The Good Ship Illustration
Welcome to The Good Ship Illustration - the podcast for illustrators who are quietly working away in their sketchbooks thinking… “is it just me?”
…it’s not just you!
We’re Helen Stephens, Katie Chappell and Tania Willis - three full-time illustrators from three different corners of the industry (and three different age brackets ). We live in the same seaside town in the UK and started having cuppas and chats… and accidentally became illustration agony aunts.
Now we record those chats for you! We answer your questions about confidence, tricky clients, pricing your work, creative block, picture books, publishing, and everything in between.
✨ New episodes every Friday. ✨
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, and do send us your questions!
P.s. Fancy some freebies? Head to thegoodshipillustration.com for colour workshops, picture book templates, and other treats.
Byeeee for now!
x The Good Ship Illustration (Helen, Katie & Tania)
🚢🚢🚢
The Good Ship Illustration
An interview with Lisa Congdon - consistency and finding your creative voice
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
If you're an illustrator with access to the internet and you have eyeballs, you might've seen Lisa Congdon's work. Lisa started blogging her collections and illustrations back in the good ol' days, and even remembers Instagram back when it was good. (Remember that? It was nice, wasn't it?)
In this episode, Katie asks Lisa about consistency and how to keep on keepin' on when the world is the way it is. We also meander through topics like ADHD, collections, comparison, agents - whether or not she has one - and last but not least, daily projects that change everythinggg.
In this episode we cover:
- Ceramic mushroom collection đź‘€
- The “messy middle” bit of being an illustrator
- How consistency has served her well
- Surviving financially in the early years
- Why not being a perfectionist was her secret super power
- Instagram in 2025
- How to know when to work with an agent
- The magical domino effect of following excitement
- Squishing comparison and staying in your own lane
Very rough timestamps in case you want to skip to a certain bit
00:00 – Welcoming Lisa! How a decade of calendars sparked the consistency conversation
01:00 – Hyperfocus, collecting tigers, cycling five times a week, and going “all in”
02:30 – Early days: Etsy, commissions, pet portraits, and figuring out a style
04:00 – Most illustrators quit
05:30 – ADHD, Capricorn energy, and learning to be organised
07:00 – Posting imperfect work online and why it mattered
08:30 – Sharing finances, getting an agent, and diversifying income streams
10:00 – “A Collection A Day” and the power of daily projects
11:00 – Agents: when they help, when they don’t, and how pricing works
13:00 – The hardest job she’s ever done and how her agent stepped in
14:00 – Instagram then vs. Instagram now
16:00 – Why video doesn’t light her up
18:00 – The comparison trap (yes, even Lisa feels it!)
20:00 – Following your gut over the algorithm
21:00 – The daily project that led to a bestselling book
24:00 – Chronicle Books, chance encounters, and the magic of just...showing up!?
26:00 – The domino effect of doing what excites you
27:00 – Human Design chat 👀
28:00 – Byeee Lisa
Links for this episode:
- Lisa Congdon: https://lisacongdon.com
- Lisa's Books: https://www.chroniclebooks.com
- Follow Lisa on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lisacongdon
Come and say hello!
✏️ @thegoodshipillustration
🌏 www.thegoodshipillustration.com
p.s. We love answering your illustration questions. Click here to submit your question for The Good Ship Illustration Podcast 🎙
December - Lisa Congdon
===
​[00:00:00]
Lisa: ~Brilliant. ~Hello Lisa. Thank you so much for coming on the Good Ship Illustration podcast. It's so good to have you with us today.
Katie: Thank you. It's so good to be here.
Lisa: ~So the first, ~the reason I got in touch with you was I saw your reel about consistency and it was your calendars, and you had, I think ~it's, ~you said like 10 years worth. And I was just like, that is amazing. ~Like ~that level of consistency is so inspiring.
My question is have you always naturally been that consistent and once you decide something, do you just keep going with it?
Katie: Yeah I always describe myself as somebody who once I figure out ~that I either like to do something. Or ~that [00:01:00] I enjoy something or that other people enjoy something ~that ~I make, I tend to go all in. And ~like ~it's not just with my artwork, it's ~like ~everything in my life.
~Like I'm a collector. So ~if you were to come into my house ~and I'm in my home office right now ~I would take you downstairs and you would see the collection of ceramic mushrooms ~that I have ~and the collection of tigers from all over the world, not real ones, obviously. And in my studio I have like this entire case that's a collection of like office and school supplies from, mostly vintage.
So it's like when ~I. ~I'm really interested in something. I hyperfocus on it and do it a lot, ~and like ~I'm an athlete ~and ~so ~like ~I love cycling, ~so ~I don't just cycle once a week. I cycle five times a week. I am one of those people. ~Now, ~the problem is I have lots of interests, so sometimes I get a little overwhelmed, but it's definitely something that's part of my personality and I think it's really helped me in my illustration career because when.
There's this marriage of oh, I really enjoy making this thing or this kind of art, and [00:02:00] I see that other people are also interested in it. I get super motivated to do it, and the calendars are a great example of that. Like I released my first calendar, I think in 2016, and I remember I was really nervous because at the time, this is hard to believe now because all I do is ~like ~manufacture products to sell.
~That's not all I do, but that's like a big part of what I do. ~And I think the calendar was like the first thing I self-produced ever. Maybe aside from a handful of note cards. And I was so nervous that no one was gonna buy it. And in order to get a good price, you have to order at least 400.
And I was like, are 400 people actually gonna buy this calendar? But it did really well. And then every year since then, I've just continued to do it. And now I sell thousands. ~But~
And I'm really lucky. I have a team, so I don't touch the calendars anymore, but since day one, we've had them printed at the same place. Here in Portland, Oregon, in the USA where I live.
So there's a print house here in Portland that was recommended to me when I did my first calendar and we've been working with them ever since. ~And ~the colors are really beautiful and they're just very [00:03:00] reliable. ~And and then they come to us and we. ~We used to package all of them in these sleeves and we had special envelopes for shipping them ~and ~now we don't use a lot of extra packaging just to save on plastic, but we do everything ourselves in-house.
Lisa: And I think for a lot of people who are big fans of your work there might be. Maybe people see your success and what you've achieved and not really see the years and decades actually now of consistency and work that you've put in.
So ~like ~when it was your early days and know you've mentioned on other interviews that I've heard that, in that initial phase you were struggling. ~A little bit like ~things hadn't taken off, it wasn't ~like ~fully supporting you yet. ~So ~how did you survive that bit? Because ~I think that is the bit ~with illustrators, ~especially, it seems to be ~if you can't make it through that bit you go back to whatever it was and you don't make a success of it.
Yeah, I'd love to hear.
Katie: ~mean ~there's so many things happening in that bit of time. ~There's ~for a lot of people, not everyone, some people start their illustration career with a fully developed artistic voice, but for most [00:04:00] people, you're still trying to figure out who you are as an artist. So you're navigating that.
You're navigating not making very much money and trying to support yourself. You're navigating trying to get people to even pay attention to what you do. It's a hard time ~and it's, ~it is the time when I think most people give up. And it's a really hard thing to work through, so I'm not gonna make it sound easy.
If you do these five things, you'll get through that bit of time. That's very hard. But for me, I was really lucky because when I started my illustration career, ~I had ~I was in my mid to late thirties. I was like 38 or 39 years old, and so I had already had ~like. All of this, ~all of these years of work experience.
And so I understood worked really, I have a DHD and so I have worked really hard to try to organize myself over the years. So I'm like this weird marriage of somebody who has ~like ~focus problems, but then also somebody who is a Capricorn and really likes meeting deadlines [00:05:00] and ~always, ~making sure my clients are happy.
So I've had to really learn how to manage my time in order to be true to that part of myself. That's ~a ~more of a people pleaser. ~And so ~I spent a lot of years ~when I was ~working for a nonprofit organization as my previous career, and I spent a lot of time ~like ~learning how to be organized, learning how to manage my time, learning how to communicate with people that I was, working with.
And I had really, fortunately for me, honed all of those skills by the time I. Started to, try to make a living as an artist. ~And ~I think that's a hard part for a lot of people ~is ~if you're starting, ~when you're ~in your early twenties, fresh out of school, you may not have a lot of work or life experience.
And that's not necessarily a bad thing. But I think managing all of the parts of your career, promoting yourself, finishing work, putting it out into the world all feels overwhelming. And for me, that was the part that I actually was really good at, and that allowed me [00:06:00] to focus more on doing a lot of drawing ~and.~
I think another thing about my personality that helped in the beginning is that I'm not a perfectionist and I was really willing to make mediocre work. I probably did not recognize it was mediocre at the time. At the time I probably thought it was amazing. ~But I hadn't, it's like you, ~you aren't as conscious of the growth in your work.
When you're making it, it's like everybody can relate to looking at something from five years ago or 10 years ago and cringing a little bit. Ooh, I drew that thing, but if I did it now, I would make it so much better. But when you're in that moment you're not necessarily aware of it.
~And so I ~I got really good at making stuff. And putting it out into the world. ~And I, ~my career started around the time that Instagram was becoming a space for people to ~like, ~share the stuff they were making. There were blogs and things, but ~like ~Instagram really was the space where I started to ~really ~share my work publicly.
And I just ~make stuff and put it on Instagram and ~make stuff and put it on Instagram. Even stuff that was in ~pro ~progress [00:07:00] and of course at the time I didn't have half a million followers, so it felt a little bit less daunting. And I'm not one of those people who's oh, this has to look perfect before I share it.
In fact, I think ~the wonkiness in my work or the ~the imperfection in my work ~is, I think I recognize ~is what makes it special. ~And ~and I think that's true for other people too. ~And so ~I just have a personality trait, like I'm just not a perfectionist, so I'm willing to ~like. Put stuff, ~share stuff that's not perfect.
And I think that helped propel my career. ~And ~it was really nerve wracking, I think financially. Eventually in the first five years of my career, I met the person I'm now married to. We moved in together. ~And so ~sharing expenses with somebody was really helpful because there were times when I wasn't making a lot of money.
~Even ~I had signed with an agent and ~I ~was starting to ~like. ~Be really productive, but I wasn't selling a lot of work. ~And I think ~lastly, one thing I re really did well from the beginning was like diversified my income streams. So I started an Etsy shop. I'm no longer an Etsy, but Etsy was the place at that time where people would ~sell ~sell their illustrations on things like prints ~and stuff.~
[00:08:00] And, I like started an Etsy shop. I started doing illustration commissions. I I like was doing like pet portraits. I was doing anything I could to make a buck ~and ~I understood that if I put all my eggs in one basket, I wasn't necessarily gonna be successful. But if I put my reach in different places ~that ~I would.
Eventually, find the ones that stuck. And that's definitely ended up being true. I'm, I still do lots of different things just at a bigger scale, but I think that helped me ~also. But ~it's a hard time and ~it's, ~it takes a lot of creativity ~just ~to figure out how you're gonna make it sometimes.
Lisa: Yeah. And that's what in the Good Ship role is reassuring people. If you are an illustrator and you have a creative brain, then that is your superpower. You can use that creative brain to think of multiple income streams. And I think when you're in that scrappy place, like you talked about how you worded it, like any way to make a book that's like the genius ideas come from that, and you don't have to.
Do any idea [00:09:00] forever. ~I love~
Katie: ~Yeah. Yeah. ~I did a couple of projects~ not at the very beginning, but in like ~mid-career where I did these, ~like ~drawing a day projects and 365 days of hand lettering. ~And, also like. Those were ideas that I had. ~I remember I did this one project ~was I think the first one I ever did ~called a collection a day.
~And ~I ~like ~photographed one of my collections every day for a year. And various times I like would draw imaginary collections. And I remember telling my now wife that I was gonna do this project every day. And this was back in, gosh, 2000. 10 or 11. It was a really long time ago. And I remember she was ~like, you're high.~
Like you're nuts. That is crazy.
Lisa: with you?
Katie: And I was like, trust me, this is gonna lead to something. I just know it. And sure enough it did. ~And ~it got me on people's radars and the project went viral ~and I, that was. ~This weird idea that I had, not necessarily ~like at the time, ~thinking this is how I'm gonna make money, but ~this is ~how I'm gonna get some eyes on me so that I could eventually make money.
~And ~I was willing to go with the crazy idea because I had faith that the idea was a good idea. And eventually I made a book out of it and [00:10:00] did make a few bucks off the book. And. And just got some notoriety is that, that person who takes photographs of her weird collections.
Lisa: And you mentioned an agent, do you still have an agent or are you
Katie: yeah, ~I have ~I started off with L Rogers who's a pretty well known illustration agent. She was an amazing mentor to me, ~and ~she was my very first agent, and she took. A huge chance on me because I hadn't gone to art school, I was self-taught. My portfolio was pretty small at the time. But I think she saw something in me and I think she also was like, oh, this person is, already mature as a person.
She's going, 'cause I was in my early forties at the time and she's going to be a responsible person for me to manage. ~And so ~we worked together for a number of years and then I had. A number of years where I was on my own. ~I just, ~at that point, I had started to build a following and a lot of the work that was coming my way was coming directly to me and not through my agent.
And so Lila and I decided to part ways because it didn't ~really ~[00:11:00] make sense for me at the time to have an agent who ~like. ~Took a percentage of ~the work, or ~the money ~of ~from the work ~that ~I was doing. ~And so ~I had a number of years where I managed all my projects myself. I signed with another agent for a few years that didn't really work out.
And then about a year ago, I started working with Totally Reps with Kat, who runs that agency. ~And it's been amazing and I think. ~What I recognized after I was on my own for a while is that that was also the time that I was starting to get some big brand collaborations and jobs where I knew I needed to ask for a decent amount of money, but I had no idea how much or what the industry standard was.
And then I was like, oh, I really do think I need an agent again, because I needed ~to have some ~assurance that I was ~a. ~Being treated fairly in those relationships and be making the money that I deserve to make. And I didn't really know very much about pricing.
I think pricing is a really hard thing for a lot [00:12:00] of artists to figure out. And I've been doing this for almost 20 years and I still get really flummoxed sometimes about what to charge. ~And ~I really appreciate having another brain to bounce ideas off of. A piece of advice I give a lot to artists ~is ~when you don't know and when they haven't already presented their budget. ~'cause ~a lot of times clients will. Email you and say, we want you to do this job and here's how much it pays. ~And ~I appreciate that when it happens, because then you can be like, okay, how do I feel about this?
Do I wanna ask for more money? Is this so low that even with negotiation, ~there's, ~we're never gonna get to where we wanna go. ~And. ~Asking a client to share their budget, especially when you're not sure, is always a good tactic, ~I think, ~especially if you don't have an agent to help you navigate that, scenario.
I also just finished an illustration job. Last month. That was one of the hardest jobs I've ever done, and I've been really lucky in my career to have so many [00:13:00] amazing clients. ~And ~literally 99% of the art directors and creative directors that I've worked with over the years have just been lovely people. ~And the, ~even if the job is hard, the communication's been really wonderful and I just feel very grateful ~and I this.~
Recent job I did was not good. It was really hard and the client and I did not see eye to eye on a lot of things, ~and ~I didn't realize this until we had gotten going, so it was too late to back out ~and ~my agent really helped me to navigate that She. Helped me process how I was feeling. She showed up to conversations and ~really did, had ~got to be the bad cop, so that I didn't have to do that.
~And ~I think having an agent can be so useful in those situations. So I feel really lucky.
Lisa: ~Yeah. ~Solid advice
Katie: Yeah.
Lisa: I would love to know, ~because ~with Instagram you talked about, make things, share things. I love that simplicity. But how does your relationship to social media feel now at the end of 2025, where we are now?
Katie: I was ~just ~doing a written interview yesterday [00:14:00] and, the person ~who ~was interviewing me ~was, it was a different question, but it was ~about building community and ~building ~an audience. ~And I think ~for many years, ~and I alluded to this earlier, ~I was on Instagram ~and I ~I joined social media, namely Instagram. At a time when my work was really Instagram friendly before, when it really was like a linear sort of, like you would see things in your feed in the order that people were put, like that was why it was called Instagram. ~Like ~literally the second somebody posted something, you would see it in your feed.
And my work ~was also, ~especially once you could share posts in stories, ~like my work ~became very Instagram friendly because I make a lot of work that is very graphic in terms of ~like ~color ~and like ~it's~ my work is pretty like flat and ~typically bright and cheery and has messages ~and ~not all of my work fits that description, but a lot of it does, and that's the kind of work that people share. ~And so ~my work was getting shared a [00:15:00] lot, and ~then ~I was growing my following as a result. ~And ~even when the algorithm changed ~to not be, this linear thing or chronological thing, I was still, it was before video, ~I was still~ my work was ~being shared a lot because, the more your work ~or the stuff you post ~is liked or commented on, the more Instagram shares it with other people.
And so ~they, ~they share what's already popular ~and. ~That really worked for me until it didn't. Fortunately I was able to grow a following that's pretty big during that period of time when ~that, like ~the Instagram algorithm and my work were ~very like ~well matched. I remember my following grew so quickly and there were definitely some hard parts about that.
But it was overall really great and I was able to start making a living from making products and ~just. ~Posting about the things I was making on Instagram ~and I am, ~I'm a storyteller, so I ~also ~was telling a lot of stories through my art and it really was this kind of magical period of time. And then the algorithm changed again to favor video ~and I.~
Deeply do not identify as a content [00:16:00] creator. I deeply identify as an artist and an illustrator, and while I occasionally make videos, ~I, ~it's not something that I'm comfortable doing or really care to do. ~And so my, ~I still post the stuff that I like to post and, ~I still ~have decent engagement depending on what I post, but ~really like ~my following has flattened in the last five years because I'm not ~like ~playing the game so much and I don't really want to ~believe me.~
I've tried, I've been like, okay, this week I'm gonna make three videos or even one video and I dread it and I either don't do it because ~I am not, ~I don't care about being in front of the camera. I don't actually like it very much. Or if I do it, it really stresses me out and I've gotten okay with, using social media for the stuff that I like to use it for.
And I have a lot of gratitude that I was able to grow my following during a time when Instagram favored the stuff that I liked to make and [00:17:00] post. ~But. ~I do get overwhelmed by Instagram, by the amount of content that's on there. ~And I'm not gonna lie, like ~sometimes I see artists who make these amazing videos and post things that are so cool and I think I should be doing that.
Or maybe I'm a little bit of a failure 'cause I'm not doing that. And then I remember, oh, you don't want to do that. That's not something that you find joy in ~or, ~and that's okay. I'm still managing to run a business and promote the stuff that I'm up to on Instagram and ~that ~I'm really grateful for that ~because. ~While I wanna learn more about how to use video and I have a new marketing person who's helping me ~holding my hand through it, ~it's not really something that I wanna spend too much time doing.
So I feel like Instagram's a really fraught place for me because I love it and I have a lot of gratitude for it because it's the place that I built my community and my audience. But it's changed so much and it's not a place that I feel as much at home [00:18:00] anymore.
Lisa: Yeah, it's changed a lot. And I wonder, so you've mentioned that it doesn't feel as good. Is there somewhere now that has that good feeling that gets you excited like Instagram did in the olden days? ~Or is it just kind not.~
Katie: No, ~and to be clear, ~occasionally I feel. Instagram makes me feel good. ~I think I, ~every now and again I'll create a piece of art and, do some storytelling on there. ~And ~I have the same kind of feeling of oh, ~this is, pe ~this is really resonating for people and that feels really good.
But ~it does, ~there is a lot of pressure ~and. ~There was a period ~actually ~in the beginning ~of this, or most ~of this year where I wasn't really posting regularly ~and ~I'm really trying to use Instagram again, ~and ~even if it's just in ~the ~ways that are comfortable for me ~and ~to post more often, ~and ~I'm back in the habit ~of it, ~but I ~even just ~stopped for a while because I was burned out ~and.~
I'm tired of comparing myself to other people. ~'cause ~I think a lot of people imagine, oh, Lisa, she's made it ~right this ~how can this possibly stress her out? But it still stresses me out and I still, do a fair bit of oh, I should be doing this or that, ~and ~then I remind myself, no, actually do what brings you joy and the rest will [00:19:00] follow.
To be honest with you, ~I think I, ~if I. Could have a career where I wasn't online at all. I would be really happy.
Lisa: I recently experimented and ~I ~got it's a smartphone, but it's like a dumb fired phone. So it's got this operating system where you literally cannot install any social media. You can't even go on Reddit, ~on the browser or anything. And ~it was so good when I was using it, but ~the same thing, like ~I need Instagram for work.
I need to post things and the faff and the hassle of oh, time to get my other phone out and do the other it was so clunky and I couldn't quite get it to it, but I'm gonna persevere because like the more time I spend ~on my phone ~on Instagram and social media, the more anxious I feel ~and the more I feel.~
Yeah, ~that thing it was, ~you read my mind about talking about comparison and things. ~'cause yeah, ~you'd think Lisa Conley and she's been at it so long, she'll be fine. There'll be no ~like ~self doubt or comparison. So it's very reassuring ~actually ~to hear that you do feel that sometimes.
Katie: Yeah, I'm human and ~I have, ~I experience all the things. I think ~I do also have, because I've been doing it a long time, ~I also have a lot of tools for turning it off because I recognize that. Because I have enough [00:20:00] experience and ~enough, ~situations where I have compared myself to other people or thought to myself, oh, I should be doing this or that.
To know that's not actually true. And those are just stories I'm telling myself ~and that. ~The times when I follow my gut and my heart and my sense of purpose about how I want to make my art and how I want to promote my art and how I want to show up in the world. If I just stay focused on that instead of what other people are doing, that's where, I thrive.
And it is possible that if I spent. Several hours a week making reels that I could potentially sell more work, but then I'd be spending several hours a week making reels. And that's not something I have any interest in doing. And so I've just had to make that choice. And it's also possible it wouldn't help me ~do, ~make more money or whatever.
~And ~I'm not. In this profession to make money, but I do have a team [00:21:00] of people who I pay to, run my retail business and I need to support myself. And so I have to be thinking about those things, like what's the best use of my time to support my business and my employees? ~So~
Lisa: Yeah, it's like we're weighing it all up, isn't it? ~Yeah. ~I would love to know. ~Aside from aside Instagram, ~looking at your career with the gift of hindsight, what do you think is the most impactful thing that you've done that ~like ~really moved your business forward and your career as an illustrator?
Katie: I think one of the things I mentioned earlier, which was ~like ~doing this 365 day project was. Pretty impactful. ~It was like at the time ~now people do monthly and yearly projects quite a bit. But at the time not very many people were doing those things. ~And I think it is a great, ~it was ~not only ~a great way to get my work in front of other people ~because ~I ended up.
Doing another project the following year, which was 365 days of hand lettering, ~which was ~more focused on my illustration career ~and less about my collections. And ~that project. Also turned into a book with a major publisher. ~And that really like, and I, ~by the way, I had zero [00:22:00] intention when I started that project of making a book.
It didn't ~even ~seem to be a thing until halfway through the project when I started hand lettering quotes instead of ~like ~letters of the alphabet
So anyway~ I think that ~that idea of both. Practicing something earnestly, ~like ~being consistent ~like we were talking about earlier, ~showing up every day doing the thing whether I wanted to or not.
I said publicly I was gonna do it. And, being true Capricorn, I was like I have to do what I said I was going to do. ~And ~over time I did develop a lettering style. ~Now. ~It's been 15 years and my lettering ~style ~styles have changed and, are so different now. But at the time this was really ~like ~novel for me and it was super cool.
And about six months into the project I was hand lettering a lot of quotes because what else do you do ~every day ~with your hand lettering ~and. ~An editor at Chronicle contacted me and was like, I think this would make a really great book. ~And so ~at the end of the project we took a hundred of the quotes, illustrated them, some of them were already illustrated [00:23:00] as part of the project and turned it into a book that ended up selling super well.
And that was like a really. It wasn't like, I was like, I'm going to do a daily project and it's going to become a book, and the book is going to be best seller. ~Like ~no one can imagine that those things are going to happen. But I took a chance on doing something every day and hoping that it would lead to something.
And it did. ~And ~I also did other projects over the years that led to nothing except, practicing. ~So ~that was a really big one for me and I've had a lot of other ~really. ~Incredible things happen over the years. I ~had ~also related to Chronicle books. ~So ~I used to live in San Francisco and Chronicle Books is the publisher that I worked with.
Not exclusively, but pretty closely over the years. And I've done a ton of books with them. ~And ~when I was in the very beginning of my career, and I had not even signed with my agent yet, ~I was just ~I might have even. Still been working part-time at another job, ~but I had a show ~I used to make these collages that [00:24:00] were inside of shadow boxes and some paintings of birch tree forests.
So it's first thing I became known for were these birch forest paintings, ~and ~I had a show. In a little shop. It wasn't even a gallery, it was like a shop that had blank walls in San Francisco, a clothing store. ~And ~somehow that show got advertised on this platform. ~At the time ~that was really popular in San Francisco where I lived.
And my show ended up being flooded with people. ~So many people came. ~It was a little overwhelming and I think I sold almost everything. ~'cause you can imagine at the time my work was like, a hundred dollars or whatever. And then ~I got a call, ~the following ~or an email the following week from the editorial director at Chronicle Books saying somebody from Chronicle was at your show.
Loved your work and we want to take some of it and turn it into journals and note cards ~and ~those are things that I make myself now ~like I self produce, like ~I'm at the place in my career that if I wanna make a product, I just make it. Especially if it's a paper product. ~'cause those are pretty, the return on investment is pretty, pretty high and, but ~[00:25:00] this was like the biggest deal to me.
It was like my first licensing deal ever. ~And it was because ~I did something and then somebody saw it and that person worked it somewhere and then they showed it. ~And I remember ~I had a meeting with that editorial director probably the following week, ~and this was, I never, ~I didn't have a website. There was no social media.
I just showed up with a literal portfolio of things that I had printed out and maybe a few things ~that ~I had made to talk to her about. ~And ~I think that was the one and only time I ~ever ~used this portfolio for an in-person meeting ~and that's the way people used to do things. And and then I ended up.~
Making some products with them. And one of the things ended up on the cover of the catalog that year. So I was like, brand new, no following. Nobody knew who I was. And then ~my l ~Rogers, who ended up becoming my agent, saw my work on the Chronicle Books catalog and ~then ~ended up signing me. ~And ~so that's just another example of something that ~really ~propelled my career ~and.~
~Again, ~neither of the things were ~like ~intentional things that I did, ~so that I, so that the things that followed would happen, ~but I knew that I had to keep trying different things ~and ~showing [00:26:00] up ~and ~making art and putting it out into the world, ~and that ~eventually if there was an audience for my work, that audience would find me and I would find them.
~And that's, ~and I could tell you probably like 20 more stories like that just get increasingly. Bigger and more profound over the years. But those are two from the beginning ~that ~that I talk about a lot. And remember fondly.
Lisa: I love that. It's like you get enthusiastic about something, do it because you're really lit up by it, and that is the domino effect, isn't it? ~Like that one domino is that ~somebody sees something, tells somebody else, and then it blows up. ~I~
Katie: ~Yeah, ~chronologically the story with Chronicle and having the show happened before the hand lettering example that I gave ~also, ~but yeah. So I told them out of order, but they're ~like yeah, ~two really pivotal examples from my career.
Lisa: Yeah. I'm dying to ask as well, 'cause this year I've been studying human design. Do you know what your human design profile is
You don't, oh, I'll have to grill you about that afterwards. ~'cause I'm like, oh I wonder, oh maybe this thing. Yeah,~
Katie: Yeah, tell me what you think it is. ~Yeah, ~I don't know.
Lisa: Yeah. ~I dunno. ~I was wondering ~just especially with like ~you've ~even ~talked about going with your [00:27:00] gut and being lit up by things.
So I'm thinking you've probably got that as your way of making decisions. So if something is an ~in ~instant Yes, they do. Yeah. And then ~there's ~manifesting generators have ~like ~more than one career in their life and it seems like you have that, ~like ~if you get really excited about something, you're really buzzy and ~you ~just go with it ~and ~you could almost get into a project ~and just go and ~get on with it and ~then ~come out ~and be ~like, I did it.
And ~'cause ~you had that whole previous career before you even became an artist ~as well. ~It could be that I'm a complete nerd about this stuff, but it just, I can see
Katie: ~Yeah, ~that sounds ~really ~interesting.
Lisa: Yeah, I'll do your reading afterwards
Katie: Awesome.
Lisa: Thanks. ~Yeah. Oh, but ~this has been so good. I feel like I could talk to you for actual hours.
Lisa, it's just so inspiring to hear your journey and the lessons you've learned. You've been the Dream podcast guest, so thank you so much.
Katie: ~You. ~Thank you. ~Thank ~for having me. [00:28:00]