You know what I loved about being a teacher? The one thing that absolutely fired me up and never got old? Bulletin boards. I was the first grade teacher that fell in love with bulletin boards long before I ever had my own classroom. As a child, I loved the stacks of colored construction paper in my third grade teacher’s closet and the way they magically transformed into a beautiful scene on our walls overnight. At 16 I started working at a preschool center, and it wasn’t long until the owner was paying my sister and I to come in extra and decorate the lobby with seasonal and thematic murals made from cut paper. In college, our education professors actually graded us on our bulletin board creations, and by then they were these elaborate 3-D projects.
And then I had my own classroom, and I was the teacher that found pure bliss in having a room filled with 24 students, the floor covered in construction paper, and the children running to the hallway eager to place their creations on our bulletin board. Whenever the week was feeling a little too long, you know what we did? Art Day.
I was the teacher that found value in teaching my first graders how to cut, glue, trace, follow step-by-step directions, collaborate, and negotiate amongst themselves. I loved the sense of pride that they developed when they marched into the hallway and pointed out their handiwork to their peers. I loved the wonder and the exclamations of “WOW!” when they turned the corner and saw their hard work come together in a beautiful creation. I loved the sense of ownership that was fostered, and the little community that grew from our Art Days. I loved the way that from those bright squares of construction paper, a fun & whimsical scene was born that really pushed their imaginations while brightening up the bare cinder block walls of our school.
So, yeah. Bulletin boards.
But what does that have to do with photography?
Well, yesterday I spent the entire day crafting. The floor of the studio was covered in tiny paper hearts. I was up and down a ladder, hanging fishing line from the ceiling for my next studio set up. At one point I had to hang up the phone because of what can only be described as a “tissue paper explosion”.
The past two weeks have been spent hand-painting frames, giving a vintage high chair new life, creating a dreamy Christmas bed, drawing Thing 1 and Thing 2 from Dr. Seuss’s books, and prepping for a cake smash. I make more trips to AC Moore in one month than I do to the gas station, and my collection of upcoming projects for the winter months just keeps growing.
Pure bliss.
I feel so fortunate to enjoy a job that I can do with such passion, weaving together all of the things that I love: creating, storytelling, and working with babies & children.
My husband came home from work yesterday and told me about this meeting and that meeting, these customers, this paperwork… And I told him about the floating hearts in our Valentine’s set up, the Dr. Seuss backdrop for the next baby boy’s cake smash, and the styrofoam cake I’ll be making tomorrow (more on that later) for one sweet little boy.
So while I may not be a teacher anymore, I’m happy to see that the one thing I have always loved is still a huge part of my day-to-day life. After all, when you do what you love, it doesn’t feel like work.
Here’s to many more playful days spent crafting and creating.