Classes
  • VIEW CLASS CALENDAR

  • View our full class calendar so you can plan your life around crafting.

  • UPCOMING CLASSES

  • Check out what classes we have coming up on our schedule.

  • EXPLORE CLASSES

  • Book a private class in our studio to celebrate anything you want to celebrate!

  • shower-art
  • ALL READY TO SHIP SHOWER ART

  • SHOP ALL READY TO SHIP SHOWER ART

  • SHOP ALL SHOWER ART

  • They're ready to meet you- in your shower!

  • CUSTOM SHOWER ART

  • Need an inside joke encased in rubber? We're probably your only option. Get a custom Shower Art and make choices that could literally affect the rest of your life.

  • WTF IS SHOWER ART?!

  • clothing
  • CLOTHING

  • SHOP ALL ADULT CLOTHING

  • JEWELRY

  • SHOP JEWELRY

  • ACCESSORIES

  • SHOP ALL ACCESSORIES

  • BABY + KIDS

  • SHOP BABY + KIDS

  • SALE

  • SHOP ALL SALE

  • home-goods
  • KITCHEN + DINING

  • SHOP ALL KITCHEN + DINING

  • STATIONERY

  • SHOP ALL STATIONERY

  • GREETING CARDS

  • SHOP ALL GREETING CARDS

  • HOLIDAY

  • SHOP ALL HOLIDAY

  • UGLY BABY GIFT CARDS

  • GET AN UGLY BABY GIFT CARD

  • diy-crafts
  • RENT A BUTTON MAKER

  • DIY BUTTONS WITH FUN CHURN CLUB

  • Original Art - Yellow Bubbles

    1 item left

    A framed, hand-stitched embroidery piece by artist Leslie Barber of Bantu Knot Embroidery.

    Acrylic Paint & Embroidery Floss on Canvas

    6x6x1.5"

    About the Artist

    Leslie Barber (she/her) is an emerging Jamaican American fiber artist based in Seattle and holds a degree in Fashion & Textile Management from North Carolina State University.

    After relocating to Washington in 2017, she felt an overwhelming sense of loneliness as she navigated primarily white spaces as a black woman. Desiring a creative outlet, she turned to the meditative act of embroidery to help ease her anxiety and depression and soon started to interpret her fondness for fashion and culture into embroidered art pieces.

    Her practice primarily involves embroidery & rug tufting with a focus on prioritizing black culture, aspects of black womanhood and the joy black people continue to have despite a system built and maintained to diminish their successes.