Wherever Erin Sheridan goes, she keeps an eye out for the eclectic items that grace her cotton clothesline rope baskets. Peacock feathers, felted flowers, vintage jewelry, geodes, and even antlers adorn the unique vessels she creates in her Hummingbird’s Heart Studio located in White Creek just outside Cambridge, NY.

Erin’s background is equally eclectic. A college English and Journalism major, she joined the Air Force and worked as a Crew Chief on B-52 bombers in the late 1970s. Eventually, in 1989, she became a real estate agent and broker, also working as a NY State certified real estate licensing instructor and continuing education creator.

But she was always drawn to artistic pursuits. Her mother, a musician and accomplished chef, opened a restaurant and bar in the area in 1969 and there taught Erin culinary skills, including baking and cake decorating. This led Erin to establish her own catering business for a time. Her mother also taught her to sew, a lifelong passion.

“I love the sewing process,” Erin says. “Once I start to build my basket, the repetitive motion is very calming to me. None of the baskets are ever the same—they start to take on their own shape and personality as I work on them.” She sometimes uses her commercial embroidery machine to create the bases for the baskets. She enjoys digitizing some of her original designs for her machine to “read.” Current examples include a loaf of bread (for a breadbasket, of course) and a tree of life. It was worth it, she says, to travel to Chicago twice to learn how to use the required software.

Erin’s passion is to make her baskets functional, as well as ”pieces of art that everyone will enjoy.” She especially loves using unique elements from nature and incorporating them into the exterior of the basket. “Sometimes the decoration is the very first component. If I find an interesting piece of bark or a cluster of unusual moss or feathers, it will inspire my basket’s design.” A challenge she faces is finding the right quality rope, because most rope these days is made of plastic or other synthetics. Another challenge, she says, laughing, “is not breaking 20 needles on one basket.”

Erin has always been a “maker of some sort,” as she puts it. While working at a quilt shop in Saratoga she taught classes in quilting techniques, design and color theory. Over the years, she has also taken classes with different artists in a diverse variety of mediums, including quilting, weaving, fabric dyeing, and printing. She enjoys making paper beads and jewelry from junk mail and creates art quilts using her hand-dyed fabrics and felted wool. Many of her artistic creations have always involved sewing of some sort, but baskets were a “What if!” moment for her. She says, “My attitude has always been, you can’t fail unless you try. Although I’ve failed miserably at some things, I’ve mostly enjoyed much success at others, and doesn’t that make it all worthwhile?”

– Nancy Roberts