Hi, I’m Kelly Wilkinson.
Crafter, journalist,
middle sister, more...

Lemon Squash

 

« big week here at mgg | Main | little hands, little scenes »
Sunday
Mar082009

welcome, heather ross & book giveaway!

 

This week it’s my great pleasure to have Heather Ross join me. If you don’t know Heather, you should. Whether it’s through her fabrics or new book or blog – everything she creates has a lovely, breezy-but-strong and very evocative pull: I want to read more stories, see more fabric, try more of her projects. Not to mention crash her parties to hear stories in person about skidding up frozen driveways in reverse and plunging into the cold ocean at Coney Island.

Heather was kind enough to answer some of my questions below, and she'll be back on Wednesday to answer yours. So leave any questions that bubble up from this interview in the comment section below, and check back later this week. Plus, Heather's giving a book away to a lucky reader -- simply leave a comment or post and you're entered in the drawing!

KW: Welcome Heather, it’s really great to have you here. I know that you grew up in a one-room schoolhouse in Vermont. And I grew up in a renovated barn in Virginia. For a while, when my parents were turning the barn into a home, we didn’t have plumbing downstairs, and my mom would follow me and my sister up a hay ladder to take a bath. And instead of furniture, we had a big radial-arm saw on the second floor. I know that environment was a big influence on me. How do you think growing up in that one-room schoolhouse helped shape you?

HR: The schoolhouse was actually one of several very unconventional living situations that my sister and I like to blame for our inability to clean our own houses. But of course, it was perhaps the most lovely and the most special. It was also incredibly isolated, so we were really depending on our imaginations to stay occupied. And, for better or for worse, we had huge amounts of unstructured and unsupervised time beginning when we were quite small. For us, it worked.

KW: I have such a personal connection to your fabric and your book, and I think that’s because of all the stories you share about growing up in Vermont: river swimming and fireflies and wild chamomile. Now you live in the city – how do you reconcile your rural upbringing and now-urban life? Do you miss those toads and critters that appear in your fabric?

HR: Honestly, its hard. I don't think that a single day has gone by since I left Vermont 18 years ago that I haven't missed it. Leaving the tiny town that I grew up in was so necessary, but so heartbreaking. I think it drives so much of my art and writing because I remain so haunted by it. I do go back, occasionally, and its always complicated. There is always a piece of me that wants to rip up my return ticket or drive my rental car into the river and just stay. The landscape feels like its a part of me, but I could never really find my place in that community. I think I could try my whole life and never quite fit in. My friends were mostly imaginary, and usually four legged and furry.

Heather hanging up doll clothes in VermontThere is a great joke I love to tell: A man leaves Boston and moves to a small town in northern Vermont. Every day he stops by the little village store for food or gas and every day he sees an older man, a real Vermonter, sitting in front of the woodstove. Every day The Old Man finds a way to remind The Man from Boston that he is not a local, not a Vermonter... and he will never be. Finally, after two decades, the man from Boston approaches him and says: Look, Old Man, I know that no matter how hard I try you will never accept me or consider me a Real Vermonter, but I find a great deal of comfort in the fact the my children are, indisputably, Real Vermonters. They were born here, they grew up here, they live here. They love it here. They have never known any other place. The Old Man looks The Man From Boston in the eye for a while and finally says: Well, I don't know about that. If your cat crawled into my oven and had herself some kittens, would you call them muffins?

But the swimming holes and old apple orchards always felt like home. You can love a place as a child, especially if you feel like its yours, without being distracted by the concern that it might not love you back. Its a lot like first love, maybe.

Loving New York is more like second love. Like loving the guy who you fell for in college who you kept telling yourself you should break up with (and run back to that really nice boy, Mr. Small Town), the good looking drummer who isn't any good and spends your money and gets your car towed... but takes you to great parties and introduces you to amazingly talented people and incredible adventures and opportunities and new ideas and takes you to fine restaurants and galleries....until he dumps you for your room mate. That Guy.

You get the idea. I'm going to stick it out for a while. Living here inspires me in so many ways, not the least of which is that it has amplified my aching for the forests and the fireflies and the swimming holes, which consequently won't stop appearing in my sketchbook.

And of course, after a lifetime of wondering what it would be like to live in a city full of art and fashion and good food.... now I know. And someday I'll head back into the woods for good.

Last summer someone decided that my apartment needed new smoke alarms installed. I wasn't informed, and came home late to find a sleeping husband, and crawled into bed without turning on the bedroom light. For about twenty minutes, I lay in bed looking up at a tiny blinking green light, awestruck by the idea that a firefly had somehow found its way into our apartment. I was so thrilled. Finally I couldn't contain myself anymore and woke up TC, and pointed up at what I thought to be a sign that we belonged in the country but what he knew to be our new smoke alarm. "Oh Honey." he said, with a look on his face that was pure love. "I know. Its a lovely firefly".

Click here to read the full interview. Believe me, you won't regret it. The great stories keep coming, and then Heather answers your questions.

References (1)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.
  • Response
    Response: blog hosting
    blog hosting [url=http://wordpress.com]blog hosting[/url] blog hosting [url= http://wordpress.com ] blog hosting [/url]

Reader Comments (54)

Loved the metaphor for New York: "That guy"!

I really like this new fabric line best: Ironic without being jaded, innocent without being naÏve. Hearing your story, I see where this comes from.

Okay, okay--questions: What was your first big splurge after you made some spending money? What's on your iPod? What songs were in your head when you made the new line?

Have a great day,
Nancy

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterFledgling

I gave a great BIG clap in front of my computer for you, Heather, for many reasons, not the least of which was your blaming growing up in an unconventional way a cause for your inability to clean your house as an adult.

I'm Kelly's mom and I use that as my excuse now!

Heather, being as creative as your are in many areas, how did you eventually focus your time and energy on fabrics and sewing projects? I'm so scattered creatively, it's no wonder my brain and my barn are full of "stuff"... not all of it pretty.

Do you make house calls? (or barn calls, in my case?)

Good luck with your new book!
Bobbie

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMom

Great interview, and fabulous photos. So evocative. Thanks Kelly and Heather for teaming up and giving us this! Love the new line. I am unabashedly a Unicorn Girl.

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAndrea ~ Heavy Petal

I'm curious to know if you sketch/create in color, or if you start in black and then find your fitting, inspired color palettes? Or are your designs inspired by color?

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKristin

I love Heather's designs and the fact that she's here on your blog -- it makes perfect sense. I just wish Heather would bring some of the classes she teaches at Purl out west! Heather, have you thought of creating a line of sewing patterns, separate to your book? You've got a customer here...

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMaggie

how wonderful and inspiring you are! i adore and happily envy the lives you and kelly have created for yourselves, as difficult as some days can be. but how fulfilling to do what you want to do and reap those rewards, both privately and publicly.

as someone who yearns to be crafty and wants to carve a little time out of each day to create something by hand.... but with 2 little kids running circles around me, how would you recommend doing that? are there fun little projects that don't take a lot of time that are super fun and rewarding? or better yet, projects i can do with the little ones?

also, as someone who is very new to the blogging world, i'm wondering how blogging has changed your career? and do you think it will create way too many entrepreneurs or is it just the thing to motivate people to their real calling?

and thank you for the bag lunch recipes and story. it provided a ton of laughter, a lot of promise for future lunches and a big ray of sunshine on an otherwise gloomy day. :)

good luck!!

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterRobyn

Thank you so much for this great interview. I have long loved Heather's fabrics and I would LOVE a copy of her book. Count me in!

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterThea

I have loved the sneak peeks into her book that I've gotten here and there online. I love that you both had such unusual living circumstances. That's a bit like Alice's Restaurant where they all live in a church! What fun!

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterCarm

I loved this interview! Such a great description- made me sigh really heavily and want to book a trip to Vermont!

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterHolly

I've heard that the new book is great, can't wait to get me hands on a copy.

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered Commenternicole

Clap. clap. clap... for a book and interview well done! Can't wait to turn page by page.

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJennifer June

A lovely interview. I can't wait to "follow" you on your tour. I would love to win a copy. If I don't win one, I will certainly be buying one!

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJamie H

Lovely. I feel like a donkey that wants to be a unicorn. :)

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterRhiannon

I'm so looking forward to paging through a copy of your book, and having some great summer projects to sew, too.

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered Commentermjb

what a wonderful interview.

i was also going to ask how you manage to carve out the time. and what are some of the most unexpected places you have found inspiration?

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterrachael s

Lovely interview!

I grew up in a rural community, moved to the city, but I'm back again. Teaching my kids to river swim, enjoying our mini-orchard and trying to stay away from the locals!

Would love a chance to win the book as well.

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterashley

what a lovely interview! i am so excited about this book.

liz

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterliz

Heather - I am a huge fan! I love what you said about loving a place even if it doesn't love you back - we moved to a small town in northern Wisconsin (from Tucson!) when I was in high school. I love the beauty and nature, but the town tends to see you as an outsider if you're not like everyone else.

Here's my question (okay, questions): did you go to college or design school? Did you study art/design? Have you always known that you would be an artist?

Thank you so much for taking the time to do a "blog tour" for those of us who, unfortunately, aren't close enough to your book tour locations!

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMelanie O

great post, the questions all brought such interesting answers.

the more i find out about heather, the more i fall for her in all ways....her fabric and her person. i love the compulsive oversharing. i think this comment might be bordering on that.

March 9, 2009 | Unregistered Commentermamie

I just happened upon both this blog and this great interview. I'm charmed already, and can't wait to read more...

Also, I am unabashedly throwing my hat in the ring for a copy of the awesome book. Kudos for even offering it!

March 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterHeather M

lovely interview. thank you.
And the book looks great too!

March 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKatharine

I just saw that book at Sam's yesterday, and wanted it really bad!!

March 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterLaurie

I love love love the idea that all of the time my daughter spends running around while I work on projects is actually helping to develop creativity. How liberating. Though...it's been a while since I saw her... :)

March 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterBetsy

What a beautiful interview. Please enter me in the drawing as I would be inspired by the pages in her book. Thank you.

March 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSarah

wonderful post! I adore heather ross! I read her blog and it's always laugh-out-loud funny, which is such a treat.
Thanks for the opportunity for this giveaway.
Cheers,
sk

March 10, 2009 | Unregistered Commentersarahkeith

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>