Age is just a number

I was only fourteen years old when I started my professional art career. I ‘borrowed’ my mom’s old Christmas card collection which inspired a hand-drawn book of Christmas window splashes. As December rolled around I hitchhiked into town (I was too young to drive) and sold the designs to the local merchants. I sold the first window to a family friend for fifteen dollars and as my confidence grew so did the prices I dared to ask. Over the next two weeks, after school and on the weekends I would lay out the designs onto the store windows and then paint them backwards on the inside.  That first year I made a whopping six hundred dollars - a fortune back in the late 1960’s. I remember one very large window project which I quoted at fifty dollars. The owner watched intently as I painted the design and was surprised when I completed the project in only a couple of hours. As I approached him with the invoice in hand he was suddenly reluctant to pay. He asked me who I worked for. On hearing the news that this skinny little kid in front of him was the owner of the company he generously offered me twenty-five bucks. He was adamant that this was still a lot of money for someone my age. I calmly asked him for a rag. I dipped it into my brush-washing bucket and walked up to the window. I told him that for half of our agreed estimate, I would wipe half paint off the window. We stared each other down for what seemed like a very long time before he agreed to pay the full amount. I was often questioned about my age and my experience as I began my self-employed journey but each time I would somehow convince my prospective client to trust me. As my portfolio and client list grew through the years things gradually got easier. 

A few years ago I was visiting a client in California. We were reviewing a complex design and discussing a project that would take five years or more to complete. Our client was a three-generation family business. One of the grandsons in the meeting looked at me intently and then asked me how old I was. I could see him doing the math in his head as he calculated how old I would be as the project was completed. It took me by surprise for I had never run into this concern previously. It made me smile. I assured him that our company was also multi-generational and that he was in good hands - no matter what. It’s funny how little changes through the years. Age is still just a number.

Tom's sign finished

The Tom’s Candle Pins sign is a standout with its 23K gold lettering. It was fun to design the bracket to be fully integrated as an important part of the sign. The strong welded steel structure is cleverly hidden internally. The sign uses CNC plasma cut steel, CNC routed 25 lb Precision Board and hand-sculpted epoxy. It is hand-painted using acrylic paints and glazes. This sign will hang on the entry building facade at NEB’s Fun World in Oshawa, Ontario.