for colouring in is taking the world by storm with adults everywhere using it as a way to relax, unwind and switch off from today’s digital-based world.

One of the leaders on the colouring book scene is Johanna Basford, a Scottish artist and illustrator who currently has three books in the the Top 100 best sellers list on Amazon.com.

Johanna’s first two books, Secret Garden – An Inky Treasure Hunt and Coloring Book and Enchanted Forest – An Inky Quest and Colouring Book, have now sold more than 10 million copies worldwide, and her latest offering, Lost Ocean – An Inky Adventure and Coloring Book, which launched on Tuesday, had an initial print run of 1.2 million for the US and UK alone.

We are delighted to catch up with Johanna to find out how she’s designed a successful career doing what she loves and how we could all benefit from a little art therapy. ~ Rachel

Johanna in studio for websiteJohanna in her studio

1. What gave you the idea to start creating colouring book for adults?

A few years ago I created a series of illustrations which I put on my website for people to download as desktop wallpapers for free. I was working as a commercial illustrator at the time and always looking for interesting ways to increase my profile and connect with potential new clients.

One of the people who downloaded my ‘Owls in a Tree’ illustration was an editor at a publishing house. She got in touch and asked if I would like to create a children’s colouring book. I pitched the idea of an adult colouring in book – my signature style of illustration was super intricate, hand drawn, black and white work and for years my clients have been telling me that they wanted to colour in my drawings. This was four years ago, before the worldwide trend for adult colouring kicked off, so you can imagine how quiet my editor went. They weren’t sure if colouring in for grown ups was silly and if there would be any demand for books like this.

I sat in my studio and drew the first five pages, then emailed them to my editor. They got back to me that day and said to go for it! And with that, the inky adventure began!

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Taking time out

Psychologists have proven that regular ‘me time’ can do wonders when it comes to creating space for self-discovery, helping us find clarity and focus, and inspiring us to prioritise what’s most important.

As well as this, making time to relax and do more of what you love is important because it enables us to recharge mentally, physically and emotionally. It’s the key to the key to living a richer, happier life and being your best self that will enable you to take even better care of the people you love.

So, whether it’s reading a book in the park, taking photographs, working out, meditating, taking a course, joining a club, writing a book, embarking on a new project, or training for a physical challenge, now’s the time to start taking intentional steps to un-busy your life and create little pockets of ‘me time’ to enjoy each day.

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Here’s how to do it:

  1. Go to bed earlier & get up earlier. Studies show that people who sleep for at least eight or nine hours and get up early are more productive and work at a higher quality than those who get less than seven hours sleep a night. As Ben Franklin famously said: “Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise”.
  2. Embrace forward planning. It sounds like common sense but knowing exactly where you’re going and what you’re doing every day can help you make the most of your time. And when you’re filling in your diary be sure to schedule some daily ‘me time’ and guard it at all costs!
  3. Tackle one thing at a time. Forget multitasking. Research shows it shortens your attention span and affects your quality of work. You’ll do a far better job, and get it done quicker, if you focus on one task at a time, get into the flow then move onto the next.
  4. Don’t feel bad for taking a 20-minute power nap. Studies have found that a short nap, one that falls within the first stage of sleep and avoids REM, can ‘refresh’ the brain, helping you get things done faster and more efficiently afterwards.
  5. Figure out where you waste most time. Could you cut your commute time or use this time to better effect, such as listening to audio books or learning a language? Could you do your evening run in your lunch break? What little changes or improvements could you make to give yourself more free time at home, doing what you love?
  6. Make good use of ‘dead time’. Take on board the concept suggested in Be Excellent At Anything by Tony Schwartz and use time you spend queuing or waiting to take small steps towards big goals or a passion project you’re working on.
  7. Learn when and how to say no. If you find your diary is full, or full of things you don’t want to do, then it’s time to start saying no – nicely. In saying no, in effect we’re also saying yes to something that matters to us.
  8. Do a digital detox: According to our good friend Frances Booth, author of The Distraction Trap: “Often, when we check our messages or phone, we get caught up answering other people’s demands, rather than filling our time with things that please us,” she says. “We need to decide how we want to spend our free time, and then fit technology around it.”

“Everything changed the day she figured out there was enough time for all the important things in her life” ~ Brian Andreas

Taking charge of your time makes it easier to do everything you need to do and want to do in your day and that’s key to spending more time doing what you love.

Remember each choice is a step in a certain direction. Just like doing nothing is also a choice. Procrastinating is a choice. Making excuses is a choice. Wasting time on regrets is a choice. Telling yourself you aren’t good enough, or, ‘It’ll never happen for me,’ is also a choice. Start making choices that serve you. Start making choices that take you in the right direction. Start making choices that will add up to the life you want to live.

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Image credit: aemartinphoto.com

FREE goodness to help you slow down, tune in and light up!

 We have had a crazy few months at DWYL HQ, so we are dedicating October to quiet, reflective time. As we search for meaning in our busy lives it can be hard to relax, tune out the noise and listen to what we really want to offer the world.

If you feel like this, or you find yourself saying: “I don’t have time” more often than you’d like, we have three amazing FREE resources just for you:

  • Making Time is a 31-day experiment in carving out more time for the things you love! You’ll learn how to look up and rediscover the small wonders out there that make you happy, 1 day at a time, 1 minute at a time. Sign up here and receive one email per day for 31 days, each one providing a specific prompt to encourage you to create, connect or just have fun.
  • Zen for Ten is a simple ten-day programme of daily emails, packed with beautiful imagery, short exercises and inspiring prompts, designed to help you:
    • be more present, get quiet and focus
    • see beauty in everything
    • travel lighter
    • get on the road to doing what you love, for life.

Sign up here for Zen for Ten and receive your first email today.

We’d love to hear how you get on. Connect with us on Facebook or Twitter and let us know what you do when you take time out!

The Do What You Love team

Do What You Love interview – Megan Dalla-Camina

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Megan Dalla-Camina is one amazing lady. As a business, creative and leadership strategist, coach, and writer and speaker on women, work and wellbeing, she is a thriving entrepreneur who is truly is doing what she loves.

Before going it alone, Megan enjoyed a high-paced career as a corporate executive. She was an award winning marketing director, head of strategy for a five billion dollar business and had interesting endeavours in gender diversity, leadership development and organisational change. But at the age of 35, it all changed. Like many successful high flyers she hit burnout, or what she describes as a kind of “greyness” in which she felt she was simply going through the motions in all aspects of her life. It was a big wake up call that made her realise it was time to do something different and be her best self. 15 years on Megan has her own flourishing business and has built a life based on all the things that really matter to her.

We hope that this interview gets you thinking about what matters most to you in your life and how you could be the best version of yourself. Enjoy! ~ Rachel

Megan Dalla-Camina

1. So many people, and women especially, struggle with the idea of having it all; a career and a personal life they love. But you know it can be done because you’ve spent the last decade figuring out how to get it! Tell us about your journey to this point…

I grew up as a creative; a dancer, actress, writer, poet, singer, music producer. I was always creating and performing, right through until I was in my early twenties. A car accident then changed my course, and I ended up in the corporate world, which saw me working for big global companies like GE, PwC and IBM for the best part of the next 20 years. I worked in marketing, business development, business strategy, gender diversity, organisational change and leadership development. Really senior roles, in Australia, Asia and the US. My last role was Head of Strategy for IBM, a 5Billion dollar business. During that time I also completed two Masters degrees, one in Business Management and the other in Wellness with a major in Positive Psychology. And just before I made my first big Director role, I got pregnant with my son who is now nearly 15.

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How can you make more time for yourself?

How can you make more time for yourself? time

Do you ever feel like life is running away with you? Well you’re not alone.

In our over-caffeinated, hyper-connected world it seems that living life in the fast lane is no longer a lifestyle choice, it’s the norm. As we hurry from one thing to the next, juggling family and home life with long hours at work and an endless stream of social commitments, it’s easy to be distracted by our busyness and fooled into thinking we are leading full and worthy lives. But as Henry David Thoreau said: “It’s not enough to be busy; so are the ants. The question is: what are we busy about?”

“Between work, being a mum, managing the house and organising my husband I don’t get a minute to myself,” explains my friend Kirsten, 36, a university lecturer who has a two-year-old daughter. “ I’d love to bake more – and even start my own cake business – but after a long hard day I’m so tired and I end up in front of the TV or catching up with Facebook and Twitter – the time just goes.”

Sound familiar?

Busy is not inevitable

When we find ourselves feeling busy, overwhelmed and tired, it’s important to remember that being busy is a choice. We are never forced into a lifestyle of busyness. It is a decision we make. In order to become less busy we must first realise that we determine our own schedule and that we have the power to change it. After all busyness is, essentially, about misplaced priorities and it’s only when we slow down and listen to our intuition that life begins to flow again. By accepting it’s ok not to be busy, and by making sure our priorities align with our values and the contributions we’d love to offer this world, we open ourselves up to all sorts of exciting new possibilities.

FREE goodness to help you slow down, tune in and light up!

We have had a crazy few months at DWYL HQ, so we are dedicating October to quiet, reflective time. As we search for meaning in our busy lives it can be hard to relax, tune out the noise and listen to what we really want to offer the world.

If you feel like this, or you find yourself saying: “I don’t have time” more often than you’d like, please gift yourself our free resource Making Time, a 31-day experiment in carving out more time for the things you love.

You’ll learn how to look up and rediscover the small wonders out there that make you happy, one day at a time, one minute at a time. Sign up here (it’s free!) and receive one email per day for 31 days, each one providing a specific prompt to encourage you to create, connect or just have fun.

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We’d love to hear how you get on. Connect with us on Facebook or Twitter and let us know what you do with your new-found time!

The Do What You Love team

What if…?

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Making time to do the things we love is essential for our happiness and wellbeing, whether it’s strolling through the countryside, taking a long hot bath or reading the next chapter of that gripping novel.

Imagine then if you could take the thing you love most – fashion, baking, writing, gardening, painting, helping people, even walking the dog – and make a living from it. Starting your own flourishing business is a great way to turn your passion into profit.

However small or large your business, it can be a fantastic way to do what you love. To start dreaming big deep and wide about what could be possible for you in business download our free ‘What If…?’ resource. You might just surprise yourself!

What do you love about colour?

What do you love about colour? The Do What You Love team share their thoughts…

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An interesting theme for me as it is not one I instantly think about. However when asked about what it is about colour I love then it has to be the way it communicates so much. It can lift the spirits of a person, change the mood within a room and dramatically alter landscape. – PAUL

My interest in colour started when I had my aura read years ago. I couldn’t believe that the colours in the photograph could tell me so much about my emotional, mental and spiritual wellbeing. Now I’m fascinated by the energy of colour and how it can influence the way we think, feel and act. Colour is a powerful tool that we can all use on a daily basis to improve our moods, boost our energy levels, improve our health, heal our bodies, stay balanced, and attract love, happiness and much more. – RACHEL

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Colour is so essential to our everyday life. It can change our energy, our outlook and our mood in a split second. It can spark a memory – like a peppermint green will always remind me of the birthday cake my mum made when I was young (yes, I wanted a green cake!) and silver always reminds me of my first car, such sparkle! What I love about colour is that it is everywhere I turn – in nature, in my home, my food and I get to choose the colour I want to wear each day and how I would like to invite it into my life. – LOUISE

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What are your thoughts? What do you love about colour?

We’d love to know. please leave a comment below…

Do What You Love interview – Kendall Marie Platt

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Today we chat to a lady who is combining her two greatest loves – science and fashion – to ensure she lives life to the fullest. Kendall Marie Platt has been a forensic scientist since 2010 and last year she also decided to launch her own fashion business styling women across the UK. She loves that she earns a living from both her technical and creative skills and she is now mentoring other women as they start up on their own. Enjoy the interview! ~Rachel

Kendall Marie Platt

1. How are you ‘doing what you love’?

By day I am forensic scientist and by night I am an independent stylist with Stella&Dot, a boutique jewellery and accessories company. I offer pop-up shops and styling sessions, called trunk shows, in people’s homes. Usually a group of girlfriends will gather at someone’s house for coffee or wine and I talk everyone through next season trends and style them using the products I have in my trunk. There’s the opportunity for guests to purchase jewellery and accessories and the hostess gets free jewellery as a thank you!

2. Tell us about your background and how you’ve come to find yourself doing two dream jobs?

I’ve always enjoyed science and wanted that involved helping people. My school wanted me to study medicine but instead I chose to do Molecular and Cellular Biology at the University of Bath and a masters in Forensic Archaeology at Bournemouth University. During the process I applied for loads of CSI jobs and sent my CV to all the big forensic providers. I also did a number of short courses, including Forensic Photography and Forensic Entomology, to make my CV stand out. My perseverance paid off when I was offered a job at the Forensic Science Service (FSS) as a Forensic Biology Examiner in the Violent and Homicide team. The FSS, a government owned company, closed in 2011 and since then I have worked for nearly all of the private forensic providers in the UK. The current company I work for, Arrogen Forensics is a small, innovative company that is really going places and in my current role as Deputy Quality Manager I am enjoying contributing to the growth of the company.

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My other big love is fashion. In fact in my school year book it said I was ‘Most likely to…. wear diamanté chemistry goggles’ – which is so apt! I first realised I could make money from my passion when I went along to a Stella&Dot trunk show (a pop-up boutique) at a friend’s house. I fell head over heels for the gorgeous jewellery so when the stylist explained that I could be a stylist myself, I jumped at the chance. Now, as well as earning good money, which will help pay for my wedding, I get free jewellery and helping other women style their own lives and even build their own business.

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3. What do you most like about each job and how do they complement one and other in terms of your personality, interests, and skill set?

My day job taxes my brain in a technical way because I have to think outside the box and use my knowledge and experience to work out, for example, where tiny blood spots might have ended up on the trainers worn by a suspect during a fight. It’s quite intense and serious, and I don’t like to think too much about what the victims might have been though.

In contrast, being a stylist allows me to interact with people in a more fun and social environment, whilst indulging my creative side. I love seeing people happy so helping women to solve their fashion dilemmas while boosting their confidence and making them feel fantastic about themselves is wonderful. Both roles require me to be super-organised, consistent in approach and persistent in order to achieve my goals.

4. What does a typical day in your life look like?

I get up at 6.30am have a cup of tea, check my emails, shower and have breakfast, making sure to accessorise and take a photo of my outfit to post to my Facebook business page before doing the 40-minute drive to the laboratory. Mornings usually involve examining clothing for blood and blood patterns, examining exhibits for footwear marks and body fluids, creating test impressions for use in marks examinations, and conducting audits and running most aspects of the Quality System.

On my lunch break I try to make one or two customer care calls for my Stella&Dot business and maybe post on my social media pages about the latest offer or featured piece. After lunch I might put together a scientific supplies order and draft a checklist for that months audit. Unless an urgent case comes in I usually get in the car about 4.30pm to drive home. I make a couple more calls to book in trunk shows or to chat to potential stylists. If I have a trunk show in the evening I’ll arrive at my hostess’ house for about 7pm. I’ll set up in her front room or kitchen and chat to her about who is attending and what pieces she would like to get for free. Once all the guests have arrived and I’ve got to know them I talk a bit about the company and the fashion trends for the upcoming season and do some group styling. The rest of the evening entails personal styling, chatting with the guests, answering questions and taking any orders on my iPad.

image4My pop-up boutique inside a hostess’ home

5. What has been your biggest challenge to date, and how did you overcome it?

When a good friend of mine was diagnosed with terminal cancer I began to have panic attacks. I am a control freak, and tend to adopt the role of organiser in group situations, but I felt so helpless because there was nothing I could do to make my friend better. In the end I decided to go and speak to someone about my feelings. This made me realise that there wasn’t anything I could do, other than support and love him whilst he was still around, and then do my best to make him as proud as possible.

6. How do you think each of us can live the fullest life possible? 

Always be kind; kindness breeds fulfilment. And make sure you do at least one thing every day that makes you happy – if you can make that thing your job even better as we spend 70 per cent of our lives at work! It helps to make a list of everything that you enjoy – be it reading a book or going for a long walk – then schedule these things into your week.

7. What is the best advice you have received?  

My parents always said I could do anything I wanted to and they showed me that hard work and determination to succeed would get me there. They also taught me that I don’t have to stay in situations that make me unhappy because there’s always have a choice – even if it means working two jobs and seven days a week to get where I want to be.

8. What keeps you awake at night? 

Dreaming up new ways to build my Stella&Dot business, or thinking about tasks I need to do in order to complete my latest audit or update my case!

9. What gets you up in the morning?

The friend I mentioned sadly lost his life to liver cancer aged 26. He was a forensic scientist, a father, a party animal, pretty badly behaved and utterly loveable. The fact that he doesn’t have the luxury of living his life everyday is what motivates me to get out there and live my life to the fullest! I adore mentoring other women, giving them confidence in their own abilities and seeing them succeed is one of the things I’m most proud of.

Do What You Love interview - Kendall Marie Platt image5 e1441796189878Spreading the word about business opportunities with Stella&Dot at Mumsnet Workfest, London

10. Finally, what do you hope your life has in store? What are your big dreams?  

I hope to continue helping women to style their lives and grow their own flourishing businesses while fighting crime and building the most robust quality system in the Forensic arena. My big dream is to live a happy and healthy life with my wonderful husband by my side. Oh and world domination of course, but that goes without saying, right?

Kendall’s snapshot…

Biggest ‘ah-ha’ moment: Realising that I could indulge my love of fashion whilst continuing my dream job as a forensic scientist.

Happiest place: At my parents house in France surrounded by friends and family.

Three things you do to relax: Hot bath, good magazine, digging in my garden.

Best way to stay focused: Lists, lists and more lists!

Mantra of the moment: Never let anyone dull your sparkle.

Most inspiring book you’ve read: Elephants on Acid by Alex Boese

Advice to anyone who isn’t doing what they love: Decide what truly makes you happy and go for it!

Quote you live by: “…life is too short to be anything but happy” ~ Karl Marx

Wish for the world: For everyone to indulge their passions at least once a day – we would all be more content that way!

If you love jewellery and fashion and would like advice about becoming a stylist or hosting a Trunk Show visit www.stelladot.co.uk/kendall or contact Kendall via Facebook , Twitter: @KBev86, Instagram: kbev86 or email: [email protected]