Labor Day 2009: Sandy Sheets for a Greater Good—

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I do not like sand in my bed.

I do like crisp clean sheets, multiple throw pillows, and a dust ruffle. All of these items must perfectly coordinate with both with the comforter, and (obviously) with each other.

To make my world complete there should also be an afghan that offers not only a pop of color, but a soft place under which to read an interesting book.

My friends all know this about me.

So in 2009 when I decided that my husband Tim and I should take our 6-year old son camping over Labor Day weekend, I received some shocked reactions. Especially from Tim, who had already known me for almost two decades by then. Two decades in which I never once suggested giving up my bed or my throw pillows. Even for just one night.

I remember that my life-long friend Mary, who is also an ardent lover of crisp, clean sheets (as well as all things practical) found this idea of camping to be incongruous with the friend she knew from Milwaukee. This same surprised reaction seemed to be the general consensus with all those from back home who heard about my idea. My idea to use our son’s new two-person tent for a camping trip that included three people.

I wasn’t trying to shock people.

All I wanted, was to spend Labor Day weekend at “The Beach.” The beach which I had heard so much of since moving to South Carolina in November, 2008.

For most of a year, I listened as various acquaintances would say things like “we’re going to ‘The Beach’ this weekend.” Or proclaiming my girlfriends and I are spending spring break at ‘The Beach’ together with all the kids.” Or yawning, as they stated: “We just got back from a week at ‘The Beach’ and boy are we ever exhausted!'”

“What Beach? Did they all go to the same place? Was this ‘Beach’ really large enough to contain all the people I know who had went there? Didn’t South Carolina have more than one beach? It seemed like they would, as an entire side of the state borders the ocean.” These were all questions that nagged in the back of my mind for months.

Curiousity finally triumphed over the fear of sounding ignorant. So I began to ask the obvious question: “What ‘Beach’ exactly, are you referring to?”

It was as if I had asked what brand of tissues they preferred to use. “Kleenex?” “Puffs?” “Seventh Generation?” “Genuine Joe Facial Tissues? ‘Genuine Joe?’ Who really cares what brand you use? Nobody. It is just what you use to wipe your tears and blow your nose. The kind you always use. Because that is what you’ve always used.

“Which ‘Beach’ did you go to?” was obviously unspoken information, needing no clarification in traditional Southern conversation. After I would drop the “Which Beach?” bombshell, I was always given a polite, yet somewhat perplexed response. Which I then immediately followed up with question two: “Is this your favorite beach?”

Judging from the across-the-board reaction to my Inquiring Minds Want to Know! type interest in their beach preference, it appeared as if this question of favorite beach was something they had never given any thought to. It was just their family’s Kleenex beach.

It pays to ask questions.

Thanks to my inquisitive nature, and fearless questioning that spanned many months — I pieced together that there are MANY beaches inside the walls of South Carolina, each with distinct personalities.

I also discovered  that some of these beaches were located inside State Parks which offered camping along the water.

By WATER I mean Ocean. And by OCEAN, I mean the place we used to spend hours flying to, leaving the Northern comforts of our first world country only to be stacked like sardines inside a mediocre hotel with a distant view of the ocean (or sometimes parking lot.) All to be warm. But even more importantly, to sleep near the water.

This was game-changing information. Information I accidentally stumbled upon while looking at the South Carolina Parks website.

“Seriously? You can camp right beside ‘The Beach’?? The same beach that is touching the Atlantic Ocean?”

These were questions I spoke out loud with an open-mouthed reverence to my iMac computer. (The iMac G4 that sat on a round base, and had a 17″ screen that swiveled 180 degrees and went up and down on a long silver arm. The same iMac G4 that is sitting in a box in my attic because it is way too cool to part with.)

I’m obviously not from here.

Looking back, none of these beach-vacationing acquaintances were visiting “The Beach” in a two-person tent with three people. They were staying in condos, or beach homes. Usually ones that had been in their families for a while. That was great for them, but didn’t help me out at all.

My family lives in a state called Wisconsin. A state much closer to Canada than Florida, so going to “The Beach” was not part of our family history. But on the very rare occasion that somebody we did know went South, they were always sure to boast of exactly where it was they were going. “We are going to Disney!” “We are going to Sanibel Island!” “We are going to Clearwater Beach!” “We are going to Sarasota!” This was big news. This was something special.

They wanted us to know exactly where they were going. And we all wanted to know. That way we could live vicariously through them while they were gone, already knowing and appreciating the origin of their newly darkened complexion upon their return home to the North.

My history with camping.

Camping actually was part of my childhood, but it was mostly at my grandparents trailer which stayed at one location all year long. This “camping” happened at the trailer which they drove to every Friday afternoon and drove home from every Sunday afternoon. All summer long. For decades. Upgrading their experience as the years flew by.

By the time I joined their fun, I’m not sure it could truthfully be classified as “camping” anymore. It was simply spending the weekend with my grandparents at their nice outdoor home on wheels which included a TV, shower, and full kitchen. It also included a shed that housed both a lawn mower and a full-sized refrigerator stocked with a wide assortment of drinks and delicious foods.

By this stage in their lives, the camping trailer had an attached screened porch which was lined outside by a bed of lush flowers that my grandma planted every Memorial Day weekend each year. In the screen porch, I would eat the scrambled eggs and shrimp salad my grandma would make for me in her kitchen on these “camping” weekends. In the screen porch, I could enjoy the beauty of the outdoors yet stay clean and bug-free.

In the screen porch, I had yet another space in my childhood to rest in unconditional love. A place to soften the transition into my early teenage years. A priceless gift that allowed me the freedom to become the free spirit I am today. Camping with my grandparents allowed me a place to breathe. A place to get away from whatever it is that pre-teens are burdened with. A place to be loved and nurtured for who I was, not for what I did.

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Camping is where I fell in love with South Carolina.

If it weren’t for the two-person tent we had given Nathan for his 6th birthday, I may have never been to some of the magical places we’ve found along the coast of South Carolina. Places that weren’t brought up in the same context of “The Beach” I first heard about back in 2009. Places without hotels. Places that allowed camping on the edge of the continent.

Over the next several years we camped at two of the most enchanting places I have ever been: Edisto Beach State Park and Hunting Island State Park. Some of my favorite beach paintings are ones that were inspired by visits to both of these two State Parks.

Our two-person tent weekend for three was where I became fascinated by South Carolina’s beauty. An intangible beauty I still never grow tired of trying to emulate through my paintings of places which have caught my artist’s eye. Our two-person tent weekend was the beginning of a whole new genre of landscape paintings which I continue to work on, even to this day.

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I’m still not much for “real” camping.

What I am for, is the way the salty air and wide open spaces of the Low Country have a way of breathing life back into my often weary mind and tired body. What I am also for, is the way that camping takes you away from everything in your real life that seemed so pressing and important before you left home. Things that can wait. Things you won’t even remember when you look back five or six years later at your camping photos. Wondering what stole away all those in-between years from me?

Why did we ever stop camping?

My first store opened up in the fall of 2012 and there was no time left over for fun. No margin in my life which could allow me the ability to overlook sleeping with sand. No margin to step outside of life’s comforts for the greater good of myself and my family. This is not a healthy way to live. Which is why I stopped doing something which people said they loved. Something I was pretty good at too.

Even though I knew how to make a store look really beautiful, it was not what I loved. Or needed. Or what my family needed. I am still trying to listen to what my next steps are, but am confident they must include something which allows for more mental space in my life. Something that energizes me enough so I can embrace opportunities that require sandy sheets for a greater good.

Labor Day 2015

My store is closed and my brain is unwinding. After three years of distraction, I am free again to explore South Carolina’s Lowcountry. Free to be spellbound by her loveliness; mesmerized by her glimmering marshes and lulled by her gentle waves.

Despite my steadfast Lowcountry fascination, I’m still not yet quite ready to be sleeping with sand in my sheets. But now that my head and my heart are slowly beginning to defrost, I can start to feel the itch for adventure returning.

SEPTEMBER 2015 Desktop Calendar

SALT MARSH PATH • ©2010 Marie Scott Studios [ Click on this image to download and use a free desktop calendar for the month of September. Enjoy your view of Edisto Beach State Park! ]

September 2015

Everyone can benefit from a new view from time to time. If you haven’t seen my downloadable monthly calendars yet, here is the most recent addition to my desktop calendar collection — September, 2015.

So if you like the view from Edisto Beach State Parkenjoy this copy of my Lowcountry painting called “Salt Marsh Path” with my blessing.

May it remind you this month, that stepping outside of your comfort zone will sometimes open up a whole new world of wonder. (Just be careful not to step out too far. You may find yourself stepping off the edge of the continent.)

With a defrosting heart,
Marie Scott

www.mariescottstudios.com

Jumping off the Hamster Wheel

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Snapshots from my reentry into sanity, as three years of retail frenzy comes to an end…

Today is Day 25 since we closed up my store. What seemed like a straightforward idea, has actually turned out to be much cloudier than I would ever have imagined.

I don’t think I realized how wound up I actually was. Or how out of whack my life had become.
I did not expect that Jumping off the Hamster Wheel would create such a big bruise when I finally landed.

As I acclimate myself to a new climate of tranquility, several moments have confirmed to me that I might actually like living on solid ground.

Here are a few photos that capture my recent “Aha moments.”

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Aha Moment #1 at the Tennessee Border: “Hey…this is all so very beautiful. I need to take a photo of these flowers!”

Driving to DC with my two homeboys. August 8 – 15, 2015 was the first weeklong sightseeing vacation the three of us have ever taken together. Without so many mental burdens weighing me down, my brain had time to notice again, and my eyes were captivated by this beautiful planter of flowers set in front of the rolling mountains. Thank you, Tennessee for the warm welcome at your lovely rest area.

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Aha Moment #2: “Why is there STILL a dead plant in this jar when I have the power to make a simple change that will improve the looks of the situation?”

Spending ten minutes selecting the “perfect” new succulent. Over the past few years there were times when this jar flourished, but in the last six months it was sorely neglected. Last week it occurred to me that I did not need to have a dead plant in my house. So during my next visit to the store, I went to the garden center and spent what felt like a LONG time pondering which plant would be the MOST perfect for my jar. I doubt it was more than ten minutes, but still — it felt quite extravagant to give this minor home-improvement-initiative so much of my time.

Once the “big decision” was made, it only took about two minutes to remove the dead plant and insert the new. Every day since, I’ve been happy I took time to make this simple change. It was time well spent. For both the plant AND me.

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Aha Moment #3: “Look at the sun shining through the cloud of steam. I love how the dark shadows allow me to see something I would never otherwise notice.”

Breathing in… and breathing out… has never smelled so good. Did you know it only takes about 25 seconds to make your kitchen smell like lemons? [Or peppermints, or even lemons/peppermints. For an entire EIGHT hours.] Who would have thought? Thank you, DoTERRA! I love all of your essential oils,and especially love your  “Aroma Lite Diffuser.” 

Thank you, Sunshine for filtering into my kitchen every afternoon, helping to brighten my spirits when my heart feels cloudy.

umbrella

Aha Moment #4: “I have a lot to be thankful for — I love my umbrella. I love the rain. I love the sun casting reflections into puddles. I love NOT driving through a monsoon.”

Waiting for the rain to pass. Who does this? A person who does NOT have a store does this! aka ME. 🙂 

I went INTO Publix as a sprinkle of rain had just begun. I then came OUT of Publix, only 15 minutes later, to find a Monsoon had descended from the mountaintop.

After my moment of unhappy surprise slowly passed over, it occurred to me that I could actually stay and wait for the real storm to pass over too. So I did. My best moments of that day were spent watching the rain blow sideways from under the safety of a dry awning.

I even made a few friends who also did not want to drive through a Monsoon. And then by the time I got home — the sun was out again. A good day.

2 new paintings

Aha Moment #5″ (AFTER I had spent the day drawing these photos onto the two canvasses in the background): “Hey… look how the compositions of these two paintings will be similar, yet in complete contrast to each other! The photo on the left has an upper and lower triangle that meet in the middle and form two opposing vertical triangles. The photo on the right has side two triangles that converge in the middle and form a horizontal diamond. How cool is that! Serendipity… or possibly Intuition?”

Fighting an uphill battle to ignore distractions. No wonder I moved out of my home studio four years ago! Without any pressing deadlines, it is oh-so-temping to do everything besides work on these two paintings I started last week.

Oh well. At least for now, my house is feeling back in order and becoming a beautiful place. No sense in torturing myself over self-imposed random deadlines. At least not this month, as I work towards Staying OFF the Hamster Wheel. (September might be another story.)

roost

Aha Moment #6: “I need a photo of this funky sign. A photo to remind me of the delightful patio lunch I just spent with my favorite person in the entire world. How exceedingly lucky I am to be married to Tim. Very, very lucky.”

Putting things into perspective; celebrating 22 years of a happy life. Together.

“…Along the way, we found happiness we never knew existed. We saw hopes and dreams come true…”  — from the card I gave my husband on our 22nd anniversary last Friday.

When choosing the card, as I read about “dreams coming true,” I burst into tears that filled the Walgreens aisle. Initial tears of sadness for a dream that had ended. But within seconds, they turned into tears of overwhelming gratitude.

Tim and I have been participants in countless hopes and dreams which HAVE come true. And we’ve also seen other dreams NOT pan out. But regardless of either outcome we’ve done it Together, and have stayed in it Together. In spite of our sinful, selfish, wicked hearts — we have somehow managed to not only still love each other, we still LIKE each other.

This is God’s unmerited blessing upon our lives.

Of all the hopes and dreams I’ve ever had, or ever will have, Our Happy Life Together is by far my MOST important dream come true above all.

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For now, as I sift through the sometimes cloudy next steps of my artist’s life, I am thankful for a faithful partner to help me sort it all out.

Stay tuned as our story continues to reveal itself.

With a thankful heart,
Marie Scott

www.mariescottstudios.com

The Sunflower Story: Our Final Chapter

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 Sunflower is now packed up and moved out.

While the memories are still fresh in my mind, I wanted to document the final days of our time in this special space we called “Sunflower.”

The cupboards are bare.

The cupboards are bare. It is time to move on to our next adventure.

Although the final chapter at this location has ended…

We have many NEW stories to begin!

Sunflower's last chapter closed on Friday, July 31, 2015.

Sunflower’s location at 110 S. Main Street closed on Friday, July 31, 2015.

Thank you Sunflower friends, for creating such an interesting and beautiful memory.

Our moving sale was an incredible hit. For three full weeks in July we were “Christmas Season” busy, saying goodbye to so many wonderful friends and customers. Although our last day was a Tuesday, we still had people coming in on Thursday to shop the remnants of what was left. The sale craze put us behind on our packing schedule, but we were grateful for each and everyone of you. Thanks for your help in clearing out the place!

Scenes from the final pages in this particular Sunflower story.

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All in all, it was a very happy ending.

What are the chances I would find a book on our shelves with the title “BEYOND THIS PLACE?”

What is next for Sunflower “BEYOND THIS PLACE?”

Stay tuned as our story begins to unfold.

With a grateful heart,
Marie Scott

www.mariescottstudios.com

Thank you, Sunflower Friends (12 months of memories)

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Three sunflowers… each looking back on a year full of priceless memories.

Looking back on the fullest year of my life.

Many, MANY thanks are in order. Many, MANY people have become good friends of Sunflower! 

The primary people I would like to thank are the members of The Sunflower Team since the opening of our store in July 2014.

Kyleincolor

Kyle

Without Kyle’s hard work, we could have never gotten Sunflower opened. Her amazing artistic talents are endless. She used so many of them to help create the beautiful store that Sunflower eventually blossomed into. Her faithful service running the shop full-time, helped keep Sunflower open in the early days as I struggled to keep my head above water with all the behind the scenes work that consumed me for months.

hollyinpink

Holly

A helper and leader. She never minded taking charge of any situation when I was more focussed on painting. The perfect hostess. A gracious friend. Responsible for matting prints, sewing towels, climbing up high to hang things, decorating, and all around good sense. Many crazy ideas were stopped thanks to her gentle voice of reason. Many tears were dried this last year as she was a safe sounding board for the future of Sunflower.

 Dorisinred

Doris

The world’s best mother-in-law. Out of a loving and generous heart, this already-busy woman ran the Sunflower shop on Friday afternoons throughout November and December. She did this as a favor — to give me a break, and to help us keep our expenses to a minimum. She even worked some Saturdays in the midst of her other two jobs and busy social (and exercise) life. 🙂 She definitely IS the world’s best mother-in-law, and also a great friend.

hannah J

Hannah J.

Her time with us short, but sweet — giving us a precious few weeks of her winter break while she was home from college. But if it wasn’t for Hannah J., I wouldn’t have realized how capable a staff of young women could be.

hannah

Hannah

This sweet young lady walked in one sunny January day and asked for a job… just as Hannah J. was heading back to school. Our Hannah’s gentle spirit and unbridled excitement were always such a breath of fresh air. Left to run the shop by herself for many days on end, this dependable young lady restored my faith in humanity. I am so grateful to have had her in my life and in my store. She is going to do great things.

savannah

Savannah

If Sunflower continues to grow throughout the decades, we will gladly put Savannah in charge of the entire operation. God couldn’t have given us a more perfect completion to the Sunflower team. She too walked in during January asking for a job. None were available, but something about her was irresistible. Adding Savannah to the team was one of the year’s best decisions. She got our social media kick-started, and then grew it to a new level of warmth and professionalism. Savannah was such a blessing in my life these last seven months. She ran the store with a confidence and knowledge of both our products and my fine art that were well beyond her years. Watch out world!

My wonderfully TALENTED husband Tim built Sunflower for me (while our wonderfully PATIENT son kept himself occupied for months.)

Tim

Husband of 20-plus years. My CFO, lead carpenter, and breakfast maker. Builder of all things functional and beautiful, all of which are still in tact at 110 S. Main Street. Extravagantly generous, supportive, and always my “eye of the storm.” Sunflower’s biggest champion despite the cost to his own comfort. Never wanting to be a killer of my dreams, and never once complaining in 15 months — Tim left the decision of whether or not to continue our retail operation entirely up to me — even though the math had never added up.

karen

Our Customers!

Even though I spent most days working in either my painting studio or home office while my capable staff ran the store, the Sunflower shop still developed a following of faithful customers who kept our spirits alive each and every month.

Our store hours were quite unorthodox, limited primarily by the fact that my studio was in the back and it is really necessary to paint without any interruptions. Yet as our hours grew in December, we experienced an outpouring of business and encouragement that made us think twice before closing the retail aspect of Sunflower, which was originally planned for January 1, 2015.

As our Sunflower team started to grow again in January, we expanded our hours. Still not enough retail hours to justify a location on Main Street — but You adjusted your schedules and shopped with us during the weekday afternoons and on Saturdays.

In April and May our sales really began to increase, but I knew that my heart could never be fully devoted to running a retail store the size of Sunflower. So after weeks of much praying (and crying!) we finally decided that closing this retail location was the right thing for our family to do.

On July 6, 2015 we announced the news on Facebook, thinking we might have a few extra shoppers who loved a good sale. Never imagining in our wildest dreams the support and love you would show us as we wrapped up this final chapter of The Sunflower Shop.

THANK YOU to so many of you who stopped in to thank us, and to tell us that we will be missed. We are humbled by the impact that our short presence made in our your lives. In spite of ourselves.

I am confident this is a result of God’s Grace alone. The store was more often than not, a responsibility which was completely overwhelming to me. Yet He still somehow used it to touch so many people.

We were a motley crew of Sunflower women this past year. In our weakness God took our best efforts, broken though they were, and poured Himself into us — cracks and all — so that He could bless YOU through our little store.

We have loved being a vessel that God used to impact lives of people we would have never otherwise crossed paths with.

SUNFLOWER PATH • ©2011 Marie Scott Studios. Inspired by the Beechwood Farms sunflower field, located most years on Hwy 414.

SUNFLOWER PATH • ©2011 Marie Scott Studios. Inspired by the Beechwood Farms sunflower field, located most years on Hwy. 414.

We do look forward to crossing paths again!

Hopefully sooner rather than later.

12 months of memories…

The fullest year of my life, wrapped up in a few photos.

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Thank you, Sunflower Friends!

Thank you for all of your LOVE and SUPPORT this past year. We couldn’t have done it without you.

We look forward to making many new memories together in the future. Follow us on Facebook to keep in touch with our upcoming plans!

Gratefully,
Marie Scott

www.mariescottstudios.com

The first day of the rest of my life! [ August 2015 Calendar ]

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SUNFLOWER FLAME • 40 inch x 30 inch painting • ©2013 Marie Scott

SUNFLOWER FLAME • 40 inch x 30 inch painting • ©2013 Marie Scott

We closed my Sunflower shop last night.

For the last time.

July was a bitter-sweeet month.

One dream ended, so a new dream could be born.

I am happy. But very, very tired.

Next week I will post photos.

Today is Saturday.

The first Saturday since July, 2014 that I wasn’t in charge of anything. The first Saturday since April, 2014 that I was doing manual labor.

I am going to the Farmer’s Market now. To buy some tomatoes. Like a normal person person would do on a Saturday! 🙂

See you next week…

With photos from the craziest, best, worst, most creative, most draining, most interesting year of my life — to date.

Oh, I almost forgot!

The August calendar for your computer!

Click here to read the story behind this painting. It describes just ONE of the MANY reasons I am looking forward to The First Day of The Rest of My Life!

TABLE ROCK • 30 inch x 40 inch original oil painting • ©2015 Marie Scott    [Click on the image to download and enjoy this calendar for your desktop during the month of August!]

TABLE ROCK • 30 inch x 40 inch original oil painting • ©2015 Marie Scott [Click on the image to download and enjoy this calendar for your desktop during the month of August!]

Warmly,
Marie Scott!

To see the entire collection of my paintings visit my online gallery at www.mariescottstudios.com

Our Grocery Store Beautification Project (The making of Sunflower – part 2)

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A photo diary:

How “Sunflower” was born last summer…

My husband Tim and I love to take old places and make them new.

We normally do this to neglected houses, but last year we did it to an old grocery store.

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We found this fireplace at a funky place in Moonville, SC called “Old House Salvage.” Later in the project, this fireplace mantel became a more permanent-looking addition to the store — thanks to Tim’s carpentry talent.

It took a couple months, and added more than a couple of gray hairs to our head.

But the results were worth it. The town’s old Winn Dixie was now the town’s newest art gallery and gift shop.

After a longer labor than originally expected, Sunflower came to life on July, 10, 2014!

Here are photos of our “labor of love.” Thank goodness we had the help of several faithful friends!

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SUnflower Done!

A photo from Sunflower in full bloom. May 11, 2015.

Our job here is almost done.

Now that the old grocery is back to life, its time for us to move on to making something else more beautiful.

Beginning in August, another locally-owned store called “Goose Feathers” is going to take what we’ve started, and build on it. And while Goose Feathers is expanding into a larger space — starting in August, Sunflower is going to go back and focus on what we do best. Creating beautiful places, spaces, and WORKS OF ART.

So what’s next for Sunflower?

Could it be ANOTHER fixer-upper project is in our very near future? Stay tuned for the exciting details…

The Home Stretch. (Why wasn’t I home sleeping?)

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October 29, 2011 at 7:38 am. I took this photo of the Spinx Run as it was happening outside my studio in downtown Greenville, SC. Why wasn't I running in this? Or better yet, why wasn't I hope sleeping?? :)

October 29, 2011 at 7:38 am. I took this photo of the Spinx Marathon as it ran my painting studio in downtown Greenville, SC. What was I doing at work on a Saturday morning? Why wasn’t I running in the 5K? Or better yet, WHY wasn’t I home SLEEPING?!!

The Home Stretch. 

Definition: “The last part of a long or difficult activity.”

We are starting to wrap up our final days at The Sunflower Gift Shop this week. It has been “a long and difficult activity” to say the least. But we wouldn’t trade the experience for anything.

As this marathon season of experimenting with a retail business comes to a close for me, I am looking forward to getting back to what I do best.

Creating beautiful works of art.

Oh, how I’m longing for the day when I’ll want to stop and take notice of the sounds, smells, and sights I having been rushing past by every day for the last 14 months. It has been too long.

I am counting the hours until my brain has room to breathe again.

Just a few more days…then a a few weeks of rest.

THEN, the fun will begin again!

Doing what I love best. Creating beautiful works of art.

UNTIL then, I will continue to “Breathe In.” And “Breathe Out,

BREATHE IN • 36 inch x 36 inch original oil painting • ©2015 Marie Scott

BREATHE IN • 36 inch x 36 inch original oil painting • ©2015 Marie Scott

BREATHE OUT • 36 inch x 36 inch original oil painting • ©2015 Marie Scott

BREATHE OUT • 36 inch x 36 inch original oil painting • ©2015 Marie Scott

“This too shall pass.”

SUNFLOWER is CHANGING! The end of a 3 year experiment comes to a close.

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Sunflower is MOVING on.

We will be CLOSING our retail location at 110 S. Main Street at the end of July.

[Or sooner… just depending on how long our inventory hangs around!] Follow us on Facebook for details of our hours and SALES which are happening all month!

It has been a wonderful, wild ride.

“It has been a wonderful, wild ride. Thank you, Travelers Rest for your support over the last 3 years!” — The Sunflower Shop

Another beautiful store is MOVING in.

We hope you will give them a warm welcome, as we are confident they will make great use of the space. 

We wish continued success to all the Main Street small businesses in Travelers Rest.

We wish continued success to all the Main Street small businesses in Travelers Rest.

Sunflower is changing, but Travelers Rest artist Marie Scott will continue to keep PAINTING.

Marie Scott’s Sunflower Studio will continue to operate in a NEW Travelers Rest location, and will be open in November as part of the Greenville Open Studios tour!

[Or maybe even sooner… stay tuned for details!]

I am not sure what is behind the next door. Whatever the door is, I just hope it has cute knobs.

“I am not quite yet sure what is behind the next door for me, but whatever the door looks like, I really just hope it has beautiful knobs.” — Sunflower artist Marie Scott

How we fixed up a Grocery Store last May. (Photos of our 2-week painting party.)

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Happy Birthday, Sunflower!

One year ago TODAY we opened up the Sunflower Gift Shop & Gallery.

TODAY seems a fitting occasion to post photos I’ve been saving from “Phase 1” of our big Grocery Store Beautification Project last spring.

Who would have thought we could turn the old Travelers Rest “Winn Dixie” into the uplifting place that Sunflower evolved into over the course of many months. We could not have done it without the help of all our friends and family!

Lell Building, May 2013. A boxing gym was using the space that Sunflower later moved in to.

Lell Building, May 2013. Countless residents of Travelers Rest have told us that our space used to be the Winn-Dixie when they were growing up at least 50 years ago.

 May 2013

The entire building was a little lonely-looking in 2013. But for all the years I had passed by, there was still something about this building that was intriguing to me. Who would have ever thought I would have moved in and filled up the enormous space with my own retail store?

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May 2014: Our big DIY endeavor began

It had never been our intent to paint the walls and floors ourselves, but we couldn’t get any professional painters to return our calls. The organic floor paint needed 10 days to dry before we could put any furniture down, and we were running out of time with the lease at my store called “Home Color” ending on May 31st.

So we toughed it out and painted the entire place ourselves — with the help of some friends, and especially our amazingly helpful parents.

Looking back on the photos, it still makes me feel exhausted to think of all the hours we poured into first just changing the color of the floors and wall. But it was worth it, to make the space come to life.

DYI has been the normal course of our marriage for the past 20+ years anyway, so this seemed the more fitting (AND cost-effective) way to roll.

How lucky I am to be married to somebody who not only enjoys working hard to take something old and make it new, but is also quite skilled at it. Tim is irreplaceable!

Sunflower is located at 110. Main Street, Travelers Rest, SC 29690

Sunflower is located at 110. Main Street, Travelers Rest, SC 29690

One year ago today, on July 10, 2014 — this old grocery store came back to life!

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Sunflower!
You HAVE helped to make many lives more beautiful during this past year.

Heading towards my own INDEPENDENCE DAY…

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Four years ago…
I moved my home painting studio to a space in downtown Greenville, SC.

Looking for affirmation that my work had meaning.

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Three years ago…
I moved my painting studio to downtown Travelers Rest, SC and opened up a small gift shop.

Looking for a space to work, and a place to sell my art.

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Two years ago… we sold our home and bought one half the size.

Looking for a simpler life (and a yard full of winter-blooming Camellias.)

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One year ago… I moved my small gift shop into a bigger space that was five times the size.

Looking for a way to grow my business and help our little town flourish.

What was I thinking?

It sounded like a good idea at the time. But alas, it was not for me.

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One month from today…
I will be a FREE woman!

Looking to define myself as who “I am.” Not what “I do.”

FREE to remember what it feels like to not have the weight of the world pressing down upon me.

Free to breathe in, and free to breathe out.

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Free to figure out what it means “to BE” the person that God has made me to be.

“Freedom is the oxygen of the soul.” — Moshe Dayan

Sunflower is changing.

We will be CLOSING our retail location at 110 S. Main Street at the end of July. [Or sooner… just depending on how long our inventory hangs!] Follow us on Facebook for details of our hours and sales!

Marie Scott’s Sunflower Studio will continue to operate in a NEW Travelers Rest location, and will be open in November for Greenville Open Studios! [Or sooner… stay tuned for details!]