Caisey Crafts

Sarah Caisey’s portraits mostly start with the eyes. She feels inspired by the world around her; in most cases, every picture starts with the eyes- whether a person or an animal. For her, eyes are mesmerising, and they tell their own story. So she always feels starting here is the best possible start to any portrait.

All About The Beads

Ali’s work is inspired by colour: in visual art, in landscapes real and imagined, in nature, and sometimes in books or music that paint particularly vivid visual pictures. Her materials also provide inspiration in their own right – a chance meeting of different coloured glass rods on her workbench has often inspired a new design.

Wendy MacSkimming

Wendy is an artist who paints in oil, watercolour, and acrylic. Her style is influenced by her love for portraiture—she has painted portraits of family members, friends, and pets. Most of her portraits are monochrome, with the occasional addition of another colour to enhance a particular element.

Stiffy Art

John Stiff is an artist whose practice is split between colourful floral abstracts and surrealistic drawings. He is drawn towards surrealism, as this allows him to bring together the combination of depictive patterns and abstract art. Especially anything to do with female figures and mythology is something he loves creating.

Robert Williams Art

Robert Williams Art Informed by Robert’s earlier professional background in child health, he uses mosaic to explore important themes, including: infancy, childhood, refuge, and parenting. His mosaic practice aims to be organic, sensual, and flowing. He achieves this by creating figurative and semi-abstract images influenced by Modernism.

John Boden Artist

John’s favourite thing to paint is people. He loves the challenge of capturing a realistic likeness and an interesting expression that reveals some aspect of the personality and character of a subject. He experiments with different genres, but he always comes back to painting people because it satisfies him in ways that other things don’t.

Careless Rapture

Claire, a glass artist in Honeybourne, has been working with glass for about six years. I use flat sheets of coloured glass, which I cut by hand, layer, and then fuse in a kiln. She started looking at all sorts of things and wondering how to replicate them in a glass which she found magical.