Interview: Louise Seymour, paper engineer
Louise Seymour (aka Paperlou) has been fascinated with all things paper since she first encountered coloured squares and Clag at the age of five. After pursuing a career in medical science, she was drawn back to her papery passion and now shares her well-honed paper engineering skills at workshops and classes through her business Paperlab.
What drew you to becoming a paper crafter?
I'm not sure I have a typical customer as i work with a variety of industries spanning retail, design, architecture and community groups. Most times my customers want to execute an idea or project in an innovative way and so we sit and chat about how creating something physical through paper will help bring their message to life.
What does a typical day involve for you? A typical day for me is morning breakfast with my little girl followed by story time and a bit of play. Sometimes she comes with me to catch up with a client over coffee to discuss an idea or collaboration. If it is just us we might go for a stroll around the city or to the local park before she settles down for a nap after lunch. I then dedicate a few hours to my creative pursuits with Paperlab and respond to any pending emails. I try to create synergy and balance between home life and business life as much as possible and I find by doing this neither of them end up feeling like work (*most of the time!)
What has been your proudest career achievement to date?
Most recently I worked closely with the marketing team at Westfield Fountain Gate to create close to 200 paper flowers for their Autumn/Winter campaign. I filled three separate Visual Merchandising cabinets located within the shopping centre with a variety of paper flowers in a gorgeous colour palette of dusty pink, burgundy and black and I suspended two giant paper flowers in there as well. This project was the result of months of planning, prototyping and hand-cut paper crafting into the wee hours in the lead up to the install. I'm really happy with the finished result and the project pushed me creatively and allowed me to take on a challenge that was fulfilling both artistically and personally.
What's the best piece of advice you've been given?
Just start. If you wait for conditions to be just perfect you'll never get anything done.
What are your plans for the future?
Future plans include to keep pushing myself in my creative pursuits and continue to find new ways to innovate with paper design. I'd love to be able to create larger scale interactive work and have some things in the pipeline to hopefully bring this to light.
What do you see as a benefit of being a CWC member?
I love to be inspired by other creative and empowering women and I think CWC offers the perfect forum to connect and engage with strong females who support each other's businesses.