CREATIVITY + INNOVATION Page 31 of 38

Why you don’t have to do what you love to make a living, but you need to do what you love to truly live: Kat Sloma shares her story

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Today’s shared stories come from American photograher Kat Sloma.

Why you don’t have to do what you love to make a living, but you need to do what you love to truly live: Kat Sloma shares her story IMG 0315

You don’t have to do what love to make a living, but you need to do what you love to truly live.

A few years ago, I had a conversation with a good friend. She and I worked together at the large corporation where I’ve earned a living as an engineer for the last 19 years. She asked, “Do you want to stay working here forever?” I laughed and said, “I don’t know, I don’t have anything I’m passionate about. I don’t know what I’d rather do. I guess I’m here until they don’t want me anymore.”

Why you don’t have to do what you love to make a living, but you need to do what you love to truly live: Kat Sloma shares her story IMG 5915

Looking back, that conversation is a significant indicator of how I was living (or not living) my life. I was floating along, letting other people plot my course. I was expecting someone else to fulfil me. Was I alive or just going through the motions of life? I had given up my power. The power to choose, to decide, to own my life. I wasn’t even seeking to find what I would really love to do.

Why you don’t have to do what you love to make a living, but you need to do what you love to truly live: Kat Sloma shares her story IMG 1282

Since then, much has transpired. Layoffs at work made me realize I couldn’t float along any longer. Watching the same friend leave the company for something she truly loved forced me to acknowledge there are other ways to approach life. Such as, approaching life with intention. I was ripe for a change, so when the opportunity to live and work in Italy for two years came along, I took it. And it cracked me wide open.

Why you don’t have to do what you love to make a living, but you need to do what you love to truly live: Kat Sloma shares her story IMG 8536

I finally did the work I needed to do, digging through the hidden corners of my soul, to find what it is I love. I discovered I love to create. I love to capture the beauty of the world around me, through my camera lens, words, paint and pencils. I also discovered, more than anything else, I love to teach and encourage others to create too.

Today, I’m still at the same corporate job. It is still how I make my “living” and support my family. But I’ve found what I love to do as well. I’ve taken back my power and the ownership of my life’s happiness. Along this journey, I’ve found it is doing what I love that makes me truly alive.

Why you don’t have to do what you love to make a living, but you need to do what you love to truly live: Kat Sloma shares her story IMG 1727 sepia

[All images courtesy of Kat Sloma]

Kat is an artist and photographer with a passion for inspiring others to find their unique vision of the world. For the last two years, she has been living in Italy and traveling Europe with an eye to finding the beauty of the everyday, whilst also working in the corporate world. You can see more of her photographs, read about her creative journey and learn about her e-courses at The Kat Eye Studio.

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Would you like to share your story on Do What You Love and reach a new audience of creative souls?

Please contact me for details.

Doing what I love has led me to Oprah: Kristin Dudish shares her story

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Today’s shared story comes from New York-based artist , who shares her experience of how doing what she loves led her to Oprah!

Kristin Dudish

For me, doing what I love means living a creative life both in and out of my art studio.  It means staying open to opportunities, both big and small.  It means developing awareness, taking chances, using talents, sharing gifts, and endless possibilities… Doing what I love means living the life I’ve always dreamed of!

As a shy child, art was my way of expressing myself.  Thanks to the encouragement and support of family, friends, and some wonderful teachers, my creative journey began at an early age.  When I was 10 years old I painted my first “mural”.  My fifth grade teacher hung paper floor to ceiling the length of our classroom wall and told me to “Go for it!”.  Looking back, that was a pivotal moment in my artistic career.   It was the moment it started to become clear that my art might be valued by people other than my family and myself.  Throughout school I continued to use my art as a form of communication.  Instead of passing notes, I drew pictures for my classmates, and by the time I reached high school I knew that I wanted to turn my passion into a career.

Doing what I love has led me to Oprah: Kristin Dudish shares her story Purr fect Angel 500

When I was in art school, I worked as a waitress.  In addition to serving the hungry masses, I also created paintings and signs for the restaurants I worked in.  I was thrilled… It was the beginning of being able to make a living doing what I love!

After receiving my BFA, I took art education certification classes, student taught, and even spent some time working in the framing department at a craft store.  Even though I really enjoyed teaching and working in a craft store kept my toe dipped in the creative water, eventually it became clear that I was yearning for more… I realised it was time to take control of my artistic future, so I took an enormous leap of faith with a friend and fellow artist (Zoe Kothe)!

Doing what I love has led me to Oprah: Kristin Dudish shares her story Oprah mural 500

[All images courtesy of Kristin Dudish]

From 2000 to 2007, I was the proud co-owner of “Brush of Class”, a mural and decorative painting company.  It was during that time that my confidence grew exponentially.  I was able to do what I love full-time and I finally accepted that being an artist and supporting yourself don’t have to be mutually exclusive.  It was also during that time that I realised that while I was doing what I love, I could also be helping others. It was that realisation that led to one of the most unbelievable experiences of my life… my Oprah adventure!

The path to doing what I love has been a winding one, but the one constant has always been a desire to infuse every aspect of my life with creativity.  Whether it’s doodling in my sketchbook, painting on canvas, or even decorating a cake, I believe opportunities for doing what I love are everywhere!

Kristin is an artist living a creative life and “doing what she loves” with her family in Buffalo, New York.  She is also the co-host of Paint Party Friday – an art co-op where painters gather weekly to share their latest painting endeavors.

Find out more about Kristin by visiting her website or blog.

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Would you like to share your story on Do What You Love and reach a new audience of creative souls?

Please contact me for more details.

A promise, a gift, a passion and a deep heartfelt desire: Terri Conrad shares her story

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Today’s shared story comes from artist Terri Conrad in the US.

Terri Conrad Image credit Terri Conrad DesignsImage credit: Terri Conrad

I am a working artist. This is how I earn my living and I love what I do.

I believe our life is a testimony of who we are and that each of us comes to life with a promise, a gift, a passion and a deep heartfelt desire. As we become aware of what each of these elements represent for us, life then becomes a quest of sorts, bringing our self into alignment with the experiences that will ultimately lead to self-realisation – being and doing what we love.
Crafting Vintage Style

The promise

Our promise is what we have come to life to master. We have made a promise to our self to overcome, resolve or heal some aspect of our consciousness. As we face our life’s experiences, we are given the opportunity to fulfill this promise. How we respond to our experiences determines whether we fulfill or break the promise we have made to our self.  One promise for me is to continue to overcome, resolve and heal the pain and discomfort I feel surrounding my sense of value and worthiness.  A self-taught artist, I wonder, am I worthy enough to belong to a community of professional artists? After all, it was just this May, that I participated in my first formal art instruction, and attended a week long art retreat. When I evaluate the question and answer it on an intellectual level, the answer is a resounding yes, for me, and for any artist who is self-taught.  I allowed the prompting of my spirit and its unique gifts to guide me to where I am today, licensing my art to manufacturers who sell my products domestically and worldwide.

A promise, a gift, a passion and a deep heartfelt desire: Terri Conrad shares her story TerriConrad DoWhatYouLove2

The gift

Our  gift is what we have come to give to life. It is the cornerstone of self-determination and self-actualization. Our gift constitutes our talents and abilities – the special things you do as only you can do them. Our gift is enhanced or diminished by how we do what we do and how we share with other those things that we do naturally or well. It’s been said that necessity is the mother of invention, and that is where the discovery of my gift began. After having both my girls, I knew I needed to return to work at some point in the then near future and did not want to return to the only thing I had done (and didn’t love) , working as a legal assistant. I had been playing with designing some pieces for my own home, hand painting furniture and signs when I began to turn my eye toward art licensing, thinking (wild high-in-the-sky how-dare-I kind of thinking), “I wonder if I could do this; work from home, earn a living and still be the primary caregiver to my daughters?” I began to slowly research art licensing, read books on the topic and even attended the art licensing show, Surtex, in NYC so I could learn as much as possible to determine if this was a path I could take.

Just as I was beginning to open my gift, and deeply receive what it had to offer, my plans were put on hold while I navigated some very painful life experiences, including the flooding of a newly remodeled home, a divorce from my husband, and then six months later, a house fire that was devastating to me on many levels. My resilience and determination were certainly called up during this time and it would have been very easy to succumb and pursue a more predictable & reliable path. Instead I chose to continue to listen to the prompting of my spirit. I have discovered through many painful life experiences that there are gifts hidden deep within the folds of  life’s challenges, lessons to learn, and much like the Sycamore tree that sheds its bark, fast & new growth to be experienced. I was determined to open the unique gift I believed was mine to give to life. My husband and I remarried each other, and began to rebuild our family life. In 2007 I launched my first licensed product and even in the midst of our tenuous economy, am oh so grateful for the sufficiency my licensing program provides my family, and that it continues to grow and prosper.

A promise, a gift, a passion and a deep heartfelt desire: Terri Conrad shares her story TerriConrad DoWhatYouLove3

The passion

Our passion represents those things that you pursue for the sheer joy of it – those things that you do that make you feel alive and meaningful; valuable and worthy. We are often frightened away from or talked out of our passion. We are made to feel it is inappropriate or useless. Imagine what life would be if we gave ourselves permission to pursue our passion, to do what we love.  I adore watching children play because they do so with abandon, without care or worry. They participate fully in the moment in the activity – to me this is passion, wholeheartedly pursuing and participating in that which brings you joy. I am passionate about creating art that will warm your heart and home. I want to connect with the heart of who you are, and for the heart of who you are to connect with my art. I am filled with joy when I receive a message telling me how something I’ve created has special meaning for someone. Our promise, our gift, our passion and heartfelt desire are a circle of self-love worthy of honor and recognition. It is irrelevant whether we earn our living with our passion. What is relevant is that we seek it, we open the gift, we explore it, we honor, recognize and share it. A gift is meant to be given, and the beauty is that when we give our gift, we receive so much in return.

A promise, a gift, a passion and a deep heartfelt desire: Terri Conrad shares her story TerriConrad DoWhatYouLove4

The heartfelt desire

Your heartfelt desire is the thing you most want to experience in life. Some want love, others want acceptance. Most of us want both. The difficulty we face is not losing our identity or integrity in the pursuit of the heartfelt desire. Like many of us, I do not give enough time & energy to my heartfelt desires. My days are filled with meeting deadlines, caring for my family and my home, and managing the business side of my creative work. As I reflect here though, I return to my promise above – I want to feel acceptance, I want to feel belonging. These are innate human desires that hold the potential for fulfillment when we allow our authentic, imperfect (self-taught artist) selves be seen in the wide open, and to reach out and engage with one another.

On a more material level, my BIG dream & heartfelt desire is for my creative business to be sufficient in wholly supporting and providing for my family, to travel to England & Paris with my husband for a work/pleasure excursion, and to have a home with a studio that overlooks the ocean– a girl’s gotta dream!

A promise, a gift, a passion and a deep heartfelt desire: Terri Conrad shares her story TerriConrad LoveWhatYouDo1

[All images courtesy of Terri Conrad]

It is an absolute joy to realise (albeit mid-life!) that my journey has actually manifested into my destiny. How blessed I feel to finally have this knowledge, to understand it and to be wise in sharing it. My deep heartfelt desire is to encourage, nurture & inspire  the unique beauty, beloved spirit, and unlimited possibilities in each of us, particularly the little girl in every woman. I hope through my art you are personally touched, and inspired to embrace the girl within, and to nurture fertile soil for her “bloomin beautiful heart.” Go for it girl! Weave a ladder of dreams, climb to the top. Be courageous! Have faith, and aspire!

Thank you, Beth, for the opportunity to share my love for what I do with your readers. Do What You Love is a beautiful community of creative spirits supporting and encouraging our collective journey to making our world a little bit of a better, and most certainly, prettier place to live.

Find out more about Terri by visiting her website or blog, or connect on Facebook]

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Missed the retreat? Why not join the Do What You Love e-course?

This online adventure starts on June 6 and will take you step-by-step along the path towards doing what you love.

Read what a powerful impact it had on previous participants here.

Find out more and register here.

This is your life we are talking about…

Do What You Love retreat: No (wo)man is an island

DWY team
The team (including our fab teachers!) from L-R: Ellie, Hannah, Lex, Rachel, Flora, Suzanne, Louise, Priscilla, Chris, Juliette, me, Paul  Image: courtesy of NavyBlur

It is not possible to deliver something like the Do What You Love retreat without an army of angels – and I was blessed with the best.

Shiny happy people, full of energy, initiative and creative love, they generously gave their time to help outside of class hours.  They gave the other participants a warm welcome, got up early, went to bed late, helped make the place look beautiful and did much behind the scenes – always with a smile (and frequently with a belly laugh and a mouthful of chocolate) – to help make everyone’s experience as special as it could be.

I am truly indebted to the retreat team who helped make it all happen, and proud to call them my friends.

Here is a sneak peek behind the scenes with the team hard at work…

Do What You Love retreat: No (wo)man is an island DWYL 758[Image: NavyBlur]

Preparing the site signage…                                                                                      

Chris Nicholls[Images above and below: NavyBlur]

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Registering arrivals and showing them to their lovely lodges…              

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Explaining where to find everything…

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Breakfast meetings…                                                                                                    

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Serving wine and sparklers…

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Preparing for early morning yoga with the lovely Devi Kirin Kaur          

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Adding little touches around the place…

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Opening the tipi up for dinner…                                                                               

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… and checking the cakes taste delicious!

I must also thank the wonderful Christine Boyd and Xander Neal of NavyBlur for all the fab photos, and Jack Benson and Rafael Gibbons of Nut Films for the film (which is in the works – so exciting!).  Can’t wait to share Do What You Love interviews with them in the coming weeks…

Thank you all!

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For more of my posts about the retreat see: Gathering / Full of Love / Reflecting / Bloom True with Flora Bowley / Paper heaven with Rachel Hazell / Delicate wax and wire sculptures with Priscilla Jones

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Missed the retreat?  Why not join the Do What You Love e-course

This online adventure starts on June 6 and will take you step-by-step along the path towards doing what you love. 

Find out what participants who took the course last time had to say HERE.

Find out more and register here.  

This is your life we are talking about…

Do What You Love retreat: Delicate wax and wire sculptures with Priscilla Jones

Bunting DWYL retreat[Image: NavyBlur]

In a sunny lodge on a hillside strung with vintage bunting, with floor-to-ceiling windows letting the light pour in, and a wooden deck perfect for tea breaks, a group of lovely ladies worked some kind of creative poetry. The delicate dreamy work that came out of Priscilla Jones’s class wouldn’t be out of place in Alice in Wonderland. It took a variety of fascinating techniques – painting with feathers on tissue paper, sculpting with florist’s wire, adding hot wax and a little bit of love…  and beauty emerged.  Here’s a sneak peek at a unique and inspiring class from a very gifted teacher…

Priscilla wax workshop[Image: NavyBlur]

Wax workshop DWY retreat Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

DWYL retreat - wax workshop Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Priscilla workshop Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Rachael Taylor sketching - DWYL retreat Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

workshop - Priscilla Jones - Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Wire work in Priscilla's workshop DWYL retreat Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Wax work DWYL retreat Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Chris Nicholls DWYL retreat Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

DWYL retreat working with wax Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Making at DWYL retreat Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Hannah Nunn making a lamp with wax and wire Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Finished wire and wax work DWYL retreat Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

Chris Nicholls teacup Credit NavyBlur[Image: Hannah Nunn]

Hannah Nunn lamp Image credit Hannah Nunn[Image: Hannah Nunn]

Wx and wire decoration Image credit: Hannah Nunn[Image: Hannah Nunn]

For more blog posts from participants in Priscilla’s class see: Hannah Nunn / Rachael Taylor

For more of my posts about the retreat see: Gathering /Full of Love / Reflecting / Bloom True with Flora Bowley / Paper heaven with Rachel Hazell / No (wo)man is an island

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Missed the retreat?  Why not join the Do What You Love e-course

This online adventure starts on June 6 and will take you step-by-step along the path towards doing what you love. 

Find out what participants who took the course last time had to say HERE.

Find out more and register here.  

This is your life we are talking about…

Life as a costume designer: Jane Grimshaw shares her story

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Today’s shared story comes from costume-maker Jane Grimshaw who has made costumes for films which have gone on to win Oscars for Costume Design.

Jane Grimshaw

When I was first asked to write this piece about myself I thought, “How hard can that possibly be?”  Well it turns out quite flippin’ hard actually. So I decided to tell you a story.  Are you sitting comfortably? Then I’ll begin.

Some time in the early 1980s a young girl was rummaging through the sewing cupboard. In a dark corner she found the cut off bottoms of a pair of enormous embroidered purple flairs her hippie mother had owned with pride some time in the not so distant past.  Now this was the 1980s, every thing to do with the previous decade’s fashion was defiantly passé.  Anyone with an ounce of self-respect would have stuffed these abominations back in to the dark corner from whence they came.  But not this little girl, she took them, cut them up and made them in to a very interesting skirt.

Fast forward to the summer this now-not-so-little girl turned 18. This time she kept herself in beer and crisps for the long break after A-levels and before college by making patchwork shorts for everyone she knew (and a few she didn’t). She even made some with a padded bum for a bicycling boyfriend.  And what did this little girl want to do for a living?  Social work.  Oh come on!  Thankfully the aforementioned boyfriend with the padded bum had other ideas.  His mother ran the costume department at our local drama school and he talked her in to giving me a job.

A year later I am at London College of Fashion, having a whale of a time, meeting lifelong friends and apparently training to be a costume maker.

Life as a costume designer: Jane Grimshaw shares her story Scan 6 include noteThis is a costume made in Nora’s workroom last year for the production of Adriana Lecouvreur at The Royal Opera House in Covent Garden

20 years later here I am, still making costumes.  Big ones, small ones, thin ones, very very fat ones.  Some of its glamorous, some of it isn’t.  Glamour comes in the form of films (Elizabeth, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The End of the Affair, soon-to-be-realised John Carter on Mars, you get the drift).  I have in fact made costumes for not one, not two but three films that have gone on to win the costume design Oscar: Shakespeare in Love, Gladiator and Elizabeth the Golden Age.  The non-glamourous bit comes in the form of constantly having to remake the same set of costumes for West End shows. (Phantom of the Opera, We Will Rock You, Lion King, Chicago  – again you get the picture).

I am currently working on Tim Burton’s new film ‘Dark Shadows’, Lion King and Phantom of the Opera.  Somehow even after all of this time I do still enjoy it.  Well most of the time. Constant deadlines can get to even the best of us from time-to-time.  But then that is why I write my blog. It helps to have something else to focus on that isn’t costume related! It helps to keep things in perspective, and join the disparate parts of my life, -costume making, family and constant side projects.

I do feel very lucky to think that what was once my hobby has become my way of making a living.

[All images courtesy of Jane Grimshaw.]

Find out more about Jane by visiting her blog Flaming Nora.

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Missed the retreat? Why not join the Do What You Love e-course

This online adventure starts on June 6 and will take you step-by-step along the path towards doing what you love. 

Find out more and register here.  

This is your life we are talking about…

Do What You Love retreat: Paper heaven with Rachel Hazell

LOVE Credit NavyBlur[Image: NavyBlur]

For someone who loves both paper and journeys as much as I do, Rachel Hazell’s class ‘Maps, Charts & Other Discoveries: An Extraordinary Expandable Sketchbook Journal’ sounded like heaven to me.  And wandering around her class during the Do What You Love retreat, that’s exactly what it appeared to be.

Bookbinding with Rachel Hazell 18 [Image: NavyBlur]

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There was folding, cutting, tearing, sticking, sewing, writing and all sorts of other things going on.

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Bookbinding with Rachel Hazell 16 [Image: NavyBlur]

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Bookbinding with Rachel Hazell 13 - Rachel Kempton [Image: NavyBlur]

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And I have never seen so many supplies – paper, ribbon, fabric scraps, pens, lace, bits of old maps, stamps, stickers –  ohhh so lovely!

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At times loud laughter would shake the walls, at others there would be complete silence as everyone got in the zone making their beautiful tiny books.

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At other times there would be singing, oftentimes there would be tea drinking, and I believe much chocolate was also consumed.

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And if that is what it takes to create book magic, then let that be the recipe!

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Rachel herself is such a treasure…

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And the  story-filled books that emerged from her class took my breath away

Bookbinding with Rachel Hazell 3 [Image: Hannah Nunn]

[Image: Hannah Nunn]

Bookbinding with Rachel Hazell 2 [Image: Hannah Nunn]

[Image: Hannah Nunn]

Bookbinding with Rachel Hazell 1 [Image: NavyBlur]

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For more blog posts from participants in Rachel’s class see: Catherine Redfern and Louise Gale

For more of my posts about the retreat see: Gathering /Full of Love / Reflecting / Bloom True with Flora Bowley / Delicate wax and wire sculptures with Priscilla Jones /  No (wo)man is an island

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Missed the retreat?  Why not join the Do What You Love e-course?

This online adventure starts on June 6 and will take you step-by-step along the path towards doing what you love. 

Find out what participants who took the course last time had to say HERE.

Find out more and register here.  

This is your life we are talking about…

Do What You Love retreat: ‘Bloom True’ with Flora Bowley

Flora Bowley (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

American painter Flora Bowley has woven her magic once again – and this time it was here in England, for the first time ever.

Painting class Flora B (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Having taken a fantastic class with her last year I just knew that Flora would be perfect for the kind of retreat I wanted to create – where the painting class would be about so much more than painting, and where people would feel uplifted, excited, challenged, supported and oh so happy!

Flora Bowley (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Just look at the gorgeousness that emerged from her class at the Do What You Love retreat last week…

Painting Flora Bowley class (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Painting class with Flora B (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Painting (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Painting workshop Flora Bowley DWYL (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Being creative - painting (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Painting getting messy(Image: NavyBlur)

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Painting (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Finished work (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Work in progress - painting (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Focussed on painting (Image: NavyBlur)

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Rachel Kempton writing DWYL retreat (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

In nature - painting (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Painting - playful and messy (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Paintings - INSPIRED BY NATURE (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Flora's painting (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Laughter in painting workshop (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

Painted hands (Image: NavyBlur)(Image: NavyBlur)

You can read about the class in posts from class participants here: Lisa WrightMoyra Scott / Rhiannon ConnellyTara Leaver / Beth Nadler /Helen Agarwal /  Kat Sloma / Juliette Crane

And more posts from me about the Do What You Love retreat here: GatheringFull of Love / Reflecting / Paper heaven with Rachel Hazell / Delicate wax and wire sculptures with Priscilla Jones / No (wo)man is an island

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Missed the retreat?  Why not join the Do What You Love e-course?

This online adventure starts on June 6 and will take you step-by-step along the path towards doing what you love. 

Find out what participants who took the course last time had to say HERE.

Find out more and register here.  

This is your life we are talking about…

Do What You Love retreat: Reflecting

Tipi

(Image: NavyBlur)

Wow.  The inaugural Do What You Love retreat was everything I hoped it would be and more.

People connected, created, laughed, cried, shared, opened up, grew, made friends – and more than a handful said it changed their life. 

It was a beautiful thing to be part of, and I thank everyone involved from the bottom of my heart.

DWYL retreat - freedom (Image: NavyBlur)

(Image: NavyBlur)

Over the next few days I want to share a few posts on each class, on the creative enterprise sessions, on my amazing team, on the magical place we called home for a few days, and on the other things that made it special.

For now I just want to share a few of my favourite photos from the wonderful Christine and Xander of NavyBlur, our official photographers.

For me these capture the essence of the retreat, and as I reflect on the journey of the past few months, and the days of the retreat itself, it is these images which are so close to my original vision.

String hearts

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flowers (Image: NavyBlur)

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Bunting (Image: NavyBlur)

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Wax & wire workshop (Image: NavyBlur)

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Painting at DWYL retreat (Image: NavyBlur)

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Painting (Image: NavyBlur)

(Image: NavyBlur)

handmade book (Image: NavyBlur)

(Image: NavyBlur)

Bookbinding (Image: NavyBlur)

(Image: NavyBlur)

Brownies (Image: NavyBlur)

(Image: NavyBlur)

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For more posts about the retreat see: Gathering / Full of Love /  Bloom True with Flora Bowley /Paper heaven with Rachel Hazell / Delicate wax and wire sculptures with Priscilla Jones /  No (wo)man is an island

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Missed the retreat? Why not join the Do What You Love e-course?

This online adventure starts on June 6 and will take you step-by-step along the path towards doing what you love.

Find out what participants who took the course last time had to say HERE.

Find out more and register here.  

This is your life we are talking about…

Do What You love retreat: Full of love

Sparkler
(Image by NavyBlur)

There is nothing quite like a dream coming true, and that’s what happened at the Do What You Love retreat, held in a beautiful part of the English countryside last week.

There are so many things to tell you and show you, so many people to thank and memories to share.

But right now I just want to breathe and reflect, and sleep!

All I will say is that for five days this special part of the world was FULL of creative love!

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Updated: for more posts on the retreat see: Gathering Reflecting / Bloom True with Flora Bowley /Paper heaven with Rachel Hazell / Delicate wax and wire sculptures with Priscilla Jones /  No (wo)man is an island