CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC
Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/160635
john allen shoes The latest designs from Dansko. More colors, styles and materials available for Fall. www.johnallenshoes.com | 214 Owen Drive | 910.484.3161 A customized day full of imaginative adventures for them. A stress-free party for you, or in other words an At a The Little Gym Awesome Birthday Bash, your child and their friends will have the whole place to themselves for fun activities created especially for them. Plus we'll handle everything from set-up to clean-up, making birthdays at The Little Gym a big wish come true for parents too. Call or go online to schedule your child's next birthday at The Little Gym The Little Gym of Fayetteville www.tlgfayettevillenc.com (910) 223-3GYM(3496) 24 | September/October • 2013 had an idea to try to create them and sell them on Etsy. "I would have loved to have been a costume designer if I loved to sew," confessed Belles. "But I have a short attention span and get bored easily on a project." Every artist has their go-to place where they create their work. For Deborah, that's her "woman cave" at home, where she has her supplies and plays music. The first round of headpieces were created from leather. After she drew out a pattern on the cowhide, she would then wet the material and shape it before painting and embellishing. When the price of leather began to rise, Deborah started looking into other materials for her creations. Now, the artist uses lightweight latex to complete her designs. Many of her pieces are edgy and rock and roll inspired with metal spikes and bedazzled rhinestones to accompany her costumes. Most of her pieces begin with a simple headband, then the materials she finds coordinate with the theme and music of the dance to be performed. The process of making a latex headpiece can often takes several weeks. Her fire inspired "Flaming Feathers" headpiece that she used for the 2013 Dancing With the Fayetteville Stars took three weeks to make since she cut each individual flame out and painted the latex to resemble a flame. Though Deborah has a radiant smile and her eyes sparkle as she talks about how her creations come together into a finished product, she maintained being drawn to the more "mysterious" side of life. "Life is full of mystery and is not always rosy. I feel like I can relate to the darker side of things," said Belles. "Sometimes I feel like you need to embrace that sadness to appreciate the happiness that life brings." Look for Deborah's latest creations during upcoming Fourth Friday events. She is toying with the idea of creating some masks for the annual zombie parade in October. CV