Monday 8 October 2012

Dear Natalie..



Dear Natalie

Growing up, my life was full of magic 
and, as an adult, 
I have tried and tried to reconnect with nature and the 
adventures had as a child.
 Natalie Toms is an illustrator. 
She grew up, like me, in the middle of the countryside 
and spent her summers at her grandparents house 
making drawings and collecting leaves, feather, seeds 
and other natural pieces along her travels.
As an artist she works closely with nature and has built a portfolio of work based upon whimsical creatures 
and taking saying and turning them literal. Her work is inspiring, thoughtful and beautiful.
Now living in Bristol, Natalie has a new land to explore; taking in the culture as well as the nature reserves this 
new city has to offer.

Kindly agreeing to give me a few moments of her time, Natalie has answered my questions and given me an 
insight into her artistic lifestyle.


From reading your bio on Carbonmade, I can see that your childhood sounds as magical as my own! Do you still believe in magic and if you do, where do you find it most often?
I find magic, although it best describes a supernatural occurrence, exists most within humanity; our imaginings and how we share our thoughts and experiences with one another and influence each others lives positively is the most magical thing we can be a part of. Magic from my childhood came in at the stories of fantastical worlds and creatures who inhabit them. A child's imagination has fewer voices of reason and logic to restrain it from running away with itself. I read a quote only a few days ago, which went “The creative adult is the child who has survived.”


I remember you once told me that you enjoy “taking sayings, phrases, idioms and making them literal” but when drawing your more imaginative pieces, i.e. 'lion hearted girl', where do you find the inspiration?

When I'm sitting at home looking for inspiration, I tend to be listening to music or watching films. Lyrics are often a strong source of inspiration for me; the more you surround yourself with inspiring things, the farther your mind wanders. Specifically 'Lion-hearted Girl' came from a Florence + the Machine song called 'Rabbit Heart'. It got me thinking about a literal lion-hearted girl and how that could manifest physically as well as conceptually. There is one thing I always do before illustrating anything, I make sure to look up the word(s) or phrase in the dictionary. You'll learn something new about something by its definition almost every time along with other ways of spelling or reading into it, which just adds to the creative tangents you could explore.


How would you describe your work space?
In my bedroom, which also sort of doubles up as my creative space, the shelves are full of sketchbooks, reference books, natural ephemera, patterned fabrics and curios; the walls are covered in fantastical photographs and illustrations mostly encased in wooden frames and the furniture is wooden too. Surrounding myself in this world allows me to wander freely and create from what I see, but also feel at home. I'm constantly trying to bring the outdoors in!”

Are there any songs, poems or books which inspire you?
Music-wise, I feel my most creative when listening to Patrick Wolf.; he captures my homeland of Cornwall so intricately and yet effortlessly in his music and lyrics and I find myself most immersed
when I hear him sing and play violin. Visual artists such as Arthur Rackham and Alan Lee are among my favourites, I love to peruse through old illustrations of natural history and reference books are among my most common haunts as well.”

What are you up to in Bristol and where would you like to take your art next?
Moving to Bristol has been wonderful for my creative side, I have been able to explore a very creative city with so many diverse forms of art. I wanted to develop my portfolio in terms of my own creative input, not so much by way of increasing my client list (although that wouldn't be a bad thing either!) Up until fairly recently, I didn't feel as if my work correlated or connected with itself. Much of my work felt like stray thoughts or ideas with a style that didn't match. Without meaning to create the same piece of art over and over, I intended to bring some consistency to what it is I have to offer, aesthetically and conceptually. To find the artist I love being most. I plan on renting a gallery space sometime within the next year, sooner rather than later in fact, and putting on my first solo exhibition of my most proud and tightly weaved collection of artwork to date.”

What is the dream for you as an artist?
To be financially supported just enough so I may continue doing what I love: creating art. I'm not ambitious enough to want to become world famous and wealthy, but a modest living within the creative market would be fantastic. I would like to have my own art café in the future, a social place where fellow creatives could display their art and musicians could perform as well. I'm quite idealistic at heart, can you tell?”

How would you describe your work?
Hmm, that's never a simple task! I'd have to say 'made by hand'. A great deal of hours go into such small illustrations; I desire to capture as much detail as possible, give character to my creatures without taming them. I only ever tweak my work digitally using Photoshop to either correct a mistake, correct colouring so the scanned image appears more like its original drawing or to strengthen contrasts and sharpness. I want the textures within the image appear to be tangible: ink and paint. For those reasons, even with my fantastical, fictional subject matter, I think my work could also be described as 'sincere'.”

Lastly, what advice or tips would you give to anyone wanting to get into illustration?
If you ever drop your creative tool, make sure you're never far away from picking it back up again. Don't give up! Study your inspirations and devote time to what it is you do. Unfortunately, I don't find the creative business very accessible, to start with you may want to try a couple of unpaid commissions for people you know, artwork for local projects for example. Keep feeding your portfolio and perhaps even mock up fake adverts or commissioned illustrations to show future enquiring clients your potential. If you begin to get a lot of requests from others asking for designs, particularly designs for free, resist the temptation of giving in for the commonly promised payment known as 'exposure'. Exposure isn't an acceptable commodity, make sure to give your time, effort and artwork value so that others do also, in no other line of work would this kind of trade be expected or agreed to. Some people find it encouraging to be part of a collective, a group of similarly minded artists who can seek out work and display their designs together, it depends on how you work best. Just keep doing what you love, stay focussed and committed; keep your eyes and ears open for inspiration as well as critique and you shouldn't be steering yourself too far wrong.”




Check out Natalie's work here:

Buy Natalie's work here:










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