San Francisco Bazaar at Maker Faire

San Francisco Bazaar at Maker Faire

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “San Francisco Bazaar at Maker Faire”.
My name is Eva Devon. Sony I’m from San Francisco, California – and this is my business sweaty taxidermy. So I make fake taxidermy I used. I repurposed sweater to use for their fur and I use traditional taxidermy mounts the inspiration is, I really enjoy regular taxidermy, but I always enjoy kind of more of the playful side more of the anthropomorphic, so this was kind of my take on it. So it’s still playful anthropomorphic, but a little more colorful everything’s been going really well and make her hair. I get a lot of laughter a lot of photos. Everybody seems to really enjoy them, so my name is Jen Amos, i’m the owner of Sparrow and sundry and i’m a shadow boxes. Some people call them dioramas and I make them out of either reclaimed wood or sustainably harvested way, and I made the boxes myself in the wood shop, so I am a woodworker at heart and a may or may not hoard. Would I’m not going to tell you so I was going through my hoarded would one day and usually there three or four inches, and I was trying to figure out what to do with them and I started out by making the wooden boxes and then I have Children so I went to their toy box and stole a bunch of toys and they put them in to the boxes and made night lights for them, because we travel a lot and was something familiar for them in a hotel room and that’s kind of where started.

Took off from there, I have got that very good reception at maker faire. Most people are very interested in the LEDs because they are lit with LEDs and I think they’re just fascinated, because people haven’t seen anything like this before and it’s new and unique and something that they can take home from the fair and remember it by my name. Is Sarah grams? I live in San Francisco and I make these tiny DIY wallet kits. I make all of this at the tech shop in San Francisco and I cut all of the leather so that you can make your own wallet.

So all these pieces are made with little holes in them already so they’re really easy to make, and I did that because I made my own wallet and I thought this is super easy and I wanted to make a kit that was like a good entry level Project for beginners, so people could make something and feel proud that they were making something and everybody needs a wallet. So I thought it was a good project. My name is Tony Frederick’s. I live in hayward in the bay area, the name of my booth.

This is what is, it gets and I make homemade handmade culinary art for the table. This is my sixth Maker Faire and has been received extremely well. I love maker faire, the makers of all kinds appreciate makers of other kinds. Every time I do this hi, I’m Doug McNeil, I’m from Oakland California, and I make journals Apple library, but i got the idea i was working in a book.

Bindery of me always had leftover paper and people are always say they make me a notebook out of that, and i don’t know how i came up with the idea of using old books are just gon na happen. There people love my product, they I get good feedback from everybody. A lot of people come from. Other fairs is finally just because that ice make a quality product.

My name is Claire Sanders and I’m from Alameda California. My project, which I’ve been doing for several years, is called fluff engine and it’s stuffed animals that I designed to make by hand as well as instructional pattern, so other creative people can make the toys themselves too. Well.

I went to a lot of craft fairs because I was attractive just as a consumer and every once in a while I’d be like hey, I could make that and which is kind of bad attitude. But so when I started my own project of sharing my own designs of people, I was like. I knew there were a lot of other treated people, so I figured why not share with them the instructions so that they could make themselves or if they saw mine and wanted to make it in different colors or wanted to make a bunch that they could do.

San Francisco Bazaar at Maker Faire

That my name is Blythe round and I’m from the Los Angeles areas – lakewood, california yeah. I make functional sir and they’re all illustrated officers so like a business of functional handcrafted, ceramic ware, that’s all hand-painted a lover of coffee and tea and there’s the league gross like ways to the cockatiel. I got a plastic and I just noticed how much waste thing i did when i was a teenager or like a college student hanging out until like your mundane, everyday experience and at the same time, felon toe ceramics class and decided that I wanted to make. I kind of brought you out of your monday and we’re like coffee drinking experience. Hi. My name is Anna Quinn, onus, also known as Anna anti-social.

San Francisco Bazaar at Maker Faire

I run anti-social designs. I’Ve been doing crochet amigurumi for the past couple years, but I’ve been crocheting since I was little girl and I always just love the taxidermy feel without the cruelty of the animal slaughter. And so, therefore, I decided to make crochet taxidermy with some fantasy animals that you’ll never see on mounts. It’S been pretty good.

San Francisco Bazaar at Maker Faire

It was a little slow yesterday, but today is definitely picking up quite a bit. There’S quite a few fans. Everyone seems to really love this stuff hi, I’m the window, lady also known as Janeiro’s based out of Oakland in the community called Fifth Avenue marina, and we have a lot of local artists in our booth. I’Ve actually included a lot of those artists in the harvest.

Today and I also live up in Pumas county in the town called Twain population 80, where i isolate myself from the world and I so handmade clothing, all out of recycled materials. This is my sixth year, I think, or seventh year, a maker faire, a lot of people wear my bustles around there all recycling neckties. I really enjoy working without pattern, so there than like this people that I made is out of. Will I really like finding scraps and they that are normally thrown out to make really elaborate costumes, and I feel like it’s really important, to recycle as a designer? That’S my choice.

Instead of buying yardage and fabric to create things, I like thinking of it as adoption in a way there’s a lot of children in the world. There’S a lot of ties in the world. There’S a lot of quilts that have been passed down in families that go to a thrift shop. I like taking them things of history and making new wearable art with it. .