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Tag: Painting With a Fish

Local designer featured at Bealls Florida

Local designer featured at Bealls Florida

BRADENTON – Kelly Hunt grew up on Anna Maria Island and her Island-inspired creative designs appear on a line of beach towels now sold at 68 Bealls Florida stores statewide.

Hunt now lives in Bradenton with her husband, Courtland, and their son Kellan, and her parents, Scott and Karen Moore, remain longtime Holmes Beach residents.

Hunt’s beach towel offerings at Bealls Florida stores feature three different designs – sea turtles, jellyfish and a Florida map that highlights favorite Florida destinations.

Local designer featured at Bealls Florida
Kelly Hunt’s beach towels feature Anna Maria Island and Florida-inspired designs. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Her beach towels debuted in Bealls Florida stores statewide on Feb. 20. On April 13, Bealls Florida hosted a “Meet Local Florida Artist Kelly Hunt” event at the Bradenton store at 6355 Manatee Ave. W.

During the event, Hunt was asked how it felt to have her products displayed and sold at Bealls Florida.

“It’s magical. I’m seeing my dream come true being a featured artist for a major retailer. It’s an honor to work with Bealls Florida. It’s been the most incredible experi­ence. My towels are in all the Bealls Florida stores and online at the Bealls Florida website. I’ve been doing this for 13 years and to have recognition on a state level is really rewarding,” she said.

Local designer featured at Bealls Florida
Designer Kelly Hunt recently participated in a meet the local artist event at the Bealls Florida store in Bradenton. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Her dad, Scott, said, “I’m very proud of my daughter. Growing up on Anna Maria Island and coming this far with her art and having that imagination to use our marine life and natural settings for her artwork and designs.”

Bealls was founded in Bradenton in 1915 and using local artists is a long-standing company practice.

During the meet the artist event, Bealls Florida repre­sentative Chrissy Kavanagh said, “At Bealls Florida, we’re all about Florida and living life local. Bringing in local art­ists to highlight their artwork on our products is something we’re really proud of and it has always been a part of our culture. Bealls Florida is more than 100 years old. We’re Florida-founded, family-owned and we’re really proud of our Florida heritage.”

PATH TO BEALLS

Hunt owns two intertwined companies: Charted Waters Florida and Painting With a Fish. At her meet the artist event, she also temporarily displayed some of her ad­ditional work and products, some of which she created utilizing a traditional Japa­nese art form of Gyotaku to create pressings using paint, canvas or rice paper and a real fish.

Hunt’s dad and her brother, Justin Moore, are renowned charter captains and fishing guides and many of the fish featured in her Gyotaku prints and apparel were caught on their boats in the waters sur­rounding Anna Maria Island.

Hunt began teaching Gyotaku painting at the Florida Maritime Museum in Cortez. She later expanded her teaching sessions to other locations and now offers private sessions and event sessions too. She began selling her original Gyotaku prints and T-shirts and other products at the Anna Maria farmers market and several other retail busi­nesses on Anna Maria Island – including her Painting With a Fish kits that now utilize silicone fish instead of real fish.

Local designer featured at Bealls Florida
Kelly Hunt’s silicone fish are used to teach people the art of Gyotaku painting. – Joe Hendricks | Sun
Local designer featured at Bealls Florida
Silicone fish are used in some of Kelly Hunt’s Paint With a Fish classes and events. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

During a recent interview, Hunt said, “I do classes with real fish but I also have silicone molds made from a casting of a fish. I teach classes with those as well because some people might not want to paint with a real fish. They turn out just as beautiful as using real fish. I got picked up by Bealls Florida because I had my products in stores on the Island, so thanks to the Island stores for carrying my products and being so supportive.

Local designer featured at Bealls Florida
The Bealls Florida store on Manatee Avenue sells Kelly Hunt’s beach towels. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“Painting With a Fish is my original company and I then I branched out with Charted Waters Florida, working with another graphic artist. I was at an event and got introduced to a Bealls Florida buyer who looks for local artists and local products as part of their company culture. It took me about a year to get my products in their stores. It’s not an easy process,” Hunt said.

She said it was important to find the right company to manufacture and distribute her beach towels statewide and the company she selected was the Miami-based Kaufman towel company.

Hunts hopes her beach towel sales pave the way for more of her designs and products to be sold at Bealls Florida stores. She also hopes to get some of her other products in Target and Publix stores someday.

“I do different things for differ­ent stores and I try to customize them. I also hired a graphic designer to help me expand my business. Sometimes I need help bringing my ideas to fruition,” Hunt said.

Hunt traveled a varied path on her way to business success.

“My grandmother was a watercolor artist. I’m really skilled in Gyotaku art and teach­ing Gyotaku but I don’t view myself as an artist. I’m more of a designer. I love to design products,” she said.

“I used to work for a market­ing consulting firm doing logo designs. I have a marketing background. I used to create event invitations, billboard designs and things like that. I’ve always had that creative sense, but I don’t have graphic designer background,” she said.

Hunt’s college education also contributed to her success.

“I’ve taken what I learned in college and used that in my businesses. You have to be smart and savvy as a businessperson running your own company and you have to be educated and present yourself well to get into these big stores. I look back on my life and realize school really did help me get to where I’m at,” the 41-year-old entrepreneur said.

A wide array of Hunt’s artwork, towels, apparel and other products can be found at www.ChartedWa­tersFlorida.com and you can learn more about her Gyotaku art and teachings at the Painting With a Fish Facebook page.

Anna Maria farmers’ market returns

Anna Maria farmers market returns

ANNA MARIA – The city of Anna Maria’s weekly farmers market is back. The seasonal market opened its third year of operations at City Pier Park on Tuesday, Oct. 15.

From now until mid-May, the farmers’ market will continue every Tuesday at City Pier Park, weather permitting, from 8:30 a.m. until 2 p.m. – with the exception of Christmas Eve, on Tuesday, Dec. 24.

City Pier Park is located at the corner of Pine Avenue and North Bay Boulevard.

“We’re excited to have the market up and running with the majority of our vendors back with us. Our new vendor, Dominga’s Flowers, is a nice addition to an already great product variety. From all accounts everyone was very happy with the opening day turnout and looking forward to another great season,” market manager Debbie Haynes said.

Anna Maria farmers’ market returns
Dominga’s Flowers is a new addition to the market. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The opening day vendors included Fibela Produce, Milagros Produce, Tillman Produce, Bella’s Gourmet Cuisine, Dominga’s Flowers, Hahn’s Gourmet Kettle Corn, Holy Paradise Guacamole, Meli Gusto gourmet products, Mr. Fun Guy’s Mushroom Store & More, Painting With a Fish, Saucy Guys and the Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring organization.

Anna Maria farmers’ market returns
Peas, mushrooms and more can be found at the city of Anna Maria’s farmers market each Tuesday. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“I can walk right down the street and go to the market. It’s so convenient,” Anna Maria resident Lynn French said while purchasing tomatoes, radishes and raw turmeric from Tillman Produce. French said raw turmeric is hard to find and Tillman noted he’s one of the three-year-old market’s original vendors.

Anna Maria farmers’ market returns
Tillman Produce was selling hard-to-find raw turmeric. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Market visitors Aisling, Noleen and Niamh McQuaid purchased fresh banana bread before making their return trip to Boston later that day.

“It’s fabulous,” Noleen McQuaid said of the bread, and of the market she and her daughters have visited before.

Selling hot sauces, local honey, spice mixes and more, Saucy Guys vendor Neil Currie said, “We’ve been here since the beginning. It’s a great market. We love it. We’ve met some great people out here – and a lot of people from all over the country that buy from our online store when they’re back home.”

Anna Maria farmers’ market returns
Saucy Guys Jim Brannon and Neil Currie are among the market’s original vendors. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Currie’s business partner Jim Brannon said, “Right now I have orange blossom honey. Everybody kept asking for it, but it’s been hard to come by. I finally got some yesterday.”

“It’s beautiful here,” vendor Angelo Cannistraci said while working his first Anna Maria market selling mushrooms and more at Bill Nelms’ Mr. Fun Guy tent.

“It’s a fantastic market,” Holy Paradise Guacamole vendor Michael Valdes said, noting his offerings included fresh guacamole, tomato salsa and pineapple-mango salsa.

Milagros Produce vendor Tony Martinez was assisted by his seven-year-old son, Aidenn, and another family member.

Anna Maria farmers’ market returns
Milagros Produce vendor Tony Martinez and his seven-year-old son, Aidenn. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

At her Painting With a Fish tent, Kelly Hunt explained how she presses raw fish into paint and then onto canvas to create her art.

“All my fish are caught locally around Anna Maria Island. I’m big on conservation. I don’t use the fish once and throw it out. I refreeze it and use it for my classes at the Florida Maritime Museum,” Hunt said.

Anna Maria farmers’ market returns
Kelly Hunt displays her fish paintings. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Hunt also sells T-shirts that contain prints of her work and the GPS coordinates of where that particular fish was caught.

She also had on hand a few copies of the book G.B. Knowles wrote with and about her father, charter fishing Captain Scott Moore: “Captain Scott Moore’s Snook Fishing Secrets.”

Moore dropped by to visit his daughter and while there he signed a copy of the book an out-of-state visitor was buying for her oldest son.

Anna Maria farmers’ market returns
Scott Moore signed a copy of “Captain Scott Moore’s Snook Fishing Secrets” for these out-of-town visitors while visiting the Anna Maria farmers market last week. – Joe Hendricks | Sun