Thursday, May 10, 2012

Wall Appeals for Mother's Day!

Wall Appeals wall decals are the perfect Mother's Day gift! Does your mom like a certain quote, flower or maybe you just think she would like her house a little more spruced up? A wall decal is an inexpensive, easy way to do something nice for her on Mother's Day. Here are some examples of our wall decals to give you an idea of what we can do!




We can still get your order in and out for Mother's Day! Call us today at 270-761-5237 or visit www.wallappeals.com for more ideas!

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

New Wall Appeal!

This brand new wall appeal is called 'In This House'. It's already very popular, we love the idea of walking in and knowing what a family is all about just by looking at the wall. The words can be customized as can the size and color. Take a look:



Look like something you want in your house? Visit www.wallappeals.com or just give us a call at 270-761-5237 and we can get your personalized 'In This House' wall decal started today!

Monday, April 2, 2012

Spring Is Here!

Spring is in full swing right now! Why not do a little redecorating with Wall Appeals wall decals? We have many designs available and can always create anything you already have in mind! Here are a few ideas for what you might want to do with your home this spring!

Beautiful French Quotation!

Fun Addition To Your Laundry Room!

Lovely Bible Quote For A Well Designed Bedroom!
Wall decals are the perfect way to do something a little different with your home this spring. They are inexpensive and much easier than painting. Visit www.wallappeals.com or give us a call at 270-761-5237 to discuss what we can design for you today!

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Wall Appeals Featured on Etsy!

Wall Appeals was recently featured in an Etsy Treasury by Glenda. It's such an honor to be recognized by fellow creators. We appreciate being involved in such a creative community like Etsy. Please go check out Glenda's 'Words To Live By' Treasury on Etsy!

http://www.etsy.com/treasury/MTA1MjY1MzF8MjM2NzQ3MTk4MQ/words-to-live-by



Monday, February 27, 2012

Pinterest Facts

Here at Wall Appeals we LOVE Pinterest. So when designtaxi.com came out with this Pinterest Infographic we just had to share it with you!

Using stats from comScore, agency Modea has created an infographic of facts about Pinterest users.

‘very Pinteresting’ states that the site has an average of 1.36 million visitors daily.

Pinterest visitors have increased by 2,702.2% since May 2011.

According to the infographic, most Pinterest users are 25 to 34-year-old women—and half of which have children.

It also states that Pinterest users spend at least 15.8 minutes on the site, most of the repinning stuff—that’s more time spent than on Facebook and Twitter.

And that the site is also said to have more referral traffic percentages than YouTube, Google+ and LinkedIn combine.

28.1% of Pinterest users are also said to be well off, with an annual household income of more than $100,000.

 Visit www.wallappeals.com or our Pinterest Page to get many wonderful wall decal ideas!

Thursday, February 23, 2012

7 Lessons From Artists


Maybe we just do wall decals here at Wall Appeals but deep down we are just artists. So it's always nice to take a break and remember the basics about what we do everyday. This article from designtaxi.com by Suzanne Falter-Barns is a great reminder about why we love our work:

“You cannot truly create something great unless you are willing to share your most tender, most vulnerable thoughts and feelings.”

“The fact is, when you're given total permission to get in there, be messy, use your intuition and make mistakes, the results can be incredible.”

Ten years ago, I was a frustrated, fed-up writer, sitting in a Starbucks in Times Square in tears. I'd gotten 27 rejections on my book—ironically enough, it was about how to live your dreams—and I was sure my own dream of being a successful author was dead.

At that moment, a little voice whispered in my ear that I would only become a writer when, and if, I chose it. Like really chose it—deep in that secret place we all have in our gut.

So I chose it, simply because there didn't seem to be anything else I could do at the time. I decided to walk out of Starbucks a writer, absurd as it seemed.

Two days later, I got fired from my temp job, giving me more time to write. Ten days later, I spontaneously got two assignments from a major magazine I'd never even considered writing for.

Three weeks later, I finally got a publishing deal on the self-help book. Another month later, Hollywood called seeking film rights on a novel I'd published eight years earlier that had died in the marketplace.

75,000 copies later, my self-help book, ‘How Much Joy Can You Stand?’ (Ballantine Wellspring) is a creativity classic, a major star is making a movie of my novel, and I am a successful writer.

But more than a writer, I am a coach. Through this process, I have found myself on a one-woman mission to move people to express themselves. I've discovered that the reason more people don't express themselves is not because they can't—but because they don't realize how universal their fears are, and how necessary their work is in the world.

In short, they suffer from a lack of information. It's the very same information all of us writers, artists, entrepreneurs, and other dreamers uncover as we return to our dreams, day after day, month after month, year after year.

So, in order to expedite that learning curve, I thought I'd share some of these hard won lessons with you, in hopes that you can pass them on to your own clients.

1. GO WITH THE FLOW (OR WITHOUT IT).

If you're going to create anything in life, pray for flow but don't count on it. "Flow" is a much bandied-about buzzword that describes creating at max.

You concentrate intensely on what you're doing, the words/images/ideas/thoughts tumble straight from your mind into your hands, the telephone rings unnoticed, and you look up three hours later, convinced only minutes have passed.

Creating in a state of flow can convince you that you are, indeed, on the right track. Yet, the converse can be true, too. If flow is missing for too long, an artist will start to feel blocked and miserable, like a constipated fish out of water. And yet… no artist experiences flow all the time or even very often.

I had to break this news once to a client I'll call Amy, who was angrily insisting that her speaking career should just fall in her lap, in a great sweep of synchronicity.

‘Sorry, Amy’, I had to say—there are good days and there are bad days, just like with anything else. The illusion is that if we're really doing our dream, the whole darned thing should flow. Yet, some days are downright tedious, just as some days are miraculous.

Professional artists know that flow cannot be counted on, so they learn to create without it—putting their work together every single day, whether or not they're "in the mood".

2. YOU HAVE TO GET IT WRONG BEFORE YOU CAN GET IT RIGHT.

Out there in the rational, logical world, many people strive to get things right the first time.

In an artist's studio, however, it's the mistakes that really count.

In the book, ‘Mastery: Interviews with 30 Remarkable People’, juggler and performance artist Michael Moschen says, "My process works very well when I have time to try it and fail, try it and fail, try it and fail.”

"Sometimes I'll try a piece for three months and get rid of it. Then I'll go back to it again and leave it several more times, because I have to fail a lot to find out all about what the piece wants and really needs. Once it clicks and I start succeeding, you can't stop me."

Or, as Miles Davis said, "Do not fear mistakes; there are none."

3. NOT EVERY WORK OF ART IS ACTUALLY ART.
Over time artists become adept at sorting out which of their creations are true "keepers" and which are mediocre "also-rans". This distinction comes from no place other than your gut, and can only be learned by experience.

These gut distinctions can be subtle at times, and take time to learn. After all, who really wants to admit the dark truth that the screenplay they've been writing for the past three months is actually a bore.

Better to let the marketplace tell you this truth… and it will.

Yet, you may also create something that you just know is a keeper—and the marketplace won't give it a break. The way you can distinguish what's truly a keeper is simply intuitive.

Learning to make that distinction comes with learning your craft.

4. YOU ARE USUALLY YOUR OWN WORST ENEMY.

It's a classic Catch-22. You cannot truly create something great unless you are willing to share your most tender, most vulnerable thoughts and feelings.

Yet, once you do that, you may be racked with self-doubt and fear. Few artists are able to accurately assess just how valuable and great their work is—or how much it will be appreciated by its audience.

In other words, insecurity is the name of the game.

The problem is that it is hard to believe that anyone actually needs and wants what you create. And yet, this is patently untrue. Out here in ‘Audience Land’, we're all patiently waiting for the next great thing to love.

Most of us (at least those of us who aren't professional critics) come from a place of appreciation and acceptance.

This is why the artists who make it continue to produce, despite the dark sense of foreboding, which often accompanies their very best work.

5. IT’S GOOD TO GET DIRTY.


The dirtier you get, the more intimate with your work you get, whether you are messing around with sales projections or oil paints.

Artists know the pure deliciousness of surrendering completely to their process. So don't worry about having to research things without a firm sense of where you're going, or whether you get some burnt sienna on your jeans.

It's good to get dirty because it means you're closer to that exalted state of flow—a place where spelling doesn't count (for the moment), amazing synchronicities can take place, strokes of brilliance pop up out of nowhere, and things blend in new and unexpected ways.

When I lead my ‘How Much Joy Can You Stand?’ workshop, I give everyone an unconventional material, like toilet paper, paper clips, or tin foil, and ask them to create something from it.

I've seen people create entire wedding gowns from toilet paper, and exquisite wall hangings from a ball of string.

The fact is, when you're given total permission to get in there, be messy, use your intuition and make mistakes, the results can be incredible. You want your coaching clients to think big and loose—to create with a sense of danger to what they're doing.

That is how greatness always begins.

6. YOU CAN’T CREATE FOR THE MARKETPLACE; YOU CAN ONLY CREATE FOR YOU.

I once heard an interview with a pop singer who had carefully dissected and repackaged the rhythmic patterns, vocal technique, lyric phrasing and dance moves of Michael Jackson, in an attempt to be Michael.

You have never heard of this guy because—guess what? It didn't work. You can't buy success any more than you can duplicate genius.

The key is to do the opposite. You want to begin with your own organic idea that is born out of who you are and what you are here to do in life.

Start with a concept that sparks your passion, then follow that spark as it guides you through its development. It may even lead you into the slightly absurd

7. IT’S THE WORK THEY’RE REJECTING, NOT YOU.


Sometimes you go out there and dangle your creative product in the marketplace, and you get back a big, wet raspberry.

Experienced artists know this has less to do with the quality of the work than what people are buying at this particular moment in time.

I used to cast television commercials in New York, and this was always a dilemma. You'd get fifteen incredible Broadway actresses vying for the role of Mom in your toothpaste commercial. (Such ads can provide several years of income, so everybody wants them.)

What it always boiled down to was not who was the best Mom, but which one was a redhead, or reminded the client of his wife.

Arbitrary, yes, but unfortunately true in a crowded market. This is why artists never take rejection personally. They simply keep looking for the next opportunity to show their work, with the understanding that they are playing the odds.

Sooner or later, someone's got to buy—and if they don't, then maybe that particular piece was not destined to sell at this time. (And that doesn't mean it won't sell later.)


Hopefully these lessons helped everyone refocus a bit, it's always nice to hear some tips on the creative process. Visit www.wallappeals.com or give us a call 270-761-5237 and we can talk about how to bring out your inner artist.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Wall Decals For Your Home!

Here are a couple of examples of how wall decals from Wall Appeals can really light up your home! These ideas came from 2expertsdesign.com:







Did any of these decals inspire you to brighten up your living room or bedroom? If so visit www.wallappeals.com or give us a call today at 270-761-5237 and we can get started on your new wall decal!