#supportlocalbussiness Tumblr posts
jessiemayk · 1 year ago
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😱Just Uploaded Again To My Patreon! Remember Jelly Beans - For $10 A Month You Can Help Support Me Create The Art I Love, Get Extra Behind The Scenes Content, Early Bird Links & Even Request Content! Soon Releasing My Nightmares Music Video, The 4th Chapter To Zone Out & Anyone Signed Up To My Patreon Will Be The First Ever To Watch With A Private Screening!!!
😱patreon.com/jessiemayk
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yustinejustine · 3 years ago
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Chris and Donna 🥰 There is nothing that beats the feeling when your client/recipient loves their drawing! Contact me on my bio if you interested in my artworks as a gift for your friends, family or loved ones! #supportsmallartist #commissionsopen #digitalartwork #coupleportrait #digitalartwork #supportlocalbussiness #austinartist #digitalportrait #digitalcoupleportrait https://www.instagram.com/p/CQgCPR1LAiz/?utm_medium=tumblr
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shayshaymeaowz · 4 years ago
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Queen bee at your service honeys with a smile @leaf_and_hive 🖤💛 #honeybrew #teatime #healthydrinking #beehappy #alcholic #probiotic #glutenfree #drinkdifferent #supportlocalbussiness #santafenewmexico #love #compassion #gratitude #forgiveness (at Leaf & Hive) https://www.instagram.com/p/CMVJlBMB6zP/?igshid=1kwqioj36cy5b
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isaraja · 4 years ago
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Pecinta barang barang preloved... check this one out... from preloved (second hand) to brand new ada di @golilastuff #fridaysharing #isabagiinfo #golilastuff #creativepeople #uniquestuff #prelovedstuff #usedstuff #secondhandstuff #brandnewstuff #freshcolor #goodfriday #greatfriday #fridayiminlove #supportlocalbussiness #supportcreativebusiness #staycreative #staypositive #stayalive #staycalm #IsaRaja #IsaR4ja https://www.instagram.com/p/CD4Jp0lFmOF/?igshid=1dlolsssnvcye
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studiokassa · 4 years ago
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Apron design by Kassa For @greentheory Go get your pre - orders fast !!!! http://www.greentheory.in #collaborate #supportlocalbrands #supportlocalbussiness #apronstyle #aproncustom #custommade #customization #newlaunching (at Green Theory) https://www.instagram.com/p/CC2c97VpFzp/?igshid=i3gfj7yceus8
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creatingasimplerlife · 4 years ago
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Rich is proudly hanging an American flag made by Valley Forge right here in the USA and purchased at our local Braley Nixon hardware store! We support shopping local and buying made in the USA products! Happy Fourth of July everyone! #fourthofjuly #madeintheusa #madeinamerica #shoplocally #supportlocalbussiness #godblessamerica🇺🇸 #adirondacks https://www.instagram.com/p/CCOT_bsAwbE/?igshid=1l6cxnnb4rmhk
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beajarenojewellery-blog · 7 years ago
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We are now doing all our precious metals plating with Elliot Fitzpatrick! Only the best will do 💕#beajareno #beajarenojewellery #london #madelondon #preciousmetals #platingservices #onlythebest #bestplaters #sourcelondon #supportlocal #supportlocalartists #supportlocalbussiness (at London, United Kingdom)
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hgssocial · 3 years ago
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Our people at HGS recommend a few must-try places across Canada which bring authenticity and diversity to our culture.
When we support local businesses, we advance as a community. Our people at HGS recommend a few must-try places across Canada which bring authenticity and diversity to our culture. Share this post to show your support. To be a part of #TeamHGS, visit: https://www.joinhgs.com/ca/en
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fabulousinmy50s · 4 years ago
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Once again this is not the post I intended.. . I believe in being responsible, I believe in thinking of others,I believe in doing for others and I believe in science. It's for those reasons that I came to Austin on March 15th to self quarantine. I've stayed in Austin, I've followed all the rules and I continue to follow the rules because it's the right thing to do. . The governor of Texas has started to implement back to work plans and many things are opening (with restrictions), so my husband and I went out to dinner for my birthday. . It was an absolutely surreal experience. The "outside world" looked like a scene from an apocalyptic movie. There were maybe 10 cars on the road, the parking lots were all empty and we were the only eat in patrons at the restaurant. . It was very sad to see first hand how many places would likely never reopen and how many lives this virus will continue to ruin. . So today's post is about livelyhood and safety. . Businesses want to keep us safe. We're their lifeblood. They know they don't exist without us. . We need to ask ourselves what will make us feel safe going back out. Because if we don't there won't be an "outside world" to go to. Not as we know it in any case. This virus will have claimed the livelyhood of millions along with the hundreds of thousands of lives it continues to take. It's not about the economy for me. It's about identity, self worth and mental health. For many a job that puts food on the table or a carrer or bussiness they've spent a lifetime building is the essence of who they are. They're lost without it. . I go out with my mask, I carry gloves and hand sanitizer, I do social distancing I make sure the places I'm going are commited to providing a safe and healthy environment. . I'm going out because for me it's the right thing to do. . I know I've kicked a hornet's nest with this post, but I really want to know your feelings. . What will or when will you feel safe going back out? . PS. Dinner out was Amazing! . . #staysafe #supportlocalbussinesses #supporteachother #thankyouessentialserviceworkers #fabulousinmy50s #agelessmodel #bestagermodel #bettertogether #overfifty (at Austin, Texas) https://www.instagram.com/p/B_5QVyLAswr/?igshid=y14qx3zx1wtm
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jessiemayk · 1 year ago
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🌅 Rising Sun Merch Up Now!
🌅LINK: jessiemayk.redbubble.com
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mr74sp6gd · 6 years ago
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#weedvision #stonercouple #vibes #munchies from #lazy Sunday to #funday #heatnation #ganjalife next up @dshimbeatz #bday bash #miaminights #miamiatnight #kotd #jordan11s #gamma11s #openmic #fashion etc #supportlocalbussiness #supportblackbusiness #supportlocalartist #miamimusic sessions w / my #ganjagoddess @jackie_jack3420 (at Three Lakes, Florida) https://www.instagram.com/p/BoYOJO2BNRw/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1cnngrn88o0fj
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risty · 4 years ago
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#Repost @isaraja.original • • • • • surabi original & surabi pandan... raos bin wuenak...😋 . Yg suka surabi silahkan diorder...😉 hatur nuhun Dapur Enin, @risty4239 😊 @dluckman09 #surabi #surabienin #homemadefood #homemadesurabi #cemilanbandung #raos #enak #supportlocalcullinary #supportlocalbussiness #localbussiness #isabagiinfo #indonesiastreetfood #streetfood #cemilan #cemilanraos #cemilanenak https://www.instagram.com/p/CDMHrqbhnfgK-DzrVgwDUbii4ni-Wd9bxxPunU0/?igshid=zw8sp5g8ubfo
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sincanvas · 7 years ago
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Thank you so much PDX for coming out to show last night!!!!!.Also thank you @skamsticker for printing out these @dead_by_it #sincanvas #artcollab #labels !!!!!!!#supportlocalart #supportlocalbussiness #keepportlandweird #sincanvas#kendrabinney #mattsclhosky #poboyart #thegoodfoot #goodfootpdx#artshow#artopening #portlandstreetart #portlandart#tcf#thechosenfew#lowbrow#thanks#theanalog #theanalogcafeandtheater #artsyfartsy (at The Analog - Theater & Cafe)
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isaraja · 4 years ago
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Kheuseus bwat kamu pecinta tanaman, bunga-bunga... banyak pilihan pot pot cantik nan aduhai kreasinya @hola.artt , cek langsung kreasinya @hola.artt dan kasih pot cantik bwat bunga dan tanaman kamu😉😊 #fridaysharing #holaartt #creativepeople #uniquestuff #freshcolor #handmade #staycraetive #becreative #handpaintedceramics #goodfriday #greatfriday #fridayiminlove #supportlocalbussiness #supportcreativebusiness #supportcreativebussiness #isabagiinfo #IsaRaja #IsaR4ja #holaartt #pecintatanaman #pecintabunga ##flowerlover https://www.instagram.com/p/CD4FovHFLb8/?igshid=1ogq08a1o1gv5
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beajarenojewellery-blog · 7 years ago
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New Amulet Pendant ; Flower, Iolite and Changing Garnet, adjustable from 17 to 19 inches...work in progress! This one will be yellow gold plated, made in Sterling silver, one of a kind! #beajareno #beajarenojewellery #amulet #pendant #sterlingsilver #flower #iolite #changinggarnet #garnet #goldvermeil #goldplated #uniquepieces #adjustable #handcrafted #jewellery #jewelleryforyogis #contemporaryjewellery #yogastyle #yogajewellery #yogainspiredjewellery #yoga #madelondon #londonjeweller #southwimbledonopenstudios #supportlocal #supportartists #supportartisans #supportlocalbussiness #supportsmallbusiness (at London, United Kingdom)
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easyfoodnetwork · 5 years ago
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These Soothing Instagram Food Drawings Are Also Raising Funds for Restaurants
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Natasha Pickowicz
Folks are putting pen (or colored pencils) to paper as an outlet for stress and as a way to support the industry
The colors of the strawberries, peach slices, and fresh-flower flourishes on top of the cakes — themselves imperfect circles, and slightly off-kilter — are bright, but also kind of faded, and definitely smudgy. These are not Instagram-perfect bakery shots. Instead, they’re all drawings, done by hand, of what might be a cake but is maybe a flan — or a pie.
Natasha Pickowicz’s artistic handiwork has pivoted these days from pastry to paper. As the pastry chef at Café Altro Paradiso and Flora Bar in NYC, Pickowicz was put on furlough in mid-March due to the novel coronavirus; the hardest transition, she said, “was not being able to make things with my hands anymore.”
“I ached to build cakes, develop spring menus, do the early morning bake off, process fruit,” Pickowicz said in an email. “All of these physical rituals just disappeared overnight.”
She turned to drawing and sharing her work online, and she’s not the only one. In the past few weeks, chefs, cookbook authors, and other restaurant industry loyalists have been sharing their hand-drawn art on Instagram. For some, it’s a stress reliever and outlet for anxiety while stuck at home. It’s also a vehicle for doing good, using artwork to raise much-needed funds for the restaurant industry.
Liz Ryan, a professional illustrator, has always used Instagram as an outlet for her work. Last week, she started posting illustrations specifically of small food businesses, mostly restaurants she personally loves in her Boerum Hill/Carroll Gardens/Cobble Hill area of Brooklyn. She’s been posting one illustration per day, along with a caption about the place and a corresponding relief fund to support it. Then someone who has made a donation or purchase to support that place or fund receives the illustration.
View this post on Instagram
Today’s illustration supports @eastonecoffee and the employees that were laid off in light in of COVID19. East One is still open so definitely keep them in mind for your coffee + nom needs, but today we’re focusing on staff relief. Navigate over to their page and donate via the Venmo account pinned to their profile (There’s also a walkthrough video in my stories if you need some help). Anyone who donates between now and 12pm EST tomorrow (03.31.20) will be entered in a random drawing for this illustration, just DM me a screenshot of your donation confirmation. Thank you @eastonecoffee for all that you do and thank *you* for supporting small businesses! #covid19 #covid19relief #eastonecoffee #illustrationforgood #nycrestaurantrelief #brooklyncoffee #localroasters
A post shared by liz ryan (@lizryandesigns) on Mar 30, 2020 at 9:14am PDT
Ryan started by having the first person to DM her with proof of donation — say, a screenshot of a confirmation page, or a receipt for a gift card — receive the artwork; she’s now shifted to make things less of a race, whereby anyone who donates and sends a confirmation within a 24-hour window will be entered in a random drawing for the illustration. So far, each illustration has gotten multiple responses, with the most recent illustration — of East One in Brooklyn — raising $112.
“The project was motivated by the responsibility I felt to take care of and give back to my neighborhood,” says Ryan in an email. And with so many folks at home right now, bonding through screens while social distancing, Instagram has turned into a less curated, gentler vehicle for that.
“I normally feel pressure to prioritize sharing polished content but the internet feels incredibly kind right now,” says Ryan, who says response has been overwhelmingly positive. “In my feeds, social media has shifted from a curated landing page to a tool for documenting and assembling authentically. I’m here for it.”
View this post on Instagram
Filipino American, woman owned, sustainability-driven @clairesprouse quickly became a woman I admire and with her, @hunkydorybk quickly became my regular spot, a sanctuary and escape from my apartment and the chaotic, outside world. After work, I decompress with a glass of wine (or two) and cave into ordering their french fries (with extra mayo, please). I work remote there, perched at the bar, enjoying @mariebasile’s company, bartender turned dear friend, after she saved me from a terrible first date, “let me know when you want me to kick him out .” (She did, btw). I won’t find another space as special as this. Here, the @diasporaco turmeric-soaked eggs with black peppercorn, original ph: @abhishek14_. @diasporaco is also woman owned, helmed by @sanajaverikadri, who began Diaspora Co. in 2017 to share the complex cultures of India, and share regional spice varieties to the broader public. Diaspora Co. is donating $4 from the sale of every $12 jar of #PragatiTurmeric to their food communities’ employees’ @gofundme. Turmeric is also anti-inflammatory and immunity boosting — perfect to keep you healthy during this crazy time. Both @hunkydorybk and @diasporaco have @gofundme pages, please donate, or purchase this print! ✨ALL✨ proceeds will go back to the illustrated businesses. DM for details. Stay safe out there. #nkpcreate #illustration #digitalart #foodillustration #cherrybombe #bombesquad #procreate #digitalartist #fooddrawing #supportlocalbussiness #buylocal #shoplocal #newyorktimes #nyt #tumeric #eggs #indianfood #indiancuisine #spices #helpourhunkys #timelapse
A post shared by @ nkpcreate on Mar 23, 2020 at 8:45am PDT
Nancy Pappas is also a professional illustrator. Halfway through March, she also pivoted her feeds to focus on spotlighting specific food businesses and restaurants, sometimes featuring multiple businesses within a single illustration (like the turmeric-soaked eggs from Hunky Dory, featuring Diaspora Co. turmeric).
Each illustration is for sale, with Pappas vowing the split the proceeds among the illustrated businesses. As Pappas wrote on Instagram, “While I am self isolating indoors, I’ll be illustrating some of my favorite local businesses. I’m going to try to do as many as I can while we ride this damn thing out.”
As a food writer, Hugh Merwin’s Instagram feed isn’t typically filled with artwork. But last week, after posting a few black-and-white cartoon drawings, he posted a similar project: Send over a food-based drawing request — “your favorite food, your least favorite food, or your favorite imaginary food” — and proof of donation to a nonprofit like Feeding America or Restaurant Workers’ Community Foundation, or receipt from a local food business, and he will post a custom drawing for you. Since then, Merwin has posted 23 drawings, ranging from a rare New York strip steak to a morel riding a scooter.
View this post on Instagram
An unintentionally goth layer cake, for @zaneta316, made with mango, passion fruit, and pomegranate. (There are a few unasked-for loquats on the middle tier, too, got carried away there, sorry.) ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ _____ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ I will draw your favorite food, your least favorite food, or your favorite imaginary food if you help out one of your local restaurants, food businesses, nonprofits, relief orgs, or any GoFundMe campaign your favorite restaurant may have set up in the last few days). ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ DM me your request with a screenshot of your donation, in any amount, and I will post your drawing here. It may take a few days — apologies! — but I'm excited to keep this going.
A post shared by hugh merwin (@hugh.merwin) on Mar 26, 2020 at 11:00am PDT
Like Merwin, Pickowicz isn’t an illustrator by profession, but has found drawing to be a valuable outlet while out of work. “To help combat my mounting anxiety and stress, I started doodling the layer cakes and pastries that I wished I was making,” she says.
She’s turned to Instagram to post them and sell them as both a personal stress reliever and fundraiser. Her caveats, she says: “Doodles will be mailed out at random with no subject matter requests, please be patient in receiving your drawing, and donate any amount of money you like.”
View this post on Instagram
Cake calisthenics
A post shared by Creeps Suzette (@natashapickowicz) on Mar 17, 2020 at 6:53am PDT
Within 24 hours, she had nearly 100 requests for illustrations and had raised $3,500, with donations ranging from $5 to $100. All of the money is being donated to a GoFundMe set up by Matter House, the hospitality group that owns Café Altro Paradiso and Flora Bar, that specifically benefits their more vulnerable and at-risk employees.
The response, says Pickowicz, “was mind-blowing and so, so moving — people overwhelmingly just wanted to express their support, and suddenly I felt like I had a purpose.”
And Instagram followers — sitting at home, scrolling endlessly, wondering what good they can do right now, especially to support an ailing restaurant industry — may feel the same way.
from Eater - All https://ift.tt/33Z81Mk https://ift.tt/2V6skUb
Tumblr media
Natasha Pickowicz
Folks are putting pen (or colored pencils) to paper as an outlet for stress and as a way to support the industry
The colors of the strawberries, peach slices, and fresh-flower flourishes on top of the cakes — themselves imperfect circles, and slightly off-kilter — are bright, but also kind of faded, and definitely smudgy. These are not Instagram-perfect bakery shots. Instead, they’re all drawings, done by hand, of what might be a cake but is maybe a flan — or a pie.
Natasha Pickowicz’s artistic handiwork has pivoted these days from pastry to paper. As the pastry chef at Café Altro Paradiso and Flora Bar in NYC, Pickowicz was put on furlough in mid-March due to the novel coronavirus; the hardest transition, she said, “was not being able to make things with my hands anymore.”
“I ached to build cakes, develop spring menus, do the early morning bake off, process fruit,” Pickowicz said in an email. “All of these physical rituals just disappeared overnight.”
She turned to drawing and sharing her work online, and she’s not the only one. In the past few weeks, chefs, cookbook authors, and other restaurant industry loyalists have been sharing their hand-drawn art on Instagram. For some, it’s a stress reliever and outlet for anxiety while stuck at home. It’s also a vehicle for doing good, using artwork to raise much-needed funds for the restaurant industry.
Liz Ryan, a professional illustrator, has always used Instagram as an outlet for her work. Last week, she started posting illustrations specifically of small food businesses, mostly restaurants she personally loves in her Boerum Hill/Carroll Gardens/Cobble Hill area of Brooklyn. She’s been posting one illustration per day, along with a caption about the place and a corresponding relief fund to support it. Then someone who has made a donation or purchase to support that place or fund receives the illustration.
View this post on Instagram
Today’s illustration supports @eastonecoffee and the employees that were laid off in light in of COVID19. East One is still open so definitely keep them in mind for your coffee + nom needs, but today we’re focusing on staff relief. Navigate over to their page and donate via the Venmo account pinned to their profile (There’s also a walkthrough video in my stories if you need some help). Anyone who donates between now and 12pm EST tomorrow (03.31.20) will be entered in a random drawing for this illustration, just DM me a screenshot of your donation confirmation. Thank you @eastonecoffee for all that you do and thank *you* for supporting small businesses! #covid19 #covid19relief #eastonecoffee #illustrationforgood #nycrestaurantrelief #brooklyncoffee #localroasters
A post shared by liz ryan (@lizryandesigns) on Mar 30, 2020 at 9:14am PDT
Ryan started by having the first person to DM her with proof of donation — say, a screenshot of a confirmation page, or a receipt for a gift card — receive the artwork; she’s now shifted to make things less of a race, whereby anyone who donates and sends a confirmation within a 24-hour window will be entered in a random drawing for the illustration. So far, each illustration has gotten multiple responses, with the most recent illustration — of East One in Brooklyn — raising $112.
“The project was motivated by the responsibility I felt to take care of and give back to my neighborhood,” says Ryan in an email. And with so many folks at home right now, bonding through screens while social distancing, Instagram has turned into a less curated, gentler vehicle for that.
“I normally feel pressure to prioritize sharing polished content but the internet feels incredibly kind right now,” says Ryan, who says response has been overwhelmingly positive. “In my feeds, social media has shifted from a curated landing page to a tool for documenting and assembling authentically. I’m here for it.”
View this post on Instagram
Filipino American, woman owned, sustainability-driven @clairesprouse quickly became a woman I admire and with her, @hunkydorybk quickly became my regular spot, a sanctuary and escape from my apartment and the chaotic, outside world. After work, I decompress with a glass of wine (or two) and cave into ordering their french fries (with extra mayo, please). I work remote there, perched at the bar, enjoying @mariebasile’s company, bartender turned dear friend, after she saved me from a terrible first date, “let me know when you want me to kick him out .” (She did, btw). I won’t find another space as special as this. Here, the @diasporaco turmeric-soaked eggs with black peppercorn, original ph: @abhishek14_. @diasporaco is also woman owned, helmed by @sanajaverikadri, who began Diaspora Co. in 2017 to share the complex cultures of India, and share regional spice varieties to the broader public. Diaspora Co. is donating $4 from the sale of every $12 jar of #PragatiTurmeric to their food communities’ employees’ @gofundme. Turmeric is also anti-inflammatory and immunity boosting — perfect to keep you healthy during this crazy time. Both @hunkydorybk and @diasporaco have @gofundme pages, please donate, or purchase this print! ✨ALL✨ proceeds will go back to the illustrated businesses. DM for details. Stay safe out there. #nkpcreate #illustration #digitalart #foodillustration #cherrybombe #bombesquad #procreate #digitalartist #fooddrawing #supportlocalbussiness #buylocal #shoplocal #newyorktimes #nyt #tumeric #eggs #indianfood #indiancuisine #spices #helpourhunkys #timelapse
A post shared by @ nkpcreate on Mar 23, 2020 at 8:45am PDT
Nancy Pappas is also a professional illustrator. Halfway through March, she also pivoted her feeds to focus on spotlighting specific food businesses and restaurants, sometimes featuring multiple businesses within a single illustration (like the turmeric-soaked eggs from Hunky Dory, featuring Diaspora Co. turmeric).
Each illustration is for sale, with Pappas vowing the split the proceeds among the illustrated businesses. As Pappas wrote on Instagram, “While I am self isolating indoors, I’ll be illustrating some of my favorite local businesses. I’m going to try to do as many as I can while we ride this damn thing out.”
As a food writer, Hugh Merwin’s Instagram feed isn’t typically filled with artwork. But last week, after posting a few black-and-white cartoon drawings, he posted a similar project: Send over a food-based drawing request — “your favorite food, your least favorite food, or your favorite imaginary food” — and proof of donation to a nonprofit like Feeding America or Restaurant Workers’ Community Foundation, or receipt from a local food business, and he will post a custom drawing for you. Since then, Merwin has posted 23 drawings, ranging from a rare New York strip steak to a morel riding a scooter.
View this post on Instagram
An unintentionally goth layer cake, for @zaneta316, made with mango, passion fruit, and pomegranate. (There are a few unasked-for loquats on the middle tier, too, got carried away there, sorry.) ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ _____ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ I will draw your favorite food, your least favorite food, or your favorite imaginary food if you help out one of your local restaurants, food businesses, nonprofits, relief orgs, or any GoFundMe campaign your favorite restaurant may have set up in the last few days). ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ DM me your request with a screenshot of your donation, in any amount, and I will post your drawing here. It may take a few days — apologies! — but I'm excited to keep this going.
A post shared by hugh merwin (@hugh.merwin) on Mar 26, 2020 at 11:00am PDT
Like Merwin, Pickowicz isn’t an illustrator by profession, but has found drawing to be a valuable outlet while out of work. “To help combat my mounting anxiety and stress, I started doodling the layer cakes and pastries that I wished I was making,” she says.
She’s turned to Instagram to post them and sell them as both a personal stress reliever and fundraiser. Her caveats, she says: “Doodles will be mailed out at random with no subject matter requests, please be patient in receiving your drawing, and donate any amount of money you like.”
View this post on Instagram
Cake calisthenics
A post shared by Creeps Suzette (@natashapickowicz) on Mar 17, 2020 at 6:53am PDT
Within 24 hours, she had nearly 100 requests for illustrations and had raised $3,500, with donations ranging from $5 to $100. All of the money is being donated to a GoFundMe set up by Matter House, the hospitality group that owns Café Altro Paradiso and Flora Bar, that specifically benefits their more vulnerable and at-risk employees.
The response, says Pickowicz, “was mind-blowing and so, so moving — people overwhelmingly just wanted to express their support, and suddenly I felt like I had a purpose.”
And Instagram followers — sitting at home, scrolling endlessly, wondering what good they can do right now, especially to support an ailing restaurant industry — may feel the same way.
from Eater - All https://ift.tt/33Z81Mk via Blogger https://ift.tt/2yl9VLm
0 notes