Today's featured guest is Portland-based artist and community-builder Emily Katz -- learn all about her new book, Modern Macramé. Author photo (c) Nicolle Clemetson
Peak of Summer 2017 -- getting ready to see what this year's Slow Flowers Cutting Garden produces!
Before I share macramé maven Emily Katz's story with you, I want to briefly share what's happening in the Slow Flowers Cutting Garden!
If you follow me on Instagram, you might have noticed some recent stories about the prep work taking place for my soon-to-arrive greenhouse.
I'm really jazzed because adding the structure will complete the third area of our one-year old garden! I'm focusing on this season's cutting garden planting plans, and that means annuals and dahlias.
To see what I'm doing, follow the link to my recent story, "Spring in the Cutting Garden," where I begin to sketch out my plans.
I'm especially excited about the cutting garden planting plan that Longfield Gardens designed for my raised beds -- Check it out -- and be sure to follow links to order your flower seeds and dahlia tubers. You'll find what annuals, dahlias and companions I'm planning to grow, too.
Emily Katz, at Detroit Flower Week (c) Heather Saunders
Now, let's turn to Emily Katz of Modern Macramé. I first met Emily at Lisa Waud's Detroit Flower Week in 2016, where she invited Emily to present and also design a beautiful macrame curtain during the conference.
Emily and I struck up a friendship in our hotel lobby while waiting for our ride one morning and realized we were both from the Pacific Northwest. I have been so impressed and fascinated by how she has revived the 1970s art of macramé -- for many reasons, not the least of which it brings back memories of a job as a teenager making macramé straps and hangers for a hippy pottery studio in 1975. Tragically, for me, that was a few years before our friend Emily Katz was born! Oh well, age is a state of mind and in my mind, I'm not much older than that 15-year-old girl who once knew all the macramé knots.
More of Heather Saunders' beautiful images of Emily's macramé-floral curtain from Detroit Flower Week (c) Heather Saunders.
Perhaps that's partly why I was drawn to Emily, but her story is enough to draw in anyone. As an artist, Emily has worked on numerous fashion and interiors projects, including owning two women's fashion lines, Bonnie Heart Clyde and her eponymous collection of sustainable clothing for women. She has studied fiber and printmaking in Florence, Italy; attended the Maryland Institute College of Art, with a focus on printmaking, and is currently traveling the world teaching macrame workshops, learning about energy healing, art directing and styling photo shoots, hosting dinners and events, collaborating on interior design projects and products, and dreaming up the next adventure.
Amazing banners and hangings (and how to make them) are featured projects in Modern Macramé. Left and right -- two installations of Emily's Celebration Garland. (c) Nicole Franzen
You'll want to check out her new book -- Modern Macramé : 33 Stylish Projects for Your Handmade Home, which will be released on May 15th It's the ultimate guide to creating and styling modern macramé projects in the home.
The book's instructions are easy to follow and replicate -- from basic to complex knotting techniques and more.
I know I said Macramé—the fine art of knotting— dates back in my memory to the 1970s, but in fact, it is an age-old craft that's undergoing a contemporary renaissance. At the heart of this resurgence is Emily, a lifestyle icon and artist who teaches sold-out macramé workshops around the world and creates swoon-worthy aspirational interiors with her custom hand-knotted pieces.