TRADE FEATURED ARTIST: DANIEL ROUTH

Interview by TRADE  

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Daniel Routh is a self-described "multimedia creative" working predominantly in the realms of video, photography, and music composition. Daniel's visual work tells tales of his personal travels and explorations across the country, while his musical compositions travel across multiple genres showing a depth of emotion and range. Read on to find out how his multiple disciplines collide, as well as his latest project about an attempt at breaking a world record.


What is the focus of your work?

At the core of what I do I'm trying to stir up something inside of people that maybe they haven't been in touch with in a while or ever before. I want to break away from surface level thinking in terms of 'art' and really push the boundaries of our contemporary views concerning what art is or is not. So in my work, whether it be a composition, or a video, or whatever, I want people to feel that there is something deeper, something more meaningful and more real. I have a real distaste for a lot of mainstream music, art, and films. I don't mean that to sound pretentious but whenever I watch one of those movies or hear that music on the radio I find myself completely unmoved – like I'm no different now than I was before I went into that movie. And to me that's a complete waste of time. It's like candy, you kind of can't help but like it but it will never sustain you and isn't good for you in large quantities.  I'm constantly trying to go deeper, to get more meaning and more substance in my work, and to do it in a way that I just think is cool. 

From where do you draw inspiration?

That's a hard question. It's often times from unpredictable places but generally I find a lot of inspiration from other artists, from the natural world, from strange or peculiar sounds, from books and poetry. Some of my favorite artists are Beethoven, Arvo Pärt, Mark Rothko, René Magritte, and C.S. Lewis. 

 

What kind of work do you make?

I call myself a multi-media artist. For me, that encompasses music, photography, and video.

What drew you to that form of art?

I've always been the kind of person that needs variety. Growing up, my older brother and I would film skateboarding videos using our parents’ VHS video camera. Then we would edit using two VCR's where we'd start and stop one of them and hit record on the other one and add music. So that got me really interested in video, I would film everything I could whenever my family and I went out to do things.

I always wanted to do photography but the kinds of cameras that I had access to were never really able to produce the quality of images I was looking for. Last summer, a friend and I took a long road trip up to the Pacific Northwest with a loaner 10 mega-pixel Nikon DSLR and an iPhone case that allowed us to attach an old Nikon manual lens. We filmed everything and took a ton of pictures. When I came back I put together a video of the trip which was my first video I'd made since was a kid. That experience really re-sparked my interest on a surprising level.

I grew up in very musical home. My dad is a piano tuner, my mom used to be a singer, and my step-dad is a musician and composer as well.  Through high school I was really involved in band and jazz band and I spent the summer before my senior year touring with a drum corps. I wanted to study music at UNT but I had switched instruments a whole lot and didn't have exceptional talent on any one instrument. Because of that, I was initially rejected into the music program at UNT. But I knew I wanted to study music composition and I wanted to do it at UNT, so I practiced three hours a day for 8 months and then auditioned two more times until I finally got accepted, probably just out of sympathy.

It was a weird time for me, I knew I had a lot of potential as a composer and a musician – I felt it inside me – but I couldn't play any one instrument exceptionally well. I had all these people telling me that I wasn't good enough but I knew that I was good enough. In the end, all it really took was just a lot of patience, a little bit of spite, and a few people who saw the potential in me to help me through that time. Four years later, I won one of the biggest competitions a composer can win at UNT and I had a piece that I composed performed by the UNT Symphony Orchestra.

 

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Do you find that your different creative disciplines influence or inspire one another? 

Definitely. It's cool because especially when I'm editing video I find myself doing the same kinds of things that I do when I'm composing music. For example, a lot of times I'll create formal, structural designs and then I'll try and create these 'moments' that are special and stand out because of the context I've built around the 'moment'. That kind of thing definitely transfers over between composing music and editing video.

But the more challenging one for me has been photography, because I've been so used to working within time and suddenly I'm doing this thing that isn't really time-based. So I'm constantly asking myself "how do I create something deep and meaningful without time?" With photography, people can look at a photo any different number of ways but I think a good photo will almost lead the eye to where the artist wants it to go, and I think that's partly what would make a person subconsciously want to stop and stare at an image for a long time, it's almost like they can't look away. Those are the kinds of images that I try to create – something that almost pulls them in and makes them feel like they're inside the photo.

 

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Tell us about your workspace and what tools you use the most.

I have a small music studio at home with recording gear and lots of miscellaneous instruments and music paper, so when I'm working on music stuff I usually do it at home. When I'm editing photos or videos I'll often times go to a coffee shop because I like the atmosphere and I usually am working around other photographers of videographers who can give me high-quality, honest feedback.

I use DSLR's for most of my video stuff, I think that's becoming a pretty standard thing now. For photography, I'll typically use a DSLR and my Pentax ME-Super film camera. I'm still trying out different films but my favorite so far has been Ektar 100 which is made by Kodak. I really want to learn some alternative photographic processes like wet plate collodion photography, camera obscura photography, as well as using alternative chemicals to process my film negatives (things like vodka and nail polish remover).

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Your most recent video project is about your Step Dad's attempt at breaking a world record. Tell me about that project as well as a little about the inspiration behind it.

Well my step-dad, Michael Combs, had some really bad heart problems about 10 years ago that stopped his heart for several minutes. He clinically died twice in three days.  But before he was sick he always had this dream to be a pilot, so because of his near-death experience he vowed to himself that when he got well again he would learn how to fly. Five years later, after being laid off from his job, he told us that not only was he going to get his pilot's license but that he was going to fly an airplane into all 50 states to spread the message to people that it's never too late to follow your dreams. Today, more than three years later, he has completed the 50 state goal and we estimate that about 30 million people have heard his message.

Last summer he and I attempted a time-over-distance world record attempt at flying coast-to-coast in his airplane which is a special class of airplane called Light Sport.  Unfortunately, we got within 91 miles of the east coast destination but then had to abandon the record attempt because we got completely enveloped in some wild thunderstorms. We planned to try again this summer and have been waiting all summer long for clear weather so we can make our second attempt.  It just hasn't happened yet and at this point, we’re not sure it will.  We’ll likely need to wait until next year.

My plan has been to make a short documentary chronicling the whole endeavor in order to continue spreading his message about not giving up on your dreams. Honestly, if it doesn't happen until next year I'll be somewhat relieved. There are just so many factors in setting aviation world-records that it really makes attempts stressful and nerve-wracking.

Has living in Denton influenced your work? 

Living in Denton has definitely influenced my work. There's this strong community of artists here and there's this way of thinking that Dentonites have that is just magnetic. I'm not from Denton, or even from Texas, I'm from Colorado, so coming here was a big culture shock for me. But as soon as I started getting into making art and doing creative things I found myself totally embraced by Denton and by the people that make up the creative community. There are lots of talented people engaged in so many different disciplines and on some level everyone is helping everybody else; I feel really fortunate to be a part of a group of people like that.

Is it important to you to be a part of a creative community?

It really is important to me. To have a group of people that I really trust and who I really feel respect me and what I do is totally invaluable. I feel like the quality of my work would really suffer if I didn't have people to be honest with me and tell me "that sucks" or "this part here is weak" or whatever. This was especially true when I was really first starting out.

Are there any local artists that you take inspiration from? 

There are a whole lot of them. I can’t remember his name but I met this painter at the Denton Arts & Jazz fest several years ago.  We talked for close to four hours and he told me something that that really opened my eyes to the way that I approach art. He said something along the lines of "Art is not the painting, nor is it the painter.  Art is the exchange that happens between the painting and the viewer." That just really blew my mind and totally made sense to me. I mean a piece of music or a painting is not art. How could it be? It's just air molecules being knocked into each other or just colors arranged together on some paper. The thing that is art is that magical thing that happens when someone hears the music or sees that painting. And I think this is why people have different ideas of what makes good art and bad art, or even art and non-art.

So I took what that guy at the Denton Arts & Jazz fest said and I ran with it and now, four years, later my work is very focused on creating something that can be very personal to the viewer almost on a spiritual level, and doing so by creating something that might challenge them to look a little bit deeper. I love things that appear simple but actually have this subtle, nuanced depth to them that you kind of have to hunt for.

Then there are also the really talented people that I'm fortunate enough to be friends with or are at least be familiar with. People like Jordan SmithRyan PollyJustin LoweMark  Lauren Apel,  Patrick Peringer,  Carlo CanlasJeremy OttensMandy Hampton, and a whole host of other highly skilled people.

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What was the last film, video, and/or composition that blew your mind?

A short film called "Union Man" by Bobby Lewis.  It's real short, like 9 minutes, but it's this really honest, gut-wrenching look at this janitor who works in the university union at UNT. It's all in black & white and there's this somber, melodramatic, bluesy piano thing that's going on underneath these visuals of him cleaning windows and mopping floors after everyone else is gone. The janitor, the "Union Man", is narrating the whole time and as it progresses he starts to really open up about his fears and his emotions.  And then, when he has become most vulnerable with his words, it cuts to a shot of him playing that piano tune on this baby-grand piano that sits in the union. So Bobby used that tune as the score for the film and the music really sums up all the feelings that the guy described and it's so pure because it's coming straight from the source. It's really powerful stuff; a really simply made, vulnerable look at this guy who everybody else just writes off as a loser or whatever. I thought that was really cool.

What future project are you most excited about?

Well, I have several things in the works that I'm excited about. I'm really looking forward to making the documentary about my step-dad's upcoming coast-to-coast world record attempt.  I'm also scoring a short film called Hero for writer and director Brian Anthone here within the next month or so. I'll also be composing music for a feature film called REM but that probably won't be until next summer. Lately, I've been working with the people at TRADE to produce a video that will hopefully generate a lot of interest in the future of the project.

Additionally, I've been working closely with Denton's new clothing line, Threadwell, doing mainly photography stuff. I’ve been designing their website kind of in my spare time the past couple months and we launched the site recently.  As a photographer, it's really a great opportunity for me to work with Threadwell because we'll organize these shoots, I'll show up, and I'll have three or four different models who are really talented and make the shoots go really smoothly.

I stay pretty busy, which I'm really thankful for, but the thing I'm most looking forward to is simply to continue to deepen my skills as an artist, whether it be in photography, video, or music. As a multi-media artist, I thrive on creating things in all three of those mediums and I am very fortunate to be able to support myself by doing so. I pretty much have three criteria for my life's work: I want to benefit others in a long-lasting, meaningful way, I want to create really cool things, and I want to travel all over the world. So I'm excited to see what the future holds!

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TRADE is a forthcoming collaborative creative space started by Heather Gregory and Tristan Bynum in the heart of Denton. TRADE works to bring together artists and creatives from different backgrounds and mediums by providing access to the space, tools, resources and creative community they need in order to thrive in Denton.  

MONTH IN REVIEW: OCTOBER

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Do y’all ever get into those conversations with people who have recently moved to Denton who just don’t dig it? We have - quite a bit actually. We’ve come to the conclusion that enjoying Denton life is a lot like taking a vacation to an all-inclusive resort - you have to completely buy in 100% to the events taking place while you’re there in order to enjoy it. This means going to large city events such as the Day of the Dead festival. That said, October was full of those types of events. Looks like November will be, too. Here is some of what happened over the past few weeks.


If we want to beat a dead horse, we could mention that Subway finally changed their sign at the beginning of the month after a long wait. Not to be outdone, the soon-to-open Lone Star Attitude put up their bright sign. Some took issue with it, as well. However, we haven't really heard any major rumblings about the classy corner sign put up by Cafe Herrera. 

The Atlantic Cities blog published an article saying that Denton County ranked #6 in a list of the tech hotspots in the nation. They came to this conclusion by looking at jobs that were created in the area between the years 2007 and 2012. City councilman Kevin Roden, says the city isn’t capitalizing on this fact correctly and published what he thinks should happen on his blog.

Oh man, was Canned this past month, too? That seems like it was forever ago. We enjoyed some wonderful canned brews and interviewed Menomena in between what seemed to be flash floods. We’re hoping Oaktopia is able to defy the “Rainy Denton Festival” curse.

Earlier this month, the city of Denton filed a temporary restraining order on the Eagleridge natural gas well to get them to stop operating without the necessary permits. The suits were dropped almost as quickly as anyone could report on the matter, and we haven’t heard much else out of it yet. City councilman, Dalton Gregory, says the city plans on rewriting (again) our local fracking rules. Said new rules will only apply to gas wells that are created after they are in effect, leaving existing gas wells to operate under the rules in place at the time of their initial drilling.

On the lighter side, we put on a show with Psychic Temple, Sarah Alexander and Shiny Around the Edges in which the latter sadly played their last show with their sax player Mike Forbes. 

Maker Space officially made the announcement that they have abandoned their original name and identity to become TRADE and plan to open in 2014.

We wrote about tacos and some of y’all whined about it. We’re gonna do it again soon, so get ready to argue with us.

We don’t want to jynx it, but the UNT football team has been strangely great this season. After their Halloween victory, they’re currently 6-3. We’re excited to see where this season will take them.

Local cold brewers, Dead Beat Coffee, sold out of their first batch of java. We’ll have more info from them and what they’re all about soon.

The Day of the Dead Festival happened again (a week before the actual Day of the Dead, mind you). The coffin races were bigger and better than ever before. We got to see lots of spectacle and a fair amount of crashes. We hope those things only increase next year. Oh yeah, the costumes were good, too.

The Horny Toad Cafe started prepping the old Good Eats spot over at Loop 288 and I-35 by Rose Costumes. All we know about them so far is that they are not related to the Horny Toad Bar and Grill in Cranfills Gap, TX. As soon as we know more, we’ll share the knowledge.

The Pizza Inn at the corner of University and Carroll suddenly closed down this month. They hurriedly took all of the signage down, too. We haven’t heard yet if there’s another business with plans to move in yet, but we’re thinking there must be.

Lastly, Irwindale, CA complained about the air and smell created by the Huy Fong Foods factory that produces the spicy Asian condiment, sriracha and wanted the factory to stop production until a solution was found. Kevin Roden (haven’t we already talked about him in here?) attempted to get the factory to move to Denton and created the social media tag #sriracha2denton encouraging others to share photos of Sriracha in and around Denton. We talked about how sriracha would make the town better. Some complained that they didn’t want it. While Irwindale and Huy Fong were able to figure things out on their own, the story of a small town Denton politician stealing sriracha from California got international attention and lots of buzz.

Alright, November. What ya got?

 

DENTON'S GHOSTLY GUARDIANS

Written by Shaun Treat 

The Homer Flow Memorial Hospital built in 1950

The Homer Flow Memorial Hospital built in 1950

 Halloween is upon us, which seems the perfect opportunity to revisit some of Denton’s most legendary ghost stories. Although most TV and movies tell us that ghosts are frightfully vengeful ghouls, there are also tales of dear departed Dentonites who linger on as guardian spirits. We're going to take this opportunity to warn you of a few of the ghastly souls you should be on the look out for this Halloween. 


Most ghost stories that get sensationalized are about vengeful or malevolent spirits, like the terrifying tale of the Goatman of the Old Alton Bridge, but not all ghosts are scary monsters. In fact, there are a number of local spectres who are loitering as guardian spirits to our fair community. One is the ghost of Nurse Betty from the old Homer Flow Memorial Hospital.

Many a Dentonite claim their honest-to-Betsy local bonafides by having been born in the old Flow Memorial Hospital, founded with a 1949 post-mortem donation by Homer Flow who is himself buried in the IOOF Cemetery.

Apparently old Homer had donated his property and a chunk of change to the city and Denton County jointly on the condition that they bankroll a charity hospital that provided affordable medical care to the poor. A downright Christian mission that worked for almost forty years, until politics and some municipal tax disputes contributed to the controversial bankruptcy of the Flow Hospital in 1986. Developers have since turned its lot into student housing on Scripture Hill, but stories of a ghostly nurse had already been haunting the hospital grounds for decades.

An unidentified nurse outside of the old Denton City Hospital south of the square, which has it's own ghostly stories. 

An unidentified nurse outside of the old Denton City Hospital south of the square, which has it's own ghostly stories. 

Laura Douglas, a librarian at the Emily Fowler Library, has kept records on the ghost often called Nurse Betty after her mother’s own accounts as a nurse there were passed down. As early as the 1950s, night staff, security guards, and even patients had inexplicable encounters with a woman dressed in a nurse’s white gown and cap. Many told of a dedicated young nurse at the Flow Hospital, pregnant from a tryst with a married doctor, who had died in the elevator after collapsing from a botched back-alley abortion yet her spirit still lingered as a caretaker. A new mother groggily saw a nurse in “a vintage uniform” close a window and then blanket her newborn in the middle of a chilly night, but was later told by the night nurse on duty that there was no one else on the floor. Even after the hospital closed, one shaken co-ed claimed that a woman “dressed in a nurse costume” had spooked away a potential attacker during her walk home in the wee hours after the campus bars had closed. Most accounts of Nurse Betty are similarly benevolent or benign, even if often unnerving.

Emily Fowler at the library front desk in 1949. 

Emily Fowler at the library front desk in 1949. 

Another public servant who continues her mission even after death is a well-known namesake of Denton’s public library. Emily Fowler was a dedicated crusader for free public literacy who served as librarian from 1943 to 1969. After her passing, numerous witnesses have had enough strange occurrences in the library to warrant several teams of paranormal investigators. In one of our favorite tales, a paranormal team was taking readings and recordings for EVP by prompting ghostly response with questions. When they reviewed their tapes, they were surprised by a faint but firm response: “Shhhhhhh!” Apparently, the lingering librarian likes her peace and quiet! Ms. Fowler also has a habit of stacking improperly indexed books in the middle of the floor, maybe because she is a real stickler for abiding by the Dewey Decimal System. Because of this, Laura Douglas has been working on having The Emily Fowler branch officially designated as a haunted library.

Denton has other guardian spirits, like Blind Sheriff Hodges and his boxer Candy or the mischievous Mr. Harrison of the Campus Theater, who still patrol our favorite local haunts. We’d like to think that when someone remarks on our fair town’s pretty remarkable community spirit, we can wink at each other knowing it also includes some civic-minded Dentonites from back in the day who are still lurking about.


 Back in The Day is an ongoing WDDI contribution from Shaun Treat, an assistant professor in Communication Studies at the University of North Texas and founder of the Denton Haunts historical ghost tour. Doc Treat has written about numerous local places and personalities at his Denton Haunts blog, and is forever indebted to the great work of the fine folks with the Denton County Historical Commission and local keepers of history like Mike Cochran and Laura Douglas at the Emily Fowler Library for their tireless work in helping preserve Denton’s intriguing past.

SELECTED TWEETS: CORN ON THE CROSS

By Christopher Hughes  

Corn on the cross, tweeted 2/18/13 

Corn on the cross, tweeted 2/18/13 

There was a table in the kitchen that expanded from the middle, napkins made from cheap cloth dyed burgundy, and little wooden napkin rings.  It all came from my mother.  She had insisted with a kind of maternal fervor that implied both satisfaction and expectation, and I knew that any resistance to her offering would result in hard feelings.  So I took it and went to the grocery store and bought ten packages of spaghetti noodles and ran into five people on aisle sixteen.  They peered invasively into my cart.  I’m having a dinner party, I said, and they invited themselves.  When I got to the checkout line, the clerk called me Mister Hughes.  It was either a sign of respect or mockery, I couldn’t tell.  He wore a cap that said Jesus Saves.  I wondered if it was religious or an advertisement.  He scanned the noodles, the sauce, all the veggies I intended to cut and dice and sauté, with a curious look on his face, and I sensed he was going to ask.  It’s for a dinner party, I said.  Could I have the leftovers, he asked.  Sure, I said.  I like to put corn in my sauce, he said.  For consistency.  Okay, fine, I told him.  He called over the bagging kid and sent him on an errand.  The line backed up.  The kid returned with multiple ears of corn.  The clerk scanned them, grinning.

            When I got home, I put on some Bill Evans, washed a pile of dishes in the sink, brought out the half empty bottle of gin that I’d hidden away after an unfortunate evening some months ago.  I poured two fingers and dumped in the olive juice and called it a martini.  Then I mopped the floor with Pine-Sol, wiped down the table with lemon-scented Pledge, straightened the framed pictures hanging crooked on the walls, changed the litter, vaccumed the cat hair off of everything, made the bed, moved the piles of books on the living room floor to the bedroom floor, and lit a ten dollar candle that smelled like cotton candy.  People began to arrive soon after, all of them with a single bottle of red wine in hand.  I led them to the corkscrew.  We drank with purpose.  Groups of three or four clustered around my living room and chatted agreeably about whatever.  I went to the kitchen and stared at the corn and wondered what to do with it.  After an hour or so, the food was done.  I put a stack of dishes and utensils on the kitchen counter and a line formed.  I watched them as they scooped the noodles onto their plates, stirred and poured thick red sauce dotted with yellow specks, grabbing at toast soaked in butter and refilling their wine glasses.  We sat down to eat and somebody offered to say a blessing and it got awkard.  I drank more.  So did they.  My cooking was adequate. Then I remembered the leftovers, and all of a sudden tupperware became important to me, and I thought maybe I was a grownup.

 


 Christopher Hughes is the author of Selected Tweets, a spoken word project and ongoing collection of prose poems based around the idea of giving context to his otherwise vague Twitter feed. He is the singer, guitarist and songwriter for The Calmative, and he produces other artists as well, out of his studio, Miscellaneous Sound. He holds an MFA in creative writing from The New School, has been published in Pax Americana, Omnia Vanitas Review and the Augury Books blog, and lives within spitting distance of Midway Mart.

3 SONGS: OCTOBER

Mind Spiders

Mind Spiders

When we initially started writing this month's rendition of 3 Songs, we felt as if we had something to prove, what with Central Track's post from last week declaring, "...things aren't going too great in the Denton music scene," but then two minutes passed by and we stopped caring. Things are always better in hindsight, Mr. Blackburn. Stuff's pretty good right now, and we have three songs to prove it. Read on to hear 'em. 


Shag - Everyday

A few weeks ago, a WDDI contributor suggested that October’s 3 Songs column be all Dirtnap Records bands (i.e. Bad Sports, Radioactivity, Mind Spiders, etc…) and while that would be awesome, it would also have us agreeing with local longhair, Dave Koen, which is something we just can’t do. So, we went out searching for what Denton had to offer again and - just like last month - were pleasantly surprised. Producer Shag, also known as Ben Garside, has been putting out wonderful instrumentals for a while now. The fact that something so great could be happening right under our noses without us even knowing about it is just plain crazy. We’re the people who know about that secret tunnel that goes from Ravelin to the UNT Environmental Science building, but forget we even mentioned that. Yes, it’s full of free chocolate-almond croissants, paved by freemasons, and will let you shave about ten minutes off of your walk to class, but that’s as much as we’re going to say about it. Anyway, Shag’s production shines throughout this track. It’s bouncy, happy and just the cure for the rainy blueness that has been this week. The entire album is actually pretty darned great. A look at Shag’s Facebook page drops the info of the release of a collaboration dubbed “All for the Sunny” featuring California’s Coss adding some vocals to a select 9 tracks from Null, the same album “Everyday” is pulled from. In fact you can check out one of those tracks here. Maybe we can get some Denton-Denton collaboration going on here, too. Hey AV the Great, you hear us?

Mind Spiders - Electric Things

We took a jab at Dirtnap-pusher, Dave Koen, in the paragraph above, but he was right. The new Mind Spiders and Radioactivity albums are both excellent (we talked about Bad Sports’ new stuff in a previous 3 Songs). Both are getting wonderful PR on spots such as All Things Considered and Vice. These incestuous bands share members that span most of the metroplex (if not further) and have been putting out records that mine a similar sound for over a decade (for some of the older members) in bands such as The Marked Men - who, if we can ever get our Past Denton Music Column started, we promise to talk about more. Mind Spiders found their sweet spot on their first album three years ago, and have continued to only get better with each new release (three albums in three years is impressive, no?). “Electric Things” finds the band working that trademark thin, fast sound, albeit with bits of Devo-esque sounds thrown in for good measure. If fact, the band has gone on record as to describe this album being influenced by many 80's-tastic things - the H.P. Lovecraft-inspired From Beyond movie being one. Oh, and while we're at it, both Mind Spiders and Radioactivity are playing Rubber Gloves on Friday, but you already knew that because you read the Den10.

Bashe - Splitter

We did really wanna include a song off of Radioactivity’s upcoming album (read above for more info), but Vice seems to have them on lock at the moment (no embed for us), so we’ve decided to go with the new single, "Splitter," from poppy math-rockers Bashe. We highlighted another song of theirs back in May. I guess we like Bashe. This new song finds the band's sound growing a great deal.  While they may have lost the slight disco feel they had earlier, "Splitter" embraces hook-filled, happy tunes that definitely had our toes tapping. We hope there’s more where this came from.

DIME STORE FEATURED SELLER: LAURA OF GYNX YARNS

Interview by The DIME Store, Photos by Laura Jinks Jimenez

DenTOWN 

DenTOWN 

 Since it is finally getting a little cooler, DIME sat down to chat with yarn-dyer extraordinaire, Laura Jinks Jimenez, of Gynx yarns to see what goes in to crafting her amazing fibers and goes about creating specific colorways (the beautiful selections colors in her gradients). Jinks' yarn is unlike anything else sold at the DIME Store and always catches your eye. Read on to learn what inspires her and how she goes about connecting with her online community to grow her business.


How did you get into yarn dyeing?

I started knitting back in 2005. I was still in high school and broke, but I had a thirst for nicer yarns than the local big box places stocked. I took to recycling thrift store sweaters I found. I could rarely find exactly what I wanted that way, so I turned to dyeing to get the colors I wanted. When I was at UNT getting my Fiber Arts degree, I started experimenting a lot with dyes and came up with some pretty cool results, and I fell in love with the process.

All of your colorways have fun and quirky names. What inspires their monikers?

My colorway inspiration comes from all over, but I think I’m most well-known for my “nerdy” colorways. A lot of my inspiration comes from anime or video games. Both anime and video games are so colorful that they often put color ideas into my head. It always makes for interesting conversation when people ask about my hard-to-pronounce Japanese names.

A recent project of mine actually has to do with cities in the DFW area. I’m working on a collection of colorways based on every city I’ve lived in, which all happen to be in the DFW region. So far I have two: Denton is “DenTOWN”, for which I drew colors I found in photos of the square, and Dallas’s “The Big D”, which is from Dallas’s nighttime skyline. I still have Mansfield, Arlington, and Fort Worth to go, so be on the lookout for those soon. 

CMKY yarn 

CMKY yarn 

Does the colorway always follow the name, or is it sometimes the other way around?

It definitely happens both ways. I work from an inspiration photo a lot, so the name comes pretty easily that way. Other times I wake up and decide I feel like dyeing something with purples and blues, and then I decide later on if it reminds me of something. Sometimes I have zero plan, which is the most liberating, and grab random colors and start playing with no end goal in mind. I will dye off of intuition and add a little bit of this or that until it seems right, which makes for really complex color combinations. Those are often the most difficult to name.

In addition to yarn dyeing, you've built a little knitting identity for yourself by talking about your techniques in your Podcast "The Dyer's Notebook," knitting with your own yarns, and having your yarns featured in yarn clubs. How does all of this add to your business of dyeing?

I started my podcast, “The Dyer’s Notebook”, a little over a year ago as a way to chronicle my adventures in the fiber world, educate others about dyeing, and also to connect with customers on a more personal level. Through the podcast and social media, I’ve created a network of customers, viewers, and friends that just continues to grow. A lot of people find out about my business through my podcast, and at this point I’d say the majority of my regular customers are viewers of my podcast as well. While I talk about what I’ve been up to with my knitting, spinning, and dyeing, I also give a preview of what’s going up in my [Etsy] shop each week so people can get excited about it and keep checking out my shop regularly.

While I offer my own yarn clubs through my shop, I’ve also started collaborating with other people on clubs and knitting kits. I recently worked with Etsy seller littleskein and knitwear designer Laura Linneman on a sock kit that includes a club-exclusive colorway from me. I love doing collaborations like that because it gets my name out there to people who might not have found me otherwise.

 

Howl's Castle 

Howl's Castle 

The Big D  

The Big D  

Gym Class 

Gym Class 

Before Gynx Yarns, you had a handmade Etsy shop. How does having a “supply” shop differ from running a handmade shop? Or do you see Gynx Yarns as more of a handmade shop than a supply shop?

When I first started on Etsy in 2009, I was selling finished products, and it wasn’t making me as happy as I thought it would. In 2011 I shifted over to selling hand-dyed yarn. The “handmade” vs. “supply” question is kind of tricky though, because I see my product somewhere in the middle. Yes, yarn is technically a supply to make something else, but I feel that hand-dyed yarn is in a completely different category from commercial yarn. When you buy a hand-dyed skein of yarn, you are buying a piece of art. When you knit with that yarn, you are collaborating with that dye artist on your own project. I lean more towards “handmade” because of the artistry that goes into it.

The main difference between the business I started out with and the business I own now is the community associated with the fiber world. It is easy for me to connect with all of the people just as obsessed with knitting as I am with social media sites such as Ravelry, Twitter, and Facebook. If you think there aren’t that many people out there who knit/crochet or that people don’t get obsessed with it, check out Ravelry. It is a whole site for knitters and crocheters, and there are currently over 3 million users from all over the world. Not only have I found customers, but I’ve made a lot of friends through the fiber world. There really isn’t that kind of a community for people who just like to buy handmade goods.

Do you have any advice for aspiring Etsy sellers?

Treat is as a business from the very beginning. Figure out how to make your business legal, find out what taxes are, how you’re going to handle things like shipping and customer service. Your business will grow and evolve over time, but you have to start as you mean to continue.

Where can we shop your work and find our more about what you do?

Right now I sell online in my Etsy shop. In person, you can, of course, check out The DIME Store.

You can find my blog and podcast here. 

 

Pumpkin Spice 

Pumpkin Spice 


The DIME Store is a shop and artist collective in downtown Denton that features art, craft, and vintage from 40+ local makers. Rachel Aughtry and Shelley Christner act as the "curators and purveyors" of the shop. When they're not at DIME, you'll find them behind their sewing machines or enjoying a margarita at The Greenhouse.

TRADE FEATURED ARTIST: MOLLY TESTER

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Molly Tester is a graphic designer who works daily to make Denton look better.  Between designing for Denton Record Chronicle, First Friday Denton and local band, Chambers, you’ve probably seen her work without even knowing it.  Trade is thrilled to share our interview with this local talent.  Read on to see why she loves Denton and her tips on getting paid for what you create.


What do you make?

Lots of things, that’s why being a designer is just the best. Designing a campaign for a brand utilizes the same skill set as making a map, style guide and album cover. I stole this explanation from a designer I really admire, that design is the umbrella that covers all my interests and projects.

What drew you to that form of art?

Initially I just loved typography and wanted to work at a type foundry or something, but was exhilarated by how wild and exhausting it was to move between different media, audiences and clients that all fell under 'design'. And still is. You have to constantly be on your feet, moving between different forms of art that all inform each other, and I love that. Understanding spacing between letters isn’t enough. You have to know everything or find the people who know that one thing and convince them to teach you about it. So it gives me the opportunity to collaborate with a real big spectrum of people.

What tool would you love to have access to that you currently don’t?

Space. Carved out space that I can spread papers out, hang projects on to examine far away and use huge paper without having to rearrange my house. And printers. It’s difficult to experiment with printing.

Can you talk us through your creative process?  How do you go about designing a brand for a client?

I try and make sure it involves a lot of different things, especially in the beginning. Like for maps I’ve drawn them first with my left hand or painted with a really fat brush just to get comfortable and not care about getting it right initially. If I immediately make something with the mentality that it’s the end product, I don’t allow for any margin to create. I need to make mistakes and do lots of renditions.  

With clients, my favorite part is the initial conversation. I try to pick their brain about everything surrounding their product/business/organization or whatever it is that I’m designing. And then I become friends with their (insert here) and start becoming part of the story. Like what kind of beer would this website want, or what did this brand look like in middle school. Then I can begin to translate their story into a visual representation, to design. Always in pursuit of continuing that dialogue between the client and their audience.

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Between working for the Denton Record Chronicle and designing for Chambers, your work is visible to a wide audience.  You are also part of the growing class of people in Denton who get paid for their creative work.  Do you have advice for emerging entrepreneurs and creatives aiming to achieve similar goals?  

WORK. It’s really easy to talk about ideas and goals in the dim light of Jupiter House, but ultimately you have to do something. Make something, anything. Also, angsty-artsiness leaves people (as it did me) to believe that the art gods will favor me and come to me as long as I follow my heart. Making art and making a living requires learning how to do business. Being an artists isn’t an excuse.

 

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What’s your history with Denton?  What brought you here after attending the Art Institute in Boston and what makes you stay?

I grew up here, but the extent of my exposure to the creative community was hanging out at Waffle House talking about graffiti. Which was really important, but not the whole picture of Denton creatives. So when I moved to Boston for art school and would come back for holidays, I realized I had been blindsided to the momentum Denton had. And I wanted to be a part of it, give back to the place that shaped how I see things. So much of my work in college was about Denton and drew from the visual culture I had been surrounded by, which romanticized it significantly. But I’ve stayed because of the creative community, because so many people here are open to the opportunity to collaborate and work together to make Denton better and more beautiful.

On your website, you mention giving back to the creative community in Denton.  Why is that important to you?

Many are friends, and those who aren’t I would like to be friends with. They’re the type of people I admire and want to get a beer with. I think of it as one very strange family, that everyone knows of everyone and people are interested in making each other’s work more whole by whatever niche thing they do. So working together becomes this thing that furthers you and helps everyone, making a name for Denton. It’s hard not to fall in love with these quirky people.

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 Are there any local artists that you take inspiration from?  How does that impact your work?

Morgan Everhart. She’s a phenomenal painter, and the thing that I admire the most is the non conventional dialogue her work creates. She was one of the pioneers of For The People art show, creating an environment for visual artists to showcase quality work and invited people in who weren’t ‘artists’ to interact with the work. Recently she did Eyes and Ears, a house show in which she painted and was fed direction from two musicians who were in turn playing based on her in process painting.

What future project are you most excited about?

I’m in the beginning stage of working with a videographer on a collaboration, and I’ve only worked with a handful of videographers so I’m really excited about learning more about their process and how to combine 2D/3D forces.


TRADE is a forthcoming collaborative creative space started by Heather Gregory and Tristan Bynum in the heart of Denton. TRADE works to bring together artists and creatives from different backgrounds and mediums by providing access to the space, tools, resources and creative community they need in order to thrive in Denton. 

HEY WISEGUY: TACOS

Breakfast tacos from La Estrella. 

Breakfast tacos from La Estrella. 

 

Hey Wiseguy,

I just moved here from up north cuz Denton seems awesome. Anyway, I keep hearing about how good the tacos here are from people. Like they're better than cheeseburgers or something crazy like that. Even the Little Guys Movers dudes who helped me move in made a series of catchy videos where they smashed tacos into their faces. Then yesterday, I saw this girl on campus wearing this taco-cat shirt. Am I missing something? When did tacos become a thing? Maybe this is just a dumb question, but are tacos actually culinarily advanced enough to be a cultural phenomena? Normally, I just grab some lunch tacos from Taco Bell or Del Taco, or some breakfast tacos from Taco Cabana if I wake up early enough, but with all the talk of tacos going around, I feel like I might be missing out. I don’t know, though, I can’t see tacos getting much better than that.

Sincerely,

No-Taco Terry

 

 

No question is a dumb question, Terry. Aside from your taste in you tube videos, however, you’re pretty much a gigantic doofus (no offense - my friend-base primarily consists of doofuses and idiots). You have no clue about the wild world of taco-dom that exists all around you. Before we delve into that, however, we need to address something. You said the phrase “lunch tacos.” That’s not a thing. Sure, there are breakfast tacos. We all know them, love them and eat them any chance we get, but aside from the “breakfast” variety of tacos, all other tacos are just “tacos.” Chocotacos don’t count. Still not getting it? When you receive a taco, ask yourself this question, “Does my taco have egg in it?” If it does, you are about to chow down on a breakfast taco. If not, it is just your general, garden-variety taco and there’s not a damned thing wrong with that. If we hear about you using the term “lunch taco” again, though, we’re gonna have a problem, buddy.

Anyway, back to what you’re missing out on. There are multiple levels of tacos that exist in Denton. You have the authentic tacos, the gringo tacos and the cheap fast food tacos you’re already used to. Don’t eat those anymore. Your new diet should be primarily composed of authentic, Mexican tacos with the occasional gringo taco thrown into the mix every now and then. Let’s hit those two up and expound upon that a bit.

Denton has it’s share of authentic, Mexican taco places. McKinney St. is lousy with them. Hit up La Estrella over there for some life-changing breakfast tacos. If you’re buying what I’m saying, I’d also encourage you to stop by Taco Lady and try something you’re afraid of such as lengua (tongue) or chicharrón (some tasty part of a pig - maybe pork groin?). La Sabrocita on Dallas Dr. is also delicious and open very late. Start with those. Eventually, you’ll start to notice these taquerias more and more and your smeller will sniff them out when you drive by one.

As far as gringo tacos go, Denton only has a couple spots from which to sample. These fancy, interestingly-filled taco places are a (mostly) recent development in the taco world. Denton is usually pretty far behind the curve as far as trends and crazes go, though. After all, we got cupcakes after everybody was already tired of eating Sprinkles and our frozen yogurt places showed up long after the name Pinkberry was laughable. Fancy-ass tacos will be no different. They’ll be here eventually. While Dallas already has it’s fair share of taco-centric restaurants in Velvet Taco, Good 2 Go Taco, Torchy’s, etc... we basically just have Fuzzy’s and Rusty’s. God, what we would give for a Good 2 Go Taco to open up here. Digg’s Tacos was going to open up a storefront last year, but they were scared away by the likes of Scott Brown Properties. That’s our loss because that place is wonderful, too. Oh well, though. Time will change things. In the meantime, go eat at Rusty’s and avoid Fuzzy’s like the plague. Some people will swear by it, but canned chicken, salad-filled guacamole and red-tinted vinegar will never make be the basis of a great gringo taco facility (I will admit to a once-a-year craving for their nachos, though). Rusty’s is more bang for your flavor-buck. Their fried chicken taco and their brisket taco are both righteous. Throw one of their specialty margaritas with ‘em and you’ve got a great meal to take out on their patio.

We hope that helps you in your taco journey, Terry. While nothing really compares to the feeling of smearing some Taco Bell hot sauce on a quesadilla at two in the morning, that isn’t something you should be doing to your body. Nothing good happens after midnight, after all. Now, I’m must go and prepare for the onslaught of the taste bud-impaired Fuzzy’s defenders. See ya in the taco wrappers!


Wiseguy fields questions whenever he can. Sometimes he answers questions, sometimes he just rants and rambles. Maybe you'll get lucky. If you have a question you'd like to ask "Hey Wiseguy," please send him an email