When we got to the Brooklyn Lyceum’s Holiday Market last December, I immediately lost my husband in the crowd.  A few minutes later, he reappeared and said, “Come with me – I found the perfect gift for Dean and Trish’s new baby.”  And we raced over to meet Jesse Kuhn of Raw Toast Design.  Dean and Trish promised us that they would stay in the city after their baby girl was born, rather than moving out to a big house in the suburbs.  And so the gift James found was a very sweet image  of a bright yellow sun with a pacifier in its mouth, rising up over the city skyline.  That image turned out to be Jesse Kuhn’s “The Early Birds,” a featured illustration in Time Out New York Kids.  It now hangs in the light-filled room of a beautiful baby girl — in New York City.

Jesse is a designer and illustrator.  He creates original artwork for commercial use, and he also sells them online and at some of the artisan markets in New York City.  His images are clever and funny, and they are beautifully drawn with generally subtle colors.  I actually feel bad for the “Poor Little Calamari” being dragged out of the ocean by a seagull, but the expression on his face and his dangling little tentacles simply crack me up.  As does “Meathead,” which is one of the best descriptive words in the English language in my opinion.  “Carbon Footprint” reminded me of the woman I recently saw allowing her cute but destructive little dogs to dig up the first fragile daffodils of spring.  You know that feeling.  That’s the kind of thought or emotion that Jesse captures so well.

So why the name “Raw Toast Design?  Jesse describes it best:

“Raw Toast actually came about during a late night run to a casino diner many years ago.  It was summoned to the counter after a friend had asked for the fastest thing they had on the menu.  The waitress politely tossed some bread-n-butter in front of us.  I then mumbled, “Raw Toast”… Everyone laughed and the name sort of stuck with me after that.  So a couple years later it became my ’stage name in the art world.’  The simplicity of bread and butter is what I try strive for within my illustrations as well…simple, clear, conceptual statements, with a subtle sprinkling of wit and sarcasm.”

Jesse is currently busy with a wonderful educational program called The Quirkles®, which consists of “26 imaginary scientists that help children everyday, all over the world, develop a love and appreciation for science.”

You can meet Jesse at the Renegade Craft Fair Brooklyn on June 5th and 6th. His favorite toast is “wheat, lightly toasted with real butter…not the tub stuff.  If I’m feelin’ fancy I’ll splash some American cheese and scrambled eggs on top of it.”  Sounds good right about now, doesn’t it?

(All images from www.rawtoastdesign.com.)

Yes, I left some of my shopping until this weekend.  But I totally scored at The Brooklyn Lyceum Holiday Craft Market.  In addition to cupcakes, chocolate, and sandwiches that kept me going, the handmade merchandise was impressive.  The Lyceum is an excellent space for a market, and I heard a lot of people saying that they liked the way the crowd could easily flow through the aisles this year.

To see all the wonderful exhibitors, you’ll have to brave the snow yourself on Sunday.  But I’ll give you a few examples of some of them.

Lovely Day Designs has hand-poured soy candles in vintage teacups, pressed-glass votives, and porcelain gravy boats, and other decorative items as well.  One of the more unusual things I came across was the living jewelry from McFlashpants, tiny plants rooted in eensy vials hanging as pendants on a necklace.  McFlashpants also makes unique jewelry made of vintage cutlery.  Everything Tiny creates laser cut accessories using bright colors and fun images like dinosaurs, Leggos, deer, and (my favorite) dachshunds.  Fortunately for my little nieces, I came across Pickleboots and got some really great kid things for them.

I really liked the graphic images printed on pages torn from unusual books by Girls Can Tell.  The soaps from Nordea all smell divine, and her felted scrubber soaps in bright colors would be great stocking stuffers.  The framed prints from Raw Toast Design are colorful, skillfully drawn, and darkly funny, like the “poor calamari” being eaten by seagulls.  For really great T-shirts, I couldn’t resist the bright pink giant squid from Squidfire.  And Miss Wit lives up to her name with some really great shirts, like the one that says, “I can’t stop googling myself.”  For the nostalgic people on your list, definitely stop by Another Work In Progress for handmade spiral notebooks made from vintage board games, like Candy Land, Bingo, Monopoly, and more.

Brooklyn Lyceum:  Saturday and Sunday, December 19 – 20, 11A – 7 P

Tomorrow is the last weekend day to shop!  So pull on your ear grips and mukluks and hit the markets!