Katy Botanicals is proud to be supporting the Safe Lives charity with a new design

SafeLives is an amazing UK-wide charity working at policy level in it’s dedication to ending domestic abuse, for everyone.

Safe Lives works with children, young people, the communities affected by domestic abuse, as well as at government and policy level, to try and understand why it happens and to stop it before it starts. And if it does start

“to find a response that provides long-term, wraparound support to decrease the chance it will happen again.”

I am delighted to be designing a new fabric with Safe Lives charity in mind, and will be donating 10% of the profits raised to this extraordinary organisation.

I hope the design will be a dreamlike cherry blossom landscape of flowers and birds, very escapist, and will be trialing it on wallpapers as well as natural fabrics such as linens and cottons.

Here’s a sneak peak of how it’s going so far. As soon as it’s finished, I’ll have it up on the website.

To keep up to date on my progress with the design and my work with Safe Lives, please do sign up for newsletters or follow me on instagram:

If you’d like to know more about the important work Safe Lives are doing, such as the Reach In programme to help children start the conversation with friends they are concerned about, and how SafeLives works with local strategic and operational leaders, and frontline practitioners to achieve systemic change, the button below takes you to the Safe Lives website.

The Garden Museum and an at home painting workshop

Russell Cole and I have just hosted a wonderful Horatio’s Garden botanical painting workshop at the Garden Museum in London. So many friendly and enthusiastic faces dropped in and many truly lovely paintings were created.

If you’d like to come to something similar, I’m hosting one more painting workshop at home in the Test Valley on the 19th April and have a few spaces left.

Firstly, the Garden Museum! If you get the chance and have some time in London, it is well worth dropping in. It’s right next to Lambeth Palace and close to Tate Britain and Waterloo Station.

In a calm, spectacular space in the old Lambeth Palace church, this museum offers exhibitions, interesting talks by gardeners and interior designers, and has the most wonderful hidden gem of a restaurant in a plant filled glass extension.

The museum is a gorgeous secret and you’ll definitely return once you’ve discovered it. I’ll add a link below so you can find out more.

I’m hosting one more workshop this spring, on .

It’s such a joy to teach budding artists how to paint, whatever level of experience they bring. I believe that anyone can paint, given good materials, some simple lessons on how to structure a painting, and a little bit of guidance and support.

I have four places left on my spring painting workshop, which includes all materials and lunch.

If you’d like to come and join me, alone or with a companion, I’ll help you create something beautiful over a relaxed morning in the countryside. What could be better?


The workshop and lunch costs £50, all materials provided and then a simple shared lunch and time to chat. For more information, either email me on return of this email or click the link below:

Spring and summer workshops

Back due to popular demand, would you like to come to one of my lampshade making or painting workshops this spring?

A rose in a vase being painted at a botanical painting workshop hosted by Katy McIntyre Brown

At the end of January I’ll be hosting a lampshade making workshop, where well be creating a pretty little conical lampshade, either in fabric or hand painted by you (with guidance and support from me).

This will be a lovely morning and you’ll be able to go home with your very own shade and the know how to make your own in the future.

Botanical painting workshops

I’ll be hosting two more botanical painting workshops on Friday 19 April and Saturday 22 June. I do love hosting my workshops. Everyone always has a lovely time and it’s wonderful to see creative confidence returning, sometimes long dormant, and the delight my attendees take in their paintings.

If you’d like to join us and spend a happy morning painting, the link below will take you to more information and a booking form. All skill levels welcome and do bring a mum or friend if you like.

Lunch is provided and if you like your painting, I’ll create a beautiful linen tea towel from your design. A great present for friends and family and nice memento of your morning.

Featherstone Flowers Christmas Fair

We don’t take our tea towels and fabrics on many outings, but the one we wouldn’t miss is the Featherstone English Flowers Christmas fair.

You couldn’t wish for a lovelier location or kinder hosts and we spent the whole weekend chatting to flower lovers and small business supporters.

A great time was had by one and all.

The magical tythe barn that has hosted two King Charles’ and graces the Hampshire landscape is used throughout the year by Katie and Jess for flower arranging workshops, summer events and pick your own flower days. To find out more follow the link: Featherstone English Flower Company.

Our first botanical painting safari was a great success

Our first botanicals painting workshops at the gorgeous Gambledown Farm went down very.

Our guests were delighted with their tents, which are unbelievably luxurious, it was hardly camping really with double beds, duvets and wool blankets, hot showers, sofas, log burners and an incredible view. Our lunches and dinners were beautifully prepared by The Kitchen Social, specialising in healthy food and locally sourced ingredients, and I offered both drawing and painting workshops on our mess tent veranda overlooking the Test Valley.

The weather was very kind to us, so we could sit out under the awning and our workshop participants were both enthusiastic and great company. They were all a delight to spend time with.

With country walks into the bargain and visiting chickens, it couldn’t have run more smoothly or been more fun. Definitely something to put in the diary for next year.

Artist in the 'Best in Show' RHS Chelsea Flower Show garden

It was a huge pleasure to represent the Horatio’s Garden arts programme and artists in residence at the charity’s Main Avenue show garden at RHS Chelsea 2023.

As one of the spinal injury charity’s designers and art workshop hosts, I was invited to take part in garden events by painting ‘plain air’ in the show garden itself. While visitors and charity sponsors took in the beauty of the planting and cutting edge garden designs in the garden, it gave me an opportunity to record a little of the plants in the evening light and to chat about the charity which builds and looks after beautiful garden spaces for spinal units across the British Isles.

Added to the excitement of the event was the presentation of Best in Show to Horatio’s Garden and the garden designers, Charlotte Harris and Hugo Bug of Harris Bug Studio.

Horatio’s Garden nurtures wellbeing after spinal injury in vibrant sanctuaries in NHS spinal centres. This show garden was the first garden on Chelsea’s famous main avenue that has mobility needs at its heart and it is being relocated to the Princess Royal Spinal Cord Injuries Centre in Sheffield in 2024. It will be the eighth of the charity’s gardens at NHS spinal centres.

As you can understand, I felt as slight sense of trepidation in representing the charity in their show garden, with such a large audience. To prepare and ensure I didn’t make a mess of my part I did lots of plein air painting, or outdoor painting, and packed and unpacked my travelling wooden easel and palette many times.

However, once set up in the garden the light was so beautiful and visiting garden enthusiasts so friendly that the event was a joy. I’d do it again at the drop of a hat!

We're taking Katy Botanicals back to Stockbridge High Street for a meet and greet

Katy Botanicals fabrics, lampshades and products will be returning to Stockbridge Town Hall for a May pop up shop.

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Stockbridge Town Hall Christmas Shop

Well, we had a truly lovely visit to the ever wonderful Stockbridge Town Hall, my favourite location for showing my wares.

Loads of chats about fabrics and designs, some interesting projects and lots of tea towels winging their way to happy homes.

The tea towels always go down well, and this time they were being employed in all sorts of interesting ways - for bedside table covers, to wrap Christmas present, to wrap around wine bottles as an extra gift for dinner party hosts, even being turned into cushion covers.

Here are some holiday snaps of my fabrics on their trip out. They’ll next be visiting the lovely Tythe barn at Berry Court Farm, Nether Wallop, for the Featherstone Flowers Christmas Fair on the weekend of the 3rd and 4th of December.

Christmas shopping

The Christmas band wagon is almost upon us and I’d love to tell you where to find us for two Christmas events over the next few weeks.

 

November 17th and 18th Stockbridge pop up boutique, with late night opening

Stockbridge is always gorgeous at Christmas, lined with glittering trees, over the top decorations and many independent boutiques stuffed with Christmas gifts. We will be returning to Stockbridge Town Hall with a pop up boutique which will offer new Christmas fabric designs along with paintings, tea towels, cushions and more.  You will also find some beautiful Featherstone’s English Flowers seasonal displays - if you haven’t yet been introduced Featherstone’s are a local and wonderful, sustainable English flower farm and florist.  A joy to experience and well worth getting to know.

 

We will be open late on Thursday night with wine and mince pies if you fancy coming along after work, and there are also some rather excellent cafes and pubs on the high street in which to round off your visit with coffee, a meal or a seasonal drink.

 

Our shop will be open from Thursday 17th 12noon to 8pm, through to Friday 18th, 10am until 5pm.

Stockbridge town hall

Stockbridge High Street

Stockbridge

SO20 6HE

What3Words map location: https://w3w.co/repeating.exam.risky

 

December 3rd and 4th, Featherstone’s Christmas Market

Featherstone’s English Flower Company is hosting a Christmas market in their historic tythe barn.  The event will definitely be beautiful and will have wonderful artisan offerings along with their flowers, wreaths, music and the Featherstone shop, all designed to warm the heart.  Do come along to say hello at the Katy Botanicals stand, and to enjoy all the rest that the fair has to offer:

Featherstone’s Flowers Christmas Market.

The Tithe Barn

Berry Court Farm

Church Hill

Nether Wallop

Stockbridge

SO20 8EY

 

If you’d like to know more about any of these dates and activities,­ please do let me know via email: katy@katymcintyrebrow.com, or via Instagram messages, www.instagram.com/katymcbrown, and very Happy early Christmas to you.

 

 

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English country garden mural

After many weeks of concentrated painting, this gorgeous English country garden mural is finally finished and looking truly wonderful.

Working with the garden designer, we layered paintings of the plants and flowers that will be surrounding this beautiful country house and will be viewed through the windows of the entrance hall.

Here’s a short walk through the mural, and to see some close up images of the mural details follow this link to my instagram page: https://www.instagram.com/katymcbrown/

Katy

Back to painting murals

Now the lovely Hampshire Open Studios show is over, I’m lucky enough to be embarking on a beautiful mural for the entrance hall of a gorgeous home in Hampshire.

This high ceilinged hall will be filled with lavender, buddleja, cornflowers and all sorts for gorgeous fragrant planting.

The planning and experimentation is as fun as the painting itself, as I always try and fit in as much as I can from the gardens surrounding the house or location, and of course as many plants and insects and birds that are important or significant to those who will be enjoying it.

At the end of first stage of painting, when the mural has been planned and mapped out on the wall, then the fun starts and I can hide all manner of bugs, secrets and mementos in the leaves and blooms that cover those walls.

I’ll keep you updated as I paint!

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Hampshire Open Studios 2020

Hampshire Open Studios was great fun.

Lots of guests and lots of feedback. There was great interest in how I create my designs, so I’ve put tougher this vide displaying some artwork, the fabric designs with some original working drawings and some murals.

Do tell me what you think. Feedback is always useful.

Katy x


Fabrics

In time for Hampshire Open Studios, my fabrics have arrived.

I’m so excited. They are so beautiful.

Each fabric design uses or is based on one of my paintings. The paintings are all originals and can be hung on the wall. The fabrics are being printed on both cotton canvas and on furnishing velvet.

More designs to follow, and available in my shop soon.

Do follow my instagram page: katymcbrown, or my facebook page: Katy McIntyre Brown Designs for the latest news.

Fern furnishing velvet, sage background

Fern furnishing velvet, sage background

Hellebore stripe

Hellebore stripe


The trials of trying to use recycled fabrics: Who knew ethical was so hard!  

So, when I started designing Urban Camouflage leggings, my hope was that I could produce a line of sportswear that was beautiful, luxurious, healing and carbon neutral.

  • The beautiful bit is what I was made for - I’ve been painting botanical paintings my whole life, professionally for over a decade, and have studied a Masters Degree in Textile Design.

  • The luxurious, slow fashion, bit was possible through a long search for a quality manufacturer who created a great pair of leggings that you wouldn’t have to replace, using employees who were recognised, trained and rewarded.

  • The healing bit I really believe in, having spent years researching the benefits that nature and even pictures of nature can bring to our mental and physical wellbeing.

  • However, the carbon neutral bit has caused me a real headache.

Who knew ethical was so hard!

Having spent 18 months searching for a way of producing ethically manufactured sportswear, I can share the following knowledge:

 

Sportswear has to fulfil very high demands from the wearer; it has to: 

  • be really, really stretchy,

  • take dyes of bright and vibrant colours,

  • have an attractive sheen or slightly shiny surface,

  • not go dark when and where the wearer sweats,

  • be long suffering and hardwearing,

  • survive regular and thorough washing and tumble drying,

  • ‘wick’ or draw moisture away from our bodies, so keeping us warm in the cold and cool in the heat,

  • be affordable and be flattering

 

So, in my search for ethical fabrics that a small business could afford, I had considered:

  1. Bamboo, but the fibres are short. This means it looks and feels slightly like velvet, so printed patterns and images will look soft not sharp and the fabric wears thin easily as the fibres pull apart.

  2. Cotton, which has a lovely breathable quality. However, it doesn’t like mixing with Lycra (or elastane / spandex which are the generic names for Lycra) so you get a baggy bum and baggy knees.

  3. new exciting developments in natural fibres, produced using raw products such as milk (QMilk) or coffee grounds (S.Cafe). These are both gorgeous fabrics and I’d love to partner with them in the future.

I next turned my attention to recycled polyester: 

Now, I know that recycled polyester is already being used successfully for printed leggings.   Yipee!!   However, currently, recycled polyester is kept in a big round bale, like the hay bales you see in the fields.   These bales are unwound from the centre and pulled out like a long sock.  Each bale is everso slightly different and when the fabric is pulled out of its bale cocoon, its form and structure starts to change.

 

As the opened bale starts to change, each bale has to be used then and there for one print run, of 3000 items.

 

Now these items can be leggings, or tops, or shells, or vests, but they have to be printed in one go.   Which, as I believe in slow fashion and only produce what I know will sell, reducing the Urban Camouflage carbon footprint and reducing wastage, means this is not an option for our business right now.

 

Well, this is where I am now, 18 months in, far better informed and much closer to my carbon neutral range of clothing.

 

The business is changing all the time, this is the place I’ve reached on my quest, so I’ll keep you informed of my progress towards our ethical future.

 

I’m going to keep talking, keep visiting and keep digging, so watch this space as it is my aim and ambition to create clothing that you will enjoy wearing and also be proud to wear.   Equally, if you know something we could use are happy to share your knowledge, please do!!  

 

The sooner Urban Camouflage can be carbon neutral the prouder I’ll be and the sooner you can receive your totally ethical Urban Camouflage sports kit!

How Nature Keeps Us Well

At the same time as more and more of us move to the cities, research is showing that humans respond positively to the shapes, colours and landscapes of natural surroundings and negatively to urban ones.

 As nature is heavily involved in the balance of our mental health, this leaves us with a problem.  The benefits we gain from being within and around it are being lost to us as we squeeze into ever growing urban hubs. But we can reverse this change, through good design of our buildings, spaces and cities.

 Five ways it has been shown that nature can improve our mental state:

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 1.     In our spare time:

Walking through woods lowers our heart rates by the same amount as a hug or stroking our pets. A 20 minute woodland walk has even been shown to make us more considerate and generous to others.

2.     In hospitals:

Patients with bedside windows looking out on leafy trees heal a day faster, are discharged a day earlier than those who don’t. They also needed significantly less pain medication and had fewer complications than patients who instead saw a brick wall.

3.     At school:

Children in classrooms with a view of trees and a natural landscape can concentrate for significantly longer than students without a view of nature.

4.     At work:

Office workers with green views from their workstations were more satisfied at work and had more patience, less frustration, increased enthusiasm for work, and fewer health problems than those with bare walls and no plant life to see.

5.     In prisons:

In a US study in a correctional Institution, some prisoners in solitary confinement were shown moving images of nature such as streams, tropical beaches or forests, while some were not.  Those prisoners sent to solitary confinement with no access to these images recorded more outbursts, whereas those able to see the images displayed calmer, more stable behaviour.

6.     In our public spaces:

Access to green space has been associated with less brain ageing.   The decline in cognitive score after ten years, in 60,000 Britons, was almost 5% smaller in people living in greener neighbourhoods.

7.     And this one is really shocking:

10% more green space in our living environment led in one study to a decrease in the number of symptoms that is comparable with a decrease in age by 5 years.   This means that you may live five years longer with access to green spaces and nature than those people with just ten percent less access to nature than you.

 It’s hard to over-estimate how important nature is to us, in every way.  We need to look after it, for ourselves today, as well as for our children and our futures. A simple way we can do this is to make sure we are visiting our green spaces as often as possible, looking after them, protecting them, staying familiar and staying in touch.

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For references please ask for a copy of my Masters research paper:

“Is it possible to design a piece of visual artwork that provides all the health benefits of views of nature?”