DIME FEATURED SELLER: MANDY CAVE

Interview provided by DIME. Photos by Sara Barnes

family1.JPG

As Denton Independent Maker Exchange (DIME) gears up for the opening of it’s brick and mortar store in April, we caught up with DIME leader and accomplished water-colorist  Mandy Cave. Mandy’s abundant enthusiasm will get you excited about her work, the store, and maybe even about creating some art, yourself. 


How did you get into watercolor painting?

All I knew when I moved to Denton was that I wanted to be an art major. It wasn’t until I took my first watercolor class that I learned to love it. One day in class my teacher showed us the work of famous watercolor painters, and I recognized a couple of them from my childhood. As a kid my parents had a painting of a dog laying on a bed framed above their headboard. I would lay in their bed for hours staring at the painting. When I got a little older, I found my new favorite painting of a young lady sitting in a yellow field, reaching out toward a house in the distance. It turns out that a watercolor artist, Andrew Wyeth had painted both of them. After that I starting realizing how much I’ve always been drawn to Watercolor. Whenever I go to the bookstore, I find myself wandering over to the kids section to flip though the illustrations. Most of my favorites are always watercolor artists. Maybe I was hardwired to like it and just never saw it until later.

What is your favorite thing about watercolor?

There are these little moments behind the scenes I enjoy so much. I feel like all watercolor artists must like them. Like when I’m about to clean off a brush in a fresh jar of water. When I tap the brush loaded with color on the side of the jar, color floats and dances around in the water. It’s magical. Right now I am learning how versatile watercolor is. I can use it to make these huge, realistic, fine art paintings, or I can make small, simplified illustrations. Both are so fun! The illustration thing is really new to me. I’m just now exploring it. 

Your custom family illustrations are the cutest thing ever. Can you explain how you go about making those?

It is an opportunity to make friends. I get to know details that are important to people. One family I’m about to paint owns chickens. The wife asked me if I thought it would be silly to include them, but I told her I think those details are what make a family unique. I can’t imagine leaving things like that out. Some people are really open to share about themselves, like the origin of their pet’s name and the way their son likes to gel his hair. I love it! Then they send me photo references and I compose a drawing that feels fitting for their family. After I make the drawing in a sketchbook (and do a lot of erasing and re-drawing), I transfer it to watercolor paper with a projector. Watercolor paper is delicate. If you use an eraser on it, the tooth of the paper gets damaged. The projector prevents me from damaging the final painting. Then, the best part, PAINTING! I use this ridiculously small 4 haired brush to outline the edges of a sweater, the tip of a dogs nose and everyone’s tiny eyes.

family6.cards.JPG

You recently had your work featured on the prestigious Design*Sponge Blog. What was that like?

It was such a fun opportunity to be found by people I wouldn’t have met otherwise. Folks from California to Maryland. One gal who found me through Design*Sponge told me about her dream of documenting her family every year, just like her grandmother did for 65 years of marriage. It’s funny because I’ve been interested in capturing the changes in one family over a long span of time. Thanks to Design*Sponge, our little dreams met. 

How did you become involved in DIME?

The postcards for the Bazaar’s are adorable! That’s how I first found out about DIME. I couldn’t make it to the Summer Bazaar but when I saw the cute postcard with the fall leaves, last october, I made it a top priority to be there. Graduation from College was coming up and I was nervous about the end of campus days, surrounded by artsy students. So, I did everything I could to make new friends at the Bazaar. I signed up to be on the e-mail list and made sure to go to the Christmas party. That night, we got to laugh at how everyone wrapped their gift in brown kraft paper and we ate chocolate cookies. After that, I jumped at every opportunity to hang out with Shelley and Rachel. I was eager to be a part of the creative community.

There are so many great artists around town. When I was getting started, Anna Tovar, also a DIME watercolor artist, met up with me to talk artsy-business over some killer breakfast nachos at Loco. The whole DIME group is inspiring and it’s contagious.

In addition to being a DIME artist, you are the newest leader on the DIME leadership team. Can you give us a little incite into your role?

Rachel, Shelley and Nikki are so fun, it feels more like play than work. Right now, I’m transitioning into my role. The most exciting thing I get to do is post on the DIME Facebook page about all the Artist’s who get into the DIME Summer Bazaar.

studio4.JPG
studio3.jpg

Where can we purchase your work?

You can find my custom illustrations at MandyCaveWatercolor.Etsy.com. I’m going to debut illustrated prints and cards at the Summer Bazaar on June 8th. After that, they will be available on my Etsy Shop and at the DIME store. The home for my fine-art portfolio is mandycave.com 

Do you have any advice for aspiring Etsy sellers?

Yes! My 1st piece of advice is “Get Smart!”. There are a bazillion helpful articles about setting up shop as a small art biz. Etsy has a ton of blog posts, Dave Ramsey has solid financial advice, Jon Acuff has great advice about pursuing your dream, DIME teaches Etsy classes and the list goes on. Read up on all your business/art heroes. Wisdom is at your fingertips if you search for it. 

My 2nd piece of advice is “Start!”. It is scary to begin a business, but don’t let that keep you from diving in. There is a lot to learn about taking photos of your product, writing descriptions of your work, how to be your own boss, keeping a schedule, doing your own taxes, blah di blah... But let’s be real, you can’t be awesome immediately. You just have to start and learn as you go. And you don’t have to quit your job at Starbucks to do it. My last semester of school I was working at Panera Bread and I started my Etsy shop. Somedays I didn’t feel like sweeping bread crumbs, but then I read something Jon Acuff said. “Your day job is practice for your dream job.” After that, I swept the floors with a little skip in my step. I needed to be a a good barista before I could be an entrepreneur. I started toasting bagels with gusto and paying attention to guest’s preferences. Because of it, I learned customer service skills that I use for my Art & Illustration Business. 

My 3rd piece of advice is “Don’t Listen To Your Negative Thoughts!” They simply aren’t true. Sometimes I think things like “There are enough artists out there already.” But that is absurd. If we don’t share our negative thoughts, we become convinced of silly lies. You have to use your talent because no one else can use it for you. 

My Last piece of advice is “Make Friends!” Finding Creative Community is so valuable. Otherwise, creative energy wanes and you will quit. Care about other people around you. Pay attention to what they say and learn from them. They are your greatest resource.

mandy1.jpg

ARTSY: ANNA CONNER

Words and images by Courtney Marie

IMG_4071.JPG

Anna Conner is an artist working out of Denton, TX. She's lived here since early childhood. Anna followed her parents’ footsteps to the classrooms of UNT, where she currently studies interior design. She’s currently on the prowl for new ways to share her passions, ideas, and art with others.

One visit to Anna’s meticulously-organized studio says a lot about her. She claims to dabble in everything and master nothing, but her collages are the products of great care and experience. She pours me a glass of wine and we flip through the old school books she snips pictures from. I gaze at the eclectic array of artwork covering the walls as she describes to me her dream art-project, an idea that came to her in a dream: a collection of tiny terrariums, each depicting a powerful and unexpected moment in someone’s life: a man in a diving bell lost in the jungle and adolescents embracing in a forest.

​Anna Conner 

​Anna Conner 

Anna is fascinated by America’s obsession with hamburgers. Fast food comes up a lot in her work. On the walls of her bedroom hang her own oil paintings of brightly-colored hamburgers: one seems to have grown human legs, the other is the body of a sea turtle. She’s in the process of planning her next artistic undertaking: 3-D fabric collages. On the docket to be created is a hand-sewn sculpture of a giant hamburger (“as tall as a small man”), bursting at the buns with odd items, and a life-sized nude elderly couple, amorously involved.

Following a disastrous internship with MTV, Anna switched her major from Radio, TV and Film to Interior Design, and looks forward to it as a career alongside her art. Of course, selling enough pieces to live off of would be ideal, but Anna feels strongly in providing art that is realistically affordable and accessible to all. She lives up to her philosophy. Having friends who are also artists encourages her to share her art and ideas with others. She loves when she is able to purchase her peers’ work and allow them to do the same. “We’re all artists and we’re all trying to work for the same thing, and it’s really nice to...support each other and buy things and have a collection, and maybe when you’re eighty one day, that person is famous and it’s worth a [lot] of money, you know, or not and you just have an amazing memory of when you were younger.”

On the docket to be created is a hand-sewn sculpture of a giant hamburger.

​Some of Anna Conner's artwork

​Some of Anna Conner's artwork

Each of her pieces are one-of-a-kind originals; nothing is reproduced, and she is willing to work on commissioned pieces. Her desk is currently covered in tiny pictures of dogs, soon to be constructed into an advertisement for a pet groomer. To make her collages, Anna scours thrift shops and antique stores for hours, on the hunt for old illustrated books. She goes through piles of razor blades, carefully cutting out the pieces of her composite work. She keeps her projects scrupulously organized in folders, drawers, and trays around her studio.

One of Anna’s greatest struggles as an artist is what she calls involuntary dry spells. “With school and with work and everything, sometimes I don’t have the time...It’s the worst, because I just have all these ideas and I feel like I’m losing them and forgetting them and they’re disintegrating into my mind, you know, leaving my body.”

Anna offered some advice to fellow creatives who struggle with dry spells, “Sometimes, I turn it into the most amazing experience.” She describes how, inspired by a song writing project launched by her boyfriend, she pushes herself to create at maximum capacity for a very short amount of time. She does this especially when she feels uninspired. “I try to knock out ten pieces in twelve hours.” One of the pieces she created during this exercise, “Red Cross Wishes for Vacation,” ended up being a favorite. She’s even been contacted to use it as a T-shirt design.

If you can’t find her in Denton, Anna’s probably at one of the skate parks in Lewisville or Allen, grinding poles with her BMX bike, christened Princess Diana. You can tell she means business by the banged-up bike tattooed on her left shin. She also works closely with UNT’s Italian Club, hosting occasional Italian-language movie nights in her home. 


LA JEDER AND THE LEAKY HOME

​Heather Fossmo of La Jeder

​Heather Fossmo of La Jeder

Erik and Heather Fossomo have been traveling all over the US for the last nine months, bringing sweet songs and smiling faces to anyone they meet on the road. One of the most incredible things about their journey has been the experience of driving their 1986, 26 ft. long motor home nicknamed "Olga." Heck, they even named the tour after the thing. In the midst of their Ode to Olga tour, the musical act, aptly named La Jeder, is releasing their premiere music video for their ​song, "Leaky Home," also about Olga, their current lodging, and all of the problems she initially brought about.

The Denton-based band has decided to release this video exclusively through We Denton Do It for the next week or so until it goes wide, and we couldn't be more pleased. The video was shot and directed by Dentonite Sam D. Ramsey. Check it out below!


PHOTOGRAPHER SPOTLIGHT: WESLEY KIRK

Wesley Kirk is a man of many talents and endeavors. In addition to being a photographer, he also finds time to manage his own film distribution business, serve as president of the UNT Short Film Club, run a motivational poster campaign and that's just naming a few.  Wesley is an extremely motivated young man, and we look forward to what he will bring to our community of artists. We caught up with Wesley to see what he has to say. Here is Wesley Kirk and his binders full of women. 

photos by Wesley Kirk

photos by Wesley Kirk

Tell us about yourself. 

My name is Wesley Kirk, but a lot of people know my photography by the name The Vision Beautiful. I’m a photographer/filmmaker from Fort Worth, TX. I like dressing sharp, listening to latin jazz & southern soul, watching Star Trek, going on adventures, making a fool of myself, and having long talks about outer space & cartoon shows.

My life in Denton is mostly spent at my computer, working on my businesses. Click Clack Short Films, a short film distribution company, Fail Better Posters, an inspirational / motivational poster company & social project, my photography company, and various other projects, collaborations, and schemes.

IMG_0004 (3).jpg
IMG_0979.jpg
IMG_9960.jpg

What brought you to photography?

I was about 12. My mom accidentally bought two cameras on ebay, and gave me the extra one, a fully-automatic 35mm point & shoot, not much better than a disposable camera. My dad had recently quit his job as an insurance adjuster, and gave me his 99 leftover rolls of film. They were both kind enough to develop whatever awful photos I took.

For my 17th birthday, my mom bought me a digital camera, not a good one, but one that would save them from having to develop all those awful pictures. Around that time, my friends and I started going on adventures around Fort Worth, exploring what we could, and I began to realize that photography was a pretty good way to keep some of my filmmaking skills sharp between movies.

Over the years, I ended up going on photoshoots more than film shoots, and people started knowing me more for my portraits than my short films. After a while, I finally started taking it seriously, getting myself a proper camera, fancy lenses, good equipment, and started perfecting my style.

Describe your style.

I'd describe my style as semi-candid cinematic portraits, where shoots tend to double as adventures.

What inspires you? ​

It’s hard to put a finger on what inspires me. I suppose the best I could answer is a good idea well executed. But what excites me most for a shoot is just a pretty lady, a fun idea we both came up with, golden light, and a place to roam around.

IMG_1391.jpg
IMG_3614.jpg
R1-02446-019A.jpg

How do you define a successful photograph?

Personally, I feel like a shoot was a success if I can't stop looking at the pictures. When I've captured that rare moment of reality looking as beautiful as it did in my mind's eye. It doesn't happen often, but every now and then, I'll do a shoot I'm so in love with that I'll keep pulling up the pictures again & again, and it'll remind me of when I was a kid and I'd spread out all my photos on my bedroom floor and think to myself "I made these."

What are the benefits and challenges of being a photographer in Denton?

The benefit is having lots of beautiful, talented, enthusiastic people around. There’s no shortage of gorgeous gals, brilliant artists, and fun people to collaborate with.

The challenge is finding good, new places to photograph. In Fort Worth, I had a variety of diverse locations, but Denton’s so small, it leaves me with few options to explore.

IMG_8045.jpg
IMG_0388_copy.jpg

If you could be invisible for one day with your camera, where would you go?

I would time travel back to January 4th, 2010, Lesley Kerr’s last day in Texas, and I would photograph the way she looked at me, and the way we were together, our conversations and adventures. I wish I could remember it all better.

IMG_4369.jpg

What is your favorite thing about Denton?

My favorite thing about Denton is that it’s small enough that I feel I can make a difference, make an impact, and leave my mark.

IMG_9458 copy.jpg

To find more from Wesley and to keep up on all of his scheming check him out on his....

Website / Facebook / Tumblr / Instagram

EFTERKLANG AT DAN'S SILVERLEAF

​Efterklang, Chambers and Nightlands played Dan's Silverleaf this past Tuesday. We Denton Do It contributor (and the most productive person ever), Courtney Marie, was there to catch it. Read on for more!

​Efterklang at Dan's Silverleaf by Courtney Marie

​Efterklang at Dan's Silverleaf by Courtney Marie

Efterklang, the Danish band whose newest album, Piramida, was recently explored on NPR, played to a packed room of fans at Dan's Silverleaf on Tuesday. The band was excited to be in Texas. Casper Clausen, the lead singer, took a moment in the middle of the set to pass on messages written to Denton from fans in other cities, and encouraged the crowd to write their own messages that he could read to the folks at their next stop with our friends down 35, Austin, TX. The six-piece played a long set, including a great deal from their latest album, 2012's Magic Chairs, intertwining the beautiful vocal arrangements they have become so well known for with their newest collection of “found” sounds retrieved from a industrial ghost town on a small island off the coast of Greenland. Chambers and Nightlands rounded out the bill. 

​Efterklang Daning it up at Dan's. - Photo by Courtney Marie

​Efterklang Daning it up at Dan's. - Photo by Courtney Marie

Katinka Vindelev sings at Dan's Silverleaf this past Tuesday.  - photo by Courtney Marie

Katinka Vindelev sings at Dan's Silverleaf this past Tuesday.  - photo by Courtney Marie

​Casper Clausen of Efterklang reads letters to Denton from their previous show. - photo by Courtney Marie

​Casper Clausen of Efterklang reads letters to Denton from their previous show. - photo by Courtney Marie

A NIGHT OF LITERARY ABANDON

​Words and photos by Courtney Marie

Justin Bigos, one of the curators of the Kraken Reading Series, sits up high in the back of a pleased crowd. 

Justin Bigos, one of the curators of the Kraken Reading Series, sits up high in the back of a pleased crowd. 

Dentonites tend to be desensitized by the sheer volume of events and activities they're regularly invited to on Facebook and in real life. We get used to hearing about all the great bands we're missing every weekend. We see show posters overlapping one another at Jupiter House and J and J's. And our excited friends won't ever keep quiet about their weekend plans. 

Listen. There's no denying that our music scene is off-the-chain, y'all. It's no wonder other forms of non-musical art go by the wayside when planning a fun night on the town. Squeezing a literary reading into the weekend’s agenda may not be as wild or loud as, say, a punk rock show at Andy’s or Rubber Gloves, but it can be just as stimulating, and you might wake up with less of a headache in the morning.


Stephen Danos, poet, reading at Paschall Bar as part of the Kraken Reading Series

Stephen Danos, poet, reading at Paschall Bar as part of the Kraken Reading Series

The unsung heros of Denton’s literary scene tend to be less outspoken than their creative friends in the music biz. That’s why we’re here to advise you to keep a lookout for these local organizations and what they’re up to.

Two weekends ago we attended a packed reading at Paschall Bar, featuring Ft. Worth’s own nationally acclaimed poet, Alex Lemon, and Stephen Danos, poet and co-curator of the Dollhouse Reading Series in Chicago. The event was hosted by Kraken Reading Series, an organization dedicated to poetry and interested in helping promote those who have just released their first or second book. They host several events a month, most of which are at Paschall Bar

The event was cozy and quiet and perfect for those seeking to grab a nice cocktail and enjoy the beauty of words or a breath of inspiration.


The crew of Denton Performance Lab reads a humorous piece about meeting a significant other's  family. 

The crew of Denton Performance Lab reads a humorous piece about meeting a significant other's  family. 

The Denton Performance Lab hosted a show that very same night, luckily beginning after the Kraken show ended. Originally hosted at the late Art Six, the group now gets together at Greenspace Art Collective, performing their own work and pieces by others. They have an open invitation to the community to submit pieces to be performed, and host a show once a month.

This particular show, themed “Love, Lust, and All That Bullshit,” was casual and fun, blending a healthy mix of comedy and serious literature together. Almost everything read was performed with a theatrical twist, including the sock puppet productions of Romeo and Juliet and The Great Gatsby. It complimented the earlier Kraken Reading Series very well and we definitely plan on hitting both up again. ​

Almost everything read was performed with a theatrical twist, including the sock puppet productions of Romeo and Juliet and The Great Gatsby.

Can’t get enough readings and performance art? Check out the other events and open mics hosted at Green Space, keep a lookout for the monthly show at Rubber Gloves hosted by Denton’s Spoken Word Collective, go laugh at one of the many comedy shows put on by the Denton Comedy Collective, and of course, try and keep up with Spiderweb Salon.


Spiderweb Salon is a local creative arts collective that partners with We Denton Do It a few times a month. We recently discussed a show of theirs that we took in on the square. They also sometimes lend us short stories to post.

If this post got you hankerin' for taking in some of Denton's literary scene, you can catch the largest show Spiderweb has put on to date this Sunday, March 10th from 2-6pm at Dan's Silverleaf as part of 35 Denton