The post Jena Holliday’s Illustrations Inspire Other Women to Keep Growing appeared first on MyTrendTales.
]]>“My work is inspired by growing up surrounded by women (4 sisters!) and finding that the beauty of our differences always made us stronger,” she writes on her personal website. Other sources of inspiration include diversity, honest motherhood, and her walk of faith (in fact, tying in with her faith, her studio/brand is named Spoonful of Faith).
According to Holliday, her creative spirit blossomed at an early age, but having grown up she put her love of art aside, launching first a career in marketing. “I have always been creative,” she shared in an interview with Creative Lady Collective. “From a young age, I would sketch comic strips and draw people I did life with. I never took it too seriously until after I finished college with a degree in marketing.”
But returning to her original passion was only a matter of time. For Holliday, it was motherhood that reignited her interest in art and illustration. “I decided that I wasn’t really doing what I loved to do, and then after the birth of my first child, I got an insane passion to go for what I always dreamed of,” she recalls.
Like in most cases, the internet happened. Sharing her work online drew other people in, and Holliday was commissioned to do the things she loved doing best. But the actual leap of faith into freelance work happened a while later—when she was pregnant with her second child.
“From there I’ve seen the need in the market for women, especially mothers, to be encouraged in being creative,” she notes. “I’ve also seen artists struggle with marketing and ‘selling’ their work and through my past experience and passion for art—I started teaching tips and tricks to women through Mother Creative, an online community I launched”.
These days, her clients include giants like Dove, HarperCollins, and Logitech. But her biggest audience has always remained the same: other women.
The post Jena Holliday’s Illustrations Inspire Other Women to Keep Growing appeared first on MyTrendTales.
]]>The post The Female Collective Aims to Make the World a Better Place appeared first on MyTrendTales.
]]>Through her Instagram page and website, she created a community that works together towards her worthy goal. And with almost 500k followers on Instagram alone, their voice is loud and clear. “The wonderful thing about social media is that you get to meet people around the world and you find out what they are dealing with, and with that you can be like, we’re dealing with the same things as well,” Reels explained in an interview with Who What Wear.
“I think unconsciously, I always knew I wanted it to be a community because I always felt that women together are powerful,” she added. “We are so much better working together than separately. There are so many things that separate us, but if we can use all of those things and work to equalize all playing fields for all women, it’s just much better for the world and all of us.”
Her Instagram might share funny memes and uplifting mantras that will keep you motivated, but her platform also allows for Reels to do so much more. Since forming her Female Collective, Reels has become one of the organizers for the Women’s March in Los Angeles and a speaker at the Create & Cultivate Conference in Chicago.
Join her growing community.
The post The Female Collective Aims to Make the World a Better Place appeared first on MyTrendTales.
]]>The post Jena Holliday’s Illustrations Inspire Other Women to Keep Growing appeared first on MyTrendTales.
]]>“My work is inspired by growing up surrounded by women (4 sisters!) and finding that the beauty of our differences always made us stronger,” she writes on her personal website. Other sources of inspiration include diversity, honest motherhood, and her walk of faith (in fact, tying in with her faith, her studio/brand is named Spoonful of Faith).
According to Holliday, her creative spirit blossomed at an early age, but having grown up she put her love of art aside, launching first a career in marketing. “I have always been creative,” she shared in an interview with Creative Lady Collective. “From a young age, I would sketch comic strips and draw people I did life with. I never took it too seriously until after I finished college with a degree in marketing.”
But returning to her original passion was only a matter of time. For Holliday, it was motherhood that reignited her interest in art and illustration. “I decided that I wasn’t really doing what I loved to do, and then after the birth of my first child, I got an insane passion to go for what I always dreamed of,” she recalls.
Like in most cases, the internet happened. Sharing her work online drew other people in, and Holliday was commissioned to do the things she loved doing best. But the actual leap of faith into freelance work happened a while later—when she was pregnant with her second child.
“From there I’ve seen the need in the market for women, especially mothers, to be encouraged in being creative,” she notes. “I’ve also seen artists struggle with marketing and ‘selling’ their work and through my past experience and passion for art—I started teaching tips and tricks to women through Mother Creative, an online community I launched”.
These days, her clients include giants like Dove, HarperCollins, and Logitech. But her biggest audience has always remained the same: other women.
The post Jena Holliday’s Illustrations Inspire Other Women to Keep Growing appeared first on MyTrendTales.
]]>The post The Female Collective Aims to Make the World a Better Place appeared first on MyTrendTales.
]]>Through her Instagram page and website, she created a community that works together towards her worthy goal. And with almost 500k followers on Instagram alone, their voice is loud and clear. “The wonderful thing about social media is that you get to meet people around the world and you find out what they are dealing with, and with that you can be like, we’re dealing with the same things as well,” Reels explained in an interview with Who What Wear.
“I think unconsciously, I always knew I wanted it to be a community because I always felt that women together are powerful,” she added. “We are so much better working together than separately. There are so many things that separate us, but if we can use all of those things and work to equalize all playing fields for all women, it’s just much better for the world and all of us.”
Her Instagram might share funny memes and uplifting mantras that will keep you motivated, but her platform also allows for Reels to do so much more. Since forming her Female Collective, Reels has become one of the organizers for the Women’s March in Los Angeles and a speaker at the Create & Cultivate Conference in Chicago.
Join her growing community.
The post The Female Collective Aims to Make the World a Better Place appeared first on MyTrendTales.
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