Monthly Archives: December 2015

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Swen Swenson

SwenSwensonSwen Swenson is a freelance illustrator and graphic designer based in Leipzig, Germany. The artist draws inspiration from the shapes and forms of nature. His approach is minimalistic and geometric creating pieces with a clear aesthetics and natural beauty. His prints are available at Society 6.

Images: Courtesy of Swen Swenson.

Meg Callahan

Meg-CallahanThese clean geometric quilts are the works of textile artist, Meg Callahan, a graduate of Rhode Island School of Design. She uses a combination of traditional quilting processes and modern production techniques to create these contemporary throws and wall pieces. On an interview with “We Are Visual Animals” she says this of ‘traditional construction methods’ that inspire her work:

“I like to honor and explore the rules of craftsmanship. Each craft has a set of rules that have been formulated over time to reach a point of perfection: a blending of honoring a material and its properties, the function of the object, and our human curiosities and creativity. When you are first dabbling in a craft, the work is at its most creative and innovative, because you haven’t learned the rules and therefore you have no obligation to follow them. Then you learn the rules and your work becomes weighed down by the rules. I am inspired by the point in which a maker moves past being constrained by rules and begins to work with the rules in their favor.”

Images: Courtesy of Meg Callahan.

Jules Hogan

JulesHoganJules Hogan is a freelance knitwear designer based in the UK. She has created this evolving line of fashion and home accessories on a re-conditioned knitting machine in her garden studio. On an interview with Folksy market place she says:

“My specialisation is knitted textiles, but I also have experience in print, embroidery, and colour prediction. In 2008 I started developing my own collection. This allows me to carry an idea through to the end product – quite often working for a client, you come up with the initial idea, knit the fabric and then wave it farewell as the company produces the final piece.”

Images: Courtesy of Jules Hogan.

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