Hey, I’m Lizzy!

I am an artist and designer based in Western Washington.

I have been creating since I was a kid, scrap-booking my many moves around the country and making cards for loved ones birthday’s. Soon enough, that evolved into creating digital collages for my favorite singer on Neopets, photographing flowers to paint in high school art class and eventually, Editor-in-Chief of my high school yearbook.

After studying graphic design in college, I worked for the next 12 years designing school planners for students, apparel for sororities and breweries, and finally, marketing and packaging for big corporations. However, I hit a wall. My creative energy was completely zapped and I realized I didn’t want to be creating at the will of others, selling something that wasn’t needed. It went against my values.

I value love. I value peace. I value authenticity. I value beauty, color, craftsmanship. I needed what I was creating to have heart and be made with my own hands. I needed my creativity to do good and make you feel something.

Nowadays, I’ve turned my creative attention to crafting physical art that feels a little more inspired. I weave nature, symbology, and esoteric principles (astrology, human design, and numerology) together to create art that is imbued with energy and encourages peace, inner and outer.

I create because I have to. There is nothing else in the world that gives me as much life as the process of creation. I want my art to shake something loose inside of you, make you pause and breathe, or… it can just be something beautiful that makes you smile everyday. :)

With love,
Lizzy

“I found I could say things with color and shapes that I couldn’t say any other way… things I had no words for.”

— Georgia O’Keeffe

A few of my favorite things…

my studio

my dog, Rufeo

my cat, Lucifer

flower-covered fields

shell-covered beaches

history-filled museums

traveling

learning

dancing

“Art to me is an anecdote of the spirit, and the only means of making concrete the purpose of its varied quickness and stillness.”

— Mark Rothko