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Art Coming Soon Mixed Media Montrose Pop-Up Shops Uncategorized

Never Grow Up: A Perfect Day at the Montrose Farmers Market

Success! This weekend was a wonderful one for creativity and community. I brought my brand-new children’s activity book to the Montrose Farmers Market at Centennial Plaza, and it was such a joyful experience!

My booth was filled with laughter, smiles, and creativity all morning. I spent the day drawing custom cartoon portraits for families and kids — one of my favorite things to do. Several children came dressed in their Halloween costumes, and I had a blast sketching them as superheroes, fairies, and little monsters in my signature cartoon style. Their reactions were priceless!

The highlight for me was seeing so many kids try out my new Montrose-made activity books. They colored, solved puzzles, and dove right into the creative games I designed. Hearing their excitement and seeing them so engaged was the best feedback I could ask for.

A fellow artist stopped by, watched me work, and said, “You are such a kid!” I took it as the highest compliment. It’s true — I still love to play, create, and dream, just like the little artists who stopped by my booth. May I never grow up!

Thank you to everyone who came out to the Montrose Farmers Market, supported local artists, and shared in the fun. Events like this remind me how special it is to be part of our creative Western Colorado community.

If you missed me this time, I’ll be back at future markets with custom artwork, cartoon portraits, and plenty of creative activity books for kids. Stay tuned — there are more fun projects on the way!

Categories
Blog Montrose Murals Updates

Rediscovering My Passion for Mural Painting in Western Colorado

Before this year, it had been quite a while since I painted a mural—and when I did, they were usually indoor murals for children’s bedrooms. But 2025 has been a year of rediscovery and transformation! I’ve had the joy of creating three outdoor murals here in Western Colorado, and each one has reignited my love for large-scale art.

I began the year by painting Cedar’s Mediterranean Cuisine’s food truck with colorful scenes inspired by Lebanon. In the middle of summer, I brightened a family’s backyard fence with a whimsical, childlike garden mural. And most recently, I completed my part of a large-scale community mural on the alley side of the Mosaic building in downtown Montrose, CO.

Each project has reminded me how murals can completely transform a space—bringing color, creativity, and personality to homes, businesses, and public areas. I love helping people reimagine their spaces through art!

Thank you, Montrose, for inspiring me to dive back into mural painting. I’m excited to see where my next project takes me!

If you’re in Montrose, Delta, Ridgway, or anywhere in Western Colorado and are thinking about adding a mural to your home or business, I’d love to talk about your ideas.

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Montrose Montrose Creative Community Western Colorado Women's Guild

Jeanette’s Big Idea Makes Local News

My friends and I are building a community in Western Colorado, centered around Montrose — one that encourages creativity, friendship, and lifting each other up.

Earlier this year, during a pop-up gallery at the Montrose Art Crawl, I shared Jeanette’s Big Idea with anyone who would listen: to create a vibrant art community with a headquarters in an art school that would also offer studio space for local artists. It’s a dream I’ve had for a long time, but this year, it suddenly started to feel possible.

The photographer who joined me that evening loved the idea and offered to host our very first women’s creative guild meeting at her home. She made curry and tea, and together we began dreaming about what this could become.

My friends Elisabeth and Cally volunteered to help with the administrative side, and now — we’re officially meeting!

My Big Idea still has a long way to go, but the community is growing, and I couldn’t be more excited to see where it leads. If you would like to join, drop me a line. We are a pretty awesome group of fem/fem presenting folks!

If you are interested in joining us, please sign up HERE

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7 S Townsend Ave Blog Classes Events Montrose Pop-Up Shops

Montrose Second Thursday Art Crawl: Pop-Up Shop!

Tomorrow from 4-8 come visit me and my partner, Lissa, at the pop-up art gallery/shop! We will be at 7 S Townsend in Montrose with art, and drop-in projects.

Our main project this time is the Thrift Art Makeover:

🎨 Thrift Store Art Makeover

Give old art a fun, new twist!

How it Works:

  1. Choose a piece of thrift store art.
    We have a selection of old art prints ready for transformation!
  2. Get creative!
    Use any of the supplies at the table to makeover your artwork:
    • ✂️ Magazine clippings
    • 🖊️ Paint pens & markers
    • 🎨 Mixed media goodies (stickers, washi tape, etc.)
  3. Add your twist.
    Think silly, whimsical, weird, or modern — no rules here! Add new characters, speech bubbles, unexpected elements, or surreal scenes.
  4. Take it or leave it.
    When you’re done, take your art home or hang it up in our Gallery of Makeovers on display at the booth.

Tips:

  • Layer clippings for cool effects.
  • Paint pens work great for drawing over glossy surfaces.
  • There’s no wrong way to do this — just have fun!

🧼 Please help us keep the space tidy by capping markers and sharing supplies!

Thank you to the City of Montrose for putting together this fun event and to Cinda at the Sunglass Shop, owner of the building where we are putting in our pop-up gallery!

Categories
Classes Coming Soon Montrose

Introducing: The Crafty Coven

Sometime around 2020, I got an idea.

When I get that kind of idea, I like to say it “sets my brain on fire.” I can’t stop thinking about it. I can’t stop talking about it. I dump my thoughts into notebooks and documents, research obsessively for months, and start making websites, logos, and marketing materials—basically, all the things.

But inevitably, I push past my limits. I burn out and drop the idea just as quickly as I picked it up. It’s a painful cycle that leaves me drained, depressed, and questioning my worth.

I didn’t want to do that to the idea I had in 2020.

So I grabbed a notebook, scrawled a message on the front with a big black Sharpie:
Jeanette’s Big Idea – Write it down, think about it, but for the love of God don’t act on it until you’re ready!

I did let myself take one small step: I talked to a few people around town to get their thoughts. Honestly, I was hoping someone else would run with it so I could enjoy the results without doing the work (yeah, right).

I spoke with someone who loves helping startups and asked if Montrose had enough of an artist community to support the idea. His response stuck with me:
“It’s not really about whether the community exists—you just have to build it.”

That hit hard. I knew then I didn’t have the capacity to take it on. Starting a brick-and-mortar business, building a community, finding seed money—it was too much. So, I put the notebook on a shelf and walked away.

But what was the idea?

An art center. A creative space where I could teach, make, and support others in doing the same.

Back in 2020, I had no creative space at home. The local Makers Space had shut down during COVID, and I desperately needed somewhere to be artistic. I even asked a new creative business owner—who’d taken over the Makers Space building—if I could rent a room in the back as a studio. But realistically, I couldn’t justify the extra expense at the time. That’s when the dream started to take shape.

As a kid, I attended art classes at the Ah Haa School for the Arts in Telluride. Those classes—color theory, pottery, painting ceramics—were formative. The big open classrooms, the tools, the feeling of belonging—it all left a deep impression. I felt at home there. I still do, just remembering it.

But over the years, I let myself believe that being an artist wasn’t practical. That it was just a hobby. And still, my love for it never faded.

So in 2020, without space to create, I began to dream:
What if I opened a space with a classroom and rentable studios? What if it had a small makerspace? What if I could spend my days teaching, making, and helping artists grow? I imagined classes, hourly makerspace access, studio rentals, an art supply store, even a members’ gallery.

But I tried to let the dream go.

Until this year.

In February, I ended up in the ER. I was an emotional wreck. The doctors gave me a sedative, and I wept for hours. During that breakdown, I heard a voice within me say:
“You are meant to create.”

That moment shook me. I realized I couldn’t keep pushing my creativity aside.

So, I started breathing life back into this website. I focused on my creative offerings again. I opened myself to possibility and said to the universe,
“Okay, fine. I’ll stop running. But seriously—what do you want from me?”

I work part-time for the City of Montrose, and my boss was excited to hear about my artistic background. Since then, more and more creative projects have come my way. One of them? Reviving the downtown Art Walk.

While meeting with a building owner interested in hosting a pop-up shop during the event, she gave me a tour of her empty storefront.

And just like that—lightning struck.

This was it. This was the space. This was the moment. I knew I needed to open the school.

So I asked myself:
How can I make this happen?

Here’s the plan:
Start with arts and crafts parties and pop-ups.
Build excitement. Save money.
And in a year (or hopefully less), open the school.

After decades of telling myself I can’t—that it’s too hard, that someone or something would stop me—I finally believe:
It’s already mine.

I can do this. I’ve been building the community. I have the skills. There’s a need in Montrose. This is it.

So, I’m starting The Crafty Coven.

I wanted the name to be playful and a little magical. I first considered reviving my old business name, Brainstorms—but it didn’t feel quite right. Lately, I’ve been having crafty get-togethers with some of my witchy friends and always joke that we’re not The Craft movie witches—we’re “The Crafty.” I even made a terrible movie poster.

That’s me: crafty, silly, and full of ideas.
Welcome to The Crafty Coven.

Let’s make something beautiful together.

With Love and Lots of Color,

Jeanette