5 minute read

BRIGHT {GIFT} IDEAS

Next Article
with your wine

with your wine

Buy from neighbors and be a gift-and-goody-giving guru

The Prickly Poppy Bakery took root in July, and business already is blooming.

Lake Highlands resident Erin Van Kirk launched the home-based business with the commitment to making each dessert a custom creation. Customers can start with set flavors (such as Hazelnut Crunch or Lavender Honey) or team with her to craft the entire concept — either way, every cake or dessert is made to order.

“It’s not like I have a chocolate cake here that I’m just icing; I love that I’m making your cake with you in mind,” she says. “It’s a lot more fun for me as a baker.”

Van Kirk trained at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts and held positions at Georgetown Cupcake, Bolsa, Bolsa Mercado and Bread Winners Cafe before launching the bakery with the help of husband Grant, an accountant. Her L street neighborhood has been “really great” in supporting the new addition, and she’s opened her doors for events such as a cupcake decorating night for the Lake Highlands Area Early Childhood PTA cooking club.

With business picking up more quickly than anticipated, an expansion to an outside venue is already under consideration — not a storefront, but perhaps a kitchen with a tasting room, where visitors could nibble and discuss their dream desserts.

For now, Van Kirk is thinking about holiday cookies. Iced sugar cookies are one of her favorite offerings, and she’ll make them in seasonal shapes such as snowflakes and Santa. Other specialties include chocolatecaramel thumbprint cookies and snowball cookies (pecan shortbread covered in powdered sugar). The bakery also will offer a sugar cookie decorating kit in December, for those who want an easy way to bake and decorate their own version of iced sugar cookies.

“Something about cookies just seems right for Christmas,” she says. —Pam

Harris

Sunday

December 15th 4:00 PM at East Dallas Christian Church

Sing We Now of Christmas

East Dallas Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

629 N. Peak Street, Dallas, TX 75246 www.edcc.org

Free Admission and open seating. Donations accepted for Concert Series Fund.

EDCC Chancel Choir, Bell Choir, and Children’s Choir

EDCC Chancel Bell and Children’s Choir

“TrebleMakers” from Plano East High School

“TrebleMakers” from Plano East School

Daniel Ja zz

Daniel Pardo’s World Jazz Instrumentalists

Musicians of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra

Musicians of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra

To new mom Crispin Deneault, it seemed as if baby girls and toddlers had millions of options for clothes and accessories. The boys, though? Not so much.

The Lake Highlands resident found what she was looking for on Etsy, a digital marketplace for artists and designers, where she spotted “adorable” outfits and accessories appliqued with names and designs. Soon, she learned from her mother how to make her own outfits for son Ford, now 2.

“My mom gave me a sewing machine for my birthday, and I just started making shirts and burp cloths because I wanted something for my son,” she says. In time, she started making outfits for baby gifts, and friends suggested she try selling what she made.

Encouraged by the positive response to a Facebook posting, she opened an Etsy shop of her own, Tres Bien Boutique. There (or through her Facebook page of the same name), you’ll find ready-to-wear children’s clothes and accessories with a variety of designs and themes. She also accepts custom orders, which typically take about a week to turn around.During holidays, turnaround time is two weeks. Last year, she says, she received more than 50 orders in a single day.

The Deneault family has grown since the launch of Tres Bien Boutique. Crispin and her husband, Tyler, welcomed a little girl, Marcelle, earlier this year. The mom of two tells her shop’s visitors that she is “back from maternity leave and raring to go!” She sees her Tres Bien creations as a bit of breathing space set apart from her life as a mom.

“It’s something that’s just for me,” she says. “It’s a great outlet to do something for myself — something fun — and bring in a little extra money.” —Pam

Harris

JulieAnn Bever PINT-SIZED PRINTS

JulieAnn Bever wanted to preserve her three children’s handprints.

They were getting older, and she wanted to be able to remember the size of their sweet little hands, so she picked up an impression kit from the nearest crafting store and gave it a valiant try.

“It was such a mess,” she says. “It was hard, and it was frustrating, and the result doesn’t look good, either.”

She tried again with the same result and thought, “There has to be an easier way.”

She consulted her artist sister and found out there was: Ditch the kits and go for the real stuff — white modeling clay.

While experimenting with that, she wondered if other parents had run into similar issues, a thought that led Bever to create her business, Pint-Sized Prints.

The response from friends interested in preserving their kids’ prints was so enthusiastic that Bever determined that her business idea probably had a market in Dallas.

“So I did it with my friends first, practiced a lot and then decided to start doing it as a business.”

Through trial and error, she discovered the clay cracks if it dries too quickly, so her dad built her several airtight bins in which to keep the pieces while they dry, so they will harden without cracking.

“It really turned into a family affair,” she says, adding that her mom helped her decorate the studio and sometimes assists with the glaze or other tasks. Plus, Bever’s grandfather originally built the studio. He used it for woodworking before he died.

“It’s kind of neat that I get to work in the same space that he worked in,” she says.

The Pint-Sized Prints process: parents bring their kids by her studio, press a handprint and/or footprint (Bever says she has just about perfected the art of wheedling wiggly babies into handing over their prints), and — voila! — the parents’ job is done; Bever does the dirty work.

“And then they just get a nice, pretty impression in a box. So they get the end result, and they don’t have to deal with all the mess and the frustration.”

Her two biggest seasons are Christmas and Mother’s Day, but if people don’t want to deal with the Christmas rush, they can buy a gift certificate and book the studio visit for later. And it doesn’t have to stop at handprints. Bever also makes impressions for dog paws, thumbprints for the whole family and keys for people’s first homes.

“Now, I’m always on the lookout for what I can make an impression of,” she says. “And it’s all because I wanted to preserve my kids’ prints, because I just love the way little hands and feet look.”

—Brittany Nunn

Kyle Wood

Dutch Art Gallery

Simple, direct, a little mysterious and unexpected and evocative of pleasant memories, Kyle Wood’s paintings are of recognizable places, and in some cases, spaces that only seem familiar. Central to his depiction of the Dallas Arboretum is an aesthetic wooden door embedded in the bleached-brick wall of DeGolyer Estate, with a few potted plants lining the walkway, rather than the acres of vibrant blossoming flora, which should tell you something about his approach. He gets into the nooks and quiet spots, and it makes the observer feel like an explorer inside the scene. His specialty is historical architecture and landscapes, he notes. “From an early age I have had a keen, unique perspective.” His great aunt Mildred is to thank for fostering his juvenile artistic inclinations, he adds. Wood is a featured artist at Dutch Art Gallery in Northlake Shopping Center at Ferndale and Northwest Highway. His prints run from $150 to $3,000, and the gallery offers a variety of framing options. Wood is one of several local artists — including Laurie Justice Pace and Kay Wyne, featured in past Advocate editions — featured at Dutch Art Gallery, whose special Texas artists’ exhibition lasts through January.

—Christina Hughes Babb

This article is from: