Artist Spotlight | An Artist In Any Medium: From Fashion To Water Color

In 2006, a determined Barbara Beach walked into a Charleston boutique with children’s dresses that she had designed and sewn together. The owner quickly added them to the inventory, and eventually shops from West Ashley to King Street were carrying Barbara Beach Designs for the poshest tots. Women would stare at the carefully crafted dresses and secretly wish the apparel were in adult sizes (this writer is guilty as charged).

The demand for these classic with a modern twist creations was gaining traction across Charleston when Beach was named a Charleston Fashion Week (CFW) Emerging Designer in 2010. This accolade included a fashion show where her small models took the catwalk and charmed a crowd as they represented the first children’s fashion designer to show at CFW, and this broadened her reach outside the Charleston area.

After a 12 year career in children’s fashion, Beach mystified her loyal following when she decided to take Barbara Beach Designs into a completely different direction with the same unwavering determination: watercolors. It did not take long before she was commissioned for pieces in private homes.

Many have wondered, “How does someone go from children’s fashion to watercolors?” The answer is quite simple. Beach designed all of her clothing by first sketching the outline and using watercolors to create the exact colors she envisioned for each design, an effect she could not achieve with colored pencils.

Beach’s intent through painting is to create large scale pieces that one can enjoy framed on the walls of the home, along with small scale cards because “there is just something special these days about receiving a thoughtful letter in the mail.” Beach finds creating the note cards similar to working in fashion when she is selecting paper styles, color ways, and measurements.

Last year she was approached by Charleston’s Hotel Emeline with a request to feature her clothing designs in their retail shop, the Keep Shop. She explained that she was now creating watercolors. After seeing her cards, they felt it a complementary piece to their collection. The sets of cards are one of a kind, and their small size make it easy for travelers to pack the small works of art into a suitcase.

Her subject matter constantly changes as Beach finds inspiration from literally everywhere, whether it be the gardens and homes on the Charleston peninsula or a Liberty of London fabric from one of the childhood dresses sewn by her aunt.

The next time you find yourself strolling the streets of Downtown Charleston, drop by the Keep Shop inside of Hotel Emeline and take a peek at Beach’s latest collection of cards, or feel free to reach out to her via her website at BarbaraBeachDesigns.WordPress.com to discuss the creation of a piece to brighten up your home or office. Or these days, home office. You can also reach her on Instagram at @BarbaraBeachDesigns.

To this very day, people still quietly ask Beach’s closest friends if there is any possibility of her return to children’s fashion. It seems Beach has closed that chapter of her creative career, although, she has recently been sewing dresses for herself while dreaming of possibly returning to the world of fashion, but the next time, possibly adult sized apparel.

 

Artwork © Barbara Beach, used with permission.

Picture of Kena Black

Kena Black

Kena earned a degree in Art History from The College of Charleston and a Master’s Degree in the Business of Art from Sotheby’s. After working with galleries and artists in Southeast Asia, she relocated to Aiken, South Carolina, and began a 9 year career in hospitality. She is now an independent small business consultant who enjoys the small town charm of Aiken.
Picture of Kena Black

Kena Black

Kena earned a degree in Art History from The College of Charleston and a Master’s Degree in the Business of Art from Sotheby’s. After working with galleries and artists in Southeast Asia, she relocated to Aiken, South Carolina, and began a 9 year career in hospitality. She is now an independent small business consultant who enjoys the small town charm of Aiken.

In the know

Related Stories

The Nutcracker | An Iconic Christmas Tradition | Palmetto Bella

The Nutcracker | An Iconic Christmas Tradition

For many, Peter Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker is a holiday tradition that kicks off the holiday season. When the music starts, you can close your eyes and allow visions of sugarplums, snowflakes, flowers, and an enchanted place enter your imagination. The Nutcracker is based on E.T.A. Hoffmann’s popular 1816 story “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King.” The idea to use the story as the basis for a ballet came from the impresario and director of the Russian Imperial Theaters, Ivan Vsevolozhsky, who had conceived of The Sleeping Beauty. Vsevolozhsky and the ballet master Marius Petipa, who had choreographed The Sleeping Beauty, wrote the libretto, or story line, for The Nutcracker and

Read More »
The August Bella Book Club Review | The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo | Aiken Bella Magazine

The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires – by Grady Hendrix

Bella Book Club Monthly Selection by Nichole Miller The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires, by Grady Hendrix, provides an unusual combination of classic horror and old Southern charm. Patricia Campbell is a stay-at-home mom who is trying her best to raise her teenage children and care for her senile mother-in-law. Her husband, a psychiatrist, is never home and is little help, and Patricia’s sanity is starting to run thin. After embarrassing herself at the snooty local ladies’ book club, she walks out to find some of the other members forming a new book group where she is introduced to true crime stories and a group of amazing women

Read More »
I Create Beautiful Things | Palmetto Bella

I Create Beautiful Things

If there was a job called Professional Creator, I could be THAT. I love to create stuff, all kinds of stuff. I like to find forgotten yarn and watch it become something new and beautiful. I glean from thrift stores or estate sales or garages or attics and find old balls of tangled messes and watch them unfurl, and then I create anew. I enjoy taking pieces of fabric, once serving their past-life purposes, and then cut and craft them into a new blanket or quilt. I am entertained by taking wood and screws and building stuff. Sometimes it’s bird atriums for my farm animals. Or functional things like a

Read More »
Pocket Poetry | Palmetto Bella

Pocket Poetry

Changing the World – One Poem at a Time Having been graciously selected by the members of The Aiken Poets to serve as Poet Laureate, I wondered what I could do to make people more excited about poetry and to make poetry better appreciated, noticed, read, memorized, written, and shared. Then I came up with this idea I call Pocket Poetry — a few lines in rhyme or free verse, written in calligraphy on white or colored cards, and distributed at random to people I meet. They go to people I know, people who provide a service, like the cashiers at the supermarket, the teller at the bank, the postal

Read More »