Hello!
I’m Miriam…
I’m a mama, artist and multidisciplinary designer living in the wonderful city of Copenhagen, Denmark.
I love to create, explore both nature and city alike and play with my son every day.
I have a passion for sharing what I know and inspiring others to fill their lives with creativity and playfulness.
Personality:
Q: WHAT FRIENDS SAY ABOUT ME?
A: Funny, supportive and a creative Pippi Longstocking.
Q: WHAT I SAY ABOUT ME?
A: Pragmatic, optimistic and all-round creative.
Q: INTROVERT OR EXTROVERT?
A: Ambivert!
Q: NIGHT OWL OR EARLY BIRD?
A: Neither! :)
This or That:
Q: MOUNTAINS OR OCEAN?
A: MOUNTAINS
Q: CHICKEN OR TOFU?
A: TOFU
Q: PENCIL OR IPAD
A: PENCIL
Q: JEANS OR STRETCHY PANTS
A: STRETCH PANTS
Currently:
COOKING
THE AUTUMN GLOW SALAD
READING
THE ARTISAN SOUL
LISTENING TO
HABITS OF A HIGH PERFORMER
BINGE WATCHING
OUTLANDER
My favorites:
BEING HOME
FLOWERS
GARDENING
OATMILK LATTES
CROSSFIT
PLANT BASED COOKING
SNUGGLING
PLANTS
HIKING
The journey so far…
Childhood Creativity & Grandma
When I was a child, I would make paper dolls, sew and build things for my barbie dolls, make flower wreaths and much more. Anything I could do that involved my hands creating something. I loved to paint and draw. I remember once, when I was around 10 years old, I drew vampire mermaids (I know, innovative right?) which turned out to be my first non-paid commission project, when my classmates suddenly asked me to draw them some too. That popularity lasted one or two days, but still.
My grandparents were my the main protagonists and supporters of my creative endeavors. Especially my grandmother. She would let me play with her box of buttons and fabrics and teach me how to sew, knit and crochet. She would make homemade salt dough for me to create figures with and my grandfather would mount them on wooden plaques and hang them on the wall.
Soap Bubble Queen & Multi-Designer
To support myself through yet another bachelor and a master degree, I landed the best student job ever at a science museum called Experimentarium. That would add soap bubble queen and later exhibition designer to the resume.
At Design School I had the opportunity to try out other disciplines than industrial design, which was my entry point. I did all I could to soak up as much as I could during those 5 years. It resulted in me knitting a chair with giant knitting needles, making soft wooden pillows, creating a forest theme for a cupcake café, and a lot of other random fun projects. I discovered my joy of play and curiosity. And above all, learning new crafts and techniques. But at first I didn’t know what I would use it all for. The chaos of not having just one focus wasn’t in tune with my pragmatic side and I didn’t know how to “sell” myself, not fitting in to any box in the design field.
Munich Years & Nursing School
At the age of 19, I tried getting into designschool, but I had no clue of what I was doing, so after the rejection letter I decided to go live with my then boyfriend Munich. From there I started nursing school in Denmark so it was a lot of back and forth between the two countries. In the end I ended up, horizons widened, leaving Germany behind to finish my nursing degree. But during the last couple of semesters could feel that I would burn out quickly in that line of work.
The suppressed creative side was eating me up inside, so I had my first big soul search, ended up taking the admission test to designschool again and got straight in. Turns out I had matured by then and developed quite a few observational and ideation skills through nursing school.
Teacher & Pattern Play
I tried my hand at many things to get where I am today. For years I had a side hustle as a maker, creating things on my lasercutter. I took on many different design opportunities that came my way, working for others doing packaging, interior design, furniture, etc. At one point I ended up in teaching design and creativity and I’ve stayed in that realm, going on 10 years now.
Now the journey has transitioned into surface pattern design while maintaining my desire to help others get in touch with their creative side in more tactile crafts. I embrace my multifaceted creativity and try to always keep at least one foot out of the box.