Stories


Botanical

Stories


Botanical

Oxmantown Skincare - Made in Dublin

Oxmantown Skincare - Made in Dublin

  Posted by Clare Grennan in: botanical, maker story, Organic skincare, Oxmantown skincare

Tell us about what you make:

I make natural plant based skincare & perfume using botanical, organic and active ingredients. All products are made by hand in small batches in my studio in Stoneybatter in an ethical and cruelty free manner. The company is named 'Oxmantown' after the area in which the products are made.

What led you to choosing this craft as a profession? What do you love most about it?

My background has been in the health & wellness industry. Being an aromatherapist, my passion is in how people experience the world through smell. I love creating fragrances from essential oils, and the idea of creating something new and that people will enjoy.

Where do you get your inspiration from?

I take inspiration from my travels. I've created my scents & perfume from the experiences I've drawn from travelling. For example Jasmine, Ylang ylang is inspired by my trips to India. The Cedar Atlas is from my trip to the Atlas mountain in Morocco. Lemongrass from my time in Thailand.

I also get inspiration from what the Irish landscape has to offer. Some of my favourite scents remind me of growing up in Ireland. I am forever fascinated between the link between smell and memory, how it can remind you of a person, a place, or an experience and the effect that it can have on your mood.

Could you describe your studio to us? What is your favourite thing about the space and how do you get into the mindset of making?

I'm in the process of building a new workshop, but for now I work from a small studio in Stoneybatter.

To get into the correct mindset for making, I find getting the light, music & smell right can really help. So I allow as much natural light in as possible. I burn oils to get motivated and to help me concentrate such as rosemary & basil or orange & bergamot to feel uplifted. Coming into autumn and winter I graduate towards burning the warmer scents such as ginger, sweet marjoram and black pepper.

What is your favourite tool/ describe the making process?

The process of making a cream/lotion involves heating the ingredients to desired temperatures in different stages, allowing them to cool & adding the heat sensitive ingredients at the very end such as vitamins and essential oils. It's hard to choose a favourite tool as all are equally as important as the other. If I had to choose, a good whisk is vital when making creams, lotions and body-butters. The blending process is time consuming but the result is rewarding, it is key to ensuring all the ingredients emulsify properly so that you get the desired consistency, texture and smell.

To find out more and to purchase Oxmantown skincare products, click here

 

 

Oxmantown Skincare - Made in Dublin

Oxmantown Skincare - Made in Dublin

  Posted by Clare Grennan in: botanical, maker story, Organic skincare, Oxmantown skincare

Tell us about what you make:

I make natural plant based skincare & perfume using botanical, organic and active ingredients. All products are made by hand in small batches in my studio in Stoneybatter in an ethical and cruelty free manner. The company is named 'Oxmantown' after the area in which the products are made.

What led you to choosing this craft as a profession? What do you love most about it?

My background has been in the health & wellness industry. Being an aromatherapist, my passion is in how people experience the world through smell. I love creating fragrances from essential oils, and the idea of creating something new and that people will enjoy.

Where do you get your inspiration from?

I take inspiration from my travels. I've created my scents & perfume from the experiences I've drawn from travelling. For example Jasmine, Ylang ylang is inspired by my trips to India. The Cedar Atlas is from my trip to the Atlas mountain in Morocco. Lemongrass from my time in Thailand.

I also get inspiration from what the Irish landscape has to offer. Some of my favourite scents remind me of growing up in Ireland. I am forever fascinated between the link between smell and memory, how it can remind you of a person, a place, or an experience and the effect that it can have on your mood.

Could you describe your studio to us? What is your favourite thing about the space and how do you get into the mindset of making?

I'm in the process of building a new workshop, but for now I work from a small studio in Stoneybatter.

To get into the correct mindset for making, I find getting the light, music & smell right can really help. So I allow as much natural light in as possible. I burn oils to get motivated and to help me concentrate such as rosemary & basil or orange & bergamot to feel uplifted. Coming into autumn and winter I graduate towards burning the warmer scents such as ginger, sweet marjoram and black pepper.

What is your favourite tool/ describe the making process?

The process of making a cream/lotion involves heating the ingredients to desired temperatures in different stages, allowing them to cool & adding the heat sensitive ingredients at the very end such as vitamins and essential oils. It's hard to choose a favourite tool as all are equally as important as the other. If I had to choose, a good whisk is vital when making creams, lotions and body-butters. The blending process is time consuming but the result is rewarding, it is key to ensuring all the ingredients emulsify properly so that you get the desired consistency, texture and smell.

To find out more and to purchase Oxmantown skincare products, click here

 

 

Sally Caulwell -  Illustration

Sally Caulwell - Illustration

  Posted by Laura Caffrey in: Botanical, Hedgerows, Illustration, Sally Caulwell

Tell us a little about what you make/design
I’m an illustrator/graphic designer. I draw all the time… I’m totally obsessed! At the moment I’m doing a lot of botanical illustration. I draw from life and I draw from old botanical prints (who knew pinterest had such a collection). I picked up a set of old botanical prints years ago at a flea and just loved everything about them. The simplicity of the layout, the intricate detail in the painterly renderings, and the little sign off at the bottom stating the Latin name. Each botanical illustration captures the different stages of a plant's life-cycle so I suppose illustration provides a function that a photograph cannot. We have so many under-celebrated wildflowers in our hedgerows and I’ve spent the last couple of years getting to know them. I count everything. Petals, stamens, stripping back the frills and trying to get at to the essence of each plant.
Could you describe your studio to us? What is your favourite thing about the space and how do you get into the mindset of making?
My studio is a little fold out desk in my bedroom, complete with pens, notebooks, and my beloved iMac! We live in a two up two down ‘coronation st’ house so a studio space is a luxury that I don’t have. When I draw in the evenings, it’s for myself. The house is quiet, kids are asleep, so it's a time when I can think clearly, get into my flow state, and explore whatever I feel like. 
  
 
What is your favourite tool and why?
My favourite tool is my black sharpie pen! I always have one within arms reach.
What led you to choosing illustration as a profession? What do you love most about it?
I guess it just happened naturally, I drew my way through school and college and then after graduating I began working as a graphic designer. I’ve do a lot of illustration in my day job (I work in detail design studio as a designer). When I started to work in design I developed a love for geometry, distilling things down to simple forms. Nothing makes me happier than a balanced composition, playing with repetition, pattern, and colour… 
I love that my job is never boring, in fact, its a joy. How lucky am I to be able to say that!
You can buy a selection of Sally's prints and a beautiful Christmas card she designed exclusively for Irish Design Shop here
Sally Caulwell -  Illustration

Sally Caulwell - Illustration

  Posted by Laura Caffrey in: Botanical, Hedgerows, Illustration, Sally Caulwell

Tell us a little about what you make/design
I’m an illustrator/graphic designer. I draw all the time… I’m totally obsessed! At the moment I’m doing a lot of botanical illustration. I draw from life and I draw from old botanical prints (who knew pinterest had such a collection). I picked up a set of old botanical prints years ago at a flea and just loved everything about them. The simplicity of the layout, the intricate detail in the painterly renderings, and the little sign off at the bottom stating the Latin name. Each botanical illustration captures the different stages of a plant's life-cycle so I suppose illustration provides a function that a photograph cannot. We have so many under-celebrated wildflowers in our hedgerows and I’ve spent the last couple of years getting to know them. I count everything. Petals, stamens, stripping back the frills and trying to get at to the essence of each plant.
Could you describe your studio to us? What is your favourite thing about the space and how do you get into the mindset of making?
My studio is a little fold out desk in my bedroom, complete with pens, notebooks, and my beloved iMac! We live in a two up two down ‘coronation st’ house so a studio space is a luxury that I don’t have. When I draw in the evenings, it’s for myself. The house is quiet, kids are asleep, so it's a time when I can think clearly, get into my flow state, and explore whatever I feel like. 
  
 
What is your favourite tool and why?
My favourite tool is my black sharpie pen! I always have one within arms reach.
What led you to choosing illustration as a profession? What do you love most about it?
I guess it just happened naturally, I drew my way through school and college and then after graduating I began working as a graphic designer. I’ve do a lot of illustration in my day job (I work in detail design studio as a designer). When I started to work in design I developed a love for geometry, distilling things down to simple forms. Nothing makes me happier than a balanced composition, playing with repetition, pattern, and colour… 
I love that my job is never boring, in fact, its a joy. How lucky am I to be able to say that!
You can buy a selection of Sally's prints and a beautiful Christmas card she designed exclusively for Irish Design Shop here