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The Create Series: Jacquelyn Clark of Lark & Linen

The Founder of the Popular Lifestyle Blog & Interior Design Business Shares Her Journey and Advice
Filed Under > The Create Series

Black and white stripe wall with chic home office via Waiting on MarthaBedroom wall art ideas and throw pillows via Waiting on Martha
Stunning travel photo via Waiting on Martha
Moodboard on string ideas via Waiting on Martha
Living room decorating ideas via Waiting on MarthaMinimalist desk decor via Waiting on Martha

To say the team is thrilled to be chatting with Ms. Jacquelyn Clark, the talented voice behind the popular lifestyle blog Lark & Linen today is an understatement; we’ve been such fangirls of the blog for years, as we’ve followed (and pinned) just about every gorgeous home tour and scrumptious recipe.  So when Jacquelyn took the leap to entrepreneurship to launch her own interior design business, we knew it had success written all over it. Read along as we chat with Jacquelyn below, to learn how it all began, how she landed a coveted editorial job with Style Me Pretty to then land her own design clients for Lark & Linen, all while maintaining a popular lifestyle blog!

JC: When I first started my career as an interior designer almost a decade ago, I was working for a wonderful architect downtown Toronto. The company was great, I mean to this day I think of those co-workers as family, but the work itself didn’t completely fulfill me (ie: a lot of schools, government offices and libraries). In order to fuel my creative spirit I began penning my blog, Lark & Linen, on the side. For the first little while, I kept it pretty under my hat – only my closest friends and family knew. But before long, people started catching wind. For me, the turning point was in 2012 – almost two years after I began. I was travelling through Scotland when I received a very exciting email from Abby Larson, the genius behind Style Me Pretty. She had somehow found my blog, had this idea for Style Me Pretty Living, and asked me if I’d be interested in helping her launch it. From there, things began moving pretty quickly.

I acted as editor for SMP Living for just under two years. During that time, my blog continued to grow, and I began receiving requests for interior design services. And while working for SMP Living was an absolute dream, designing spaces in the physical sense was something I missed tremendously so taking on small projects in the evening and on the weekends was a no brainer. After a year and a half of essentially working three full time jobs, I began to feel burnt out and knew that something needed to give. Launching my own business had always been a thought in the back of my mind, I had a little bit of a nest egg built up from almost two years of non-stop work, and knew in my gut that I just needed to go full tilt. I launched my own interior design studio in October of 2015 and haven’t looked back!

WOM
: What’s your favorite design project you’ve ever worked on?
JC: Oh you can’t make me choose! I’ve actually been INCREDIBLY lucky on the client front so far and have worked with some really amazing people. All of my clients have given me a lot of creative freedom, and have instilled a lot of trust in my abilities. And in my experience, those are always the projects that end up with the best results. I’ve done everything from tiny powder room refreshers to full guts, and I have invested so much of myself in each and every one. This question is like Sophie’s choice!

WOM: Ha! Fair enough! How about a work mantra? 
JC: “Nobody died”. Ha! No, but for real – I do tend to be of the anxious mindset, and I constantly have to remind myself to put things into perspective. While I fully believe that design is in the details, I do have to check myself and remember that the outlet that’s 1/8th of an inch off centre or the grout that came out slightly lighter than I’d like is really and truly not the end of the world. Nobody died, it could always be worse, and there’s nothing here that can’t be fixed.

WOM: What does your typical day look like?
JC: I’m the antithesis of a morning person, so I typically roll out of bed around 8. On a good day, I’ll lace up my runners as soon as my feet hit the ground, go for a quick run and grab a tea on my way home before getting ready for the day. On most days however, I groggily fill the kettle, turn on my computer and make a to-do list in my pyjamas. Once I’m actually awake, dressed and ready, my days are always a combination of client meetings, furniture sourcing, blog writing, recipe creating, delivery coordinating madness. It’s busy, and it’s hectic, but I wouldn’t have it any other way. I do try to shut everything down by 7 so Justin and I can make and enjoy dinner together, but often end up tackling a few more things into the wee hours of the morning. Now that I have a steady stream of clients and a better grasp of how much I can take on and when, my current goal is to work on the work-life balance thing, so we’ll see how that goes this year!

WOM: Tell us a bit about the creative process for you.
JC:
It really and truly depends on the client and their needs, but I always start with a q&a series to really hone in on what it is my client is after, both from a design standpoint and a lifestyle perspective. From there it’s all about the details: site documenting, budget planning and the not-so-fun essentials. Once everything has been worked out logistically, I really start brainstorming. This typically involves a serious Pinterest love affair, reconnecting with my stack of design magazines, and evolves from there!

WOM
: What do you love about your job?
JC: As an introvert, a business in interior design makes for the perfect balance between collaboration (with my clients, my contractors and the like) and sealing myself up in a yoga pant-clad bubble and getting all of those creative energies out on paper. It’s fantastic!

WOM: We’re always sharing the best ways to update a space here on WOM. What’s your favorite way to accessorize a room?
JC: Rugs and custom drapery. They really and truly make a space each and every time.

WOM: We’re sure you’re inundated with a whole lot of pretty every day. How often do you redecorate your own space?
JC: Ha! Constantly! We’re actually house hunting right now, which has tempered my big re-decorating ways, but it hasn’t stopped me from picking up new accessories, pillow covers and the like here and there.

WOM: As an interior designer, where do you find inspiration? 
JC: While Pinterest is a great source, of course, I do find I’m most inspired when travelling. I always seem to come up with my best ideas when out and about exploring!
WOM: We can totally see that.  And do you have a girl crush or style icon?
JC: I really admire Catherine Kwong. She is a master at interior design and her projects always bridge that gap between all out luxury and total livability. She’s a design genius, as far as I’m concerned.

WOM: What is the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?
JC: “Be humble and grateful, always.”

WOM: And what advice do you have for individuals hoping to follow your path?
JC: Start a blog! The connections you can make through blogging are invaluable, it allows you to really hone in on your personal style and, probably most importantly, you have full creative control. That last point is hugely beneficial for a designer and, unless you’re designing your own home for your own single self, rarely, if ever, happens.

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Design & Styling, Lark & Linen in Photo 1 | Photo 2Photo 4 | Photo 5 // Photo 3 | Photo 6

The Best Advice for Creative Entrepreneurs

7 of Our Favorite Boss Ladies Share Their Wisdom with WOM
Filed Under > Let's Talk

Being a creative entrepreneur isn’t all pretty work spaces and shiny desk accessories.  It doesn’t involve popping champagne bottles every week (or even every month or year for that matter).  You’d be hard-pressed to find an entrepreneur that hasn’t had their doubts, or the days when it took everything in them not to quit.  But you’d also find it hard to deny how truly inspiring an entrepreneur is; their drive, excitement and passion for the craft is just contagious.

I recently had the pleasure of tapping seven of my favorite boss ladies for their best advice for entrepreneurs, and it’s all so spot-on. It seems that the magic formula for continued growth and success involves a mixture of passion, patience and perseverance.  Click through the slideshow above to read more.  

A big thank you to these impressive (and busy!) women for sharing their best advice for creative entrepreneurs with us today.  Cheers, Kat

P.S. Looking for more working-girl inspo? Meg Biram’s #GSD series and The Everygirl’s Career Profiles are great, along with the handful of books below. xo 

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DON'T DO IT HALF-HEARTED

DON'T DO IT HALF-HEARTED

"DON'T DO IT UNLESS YOU LOVE AND BELIEVE IN WHAT YOU'RE DOING. OTHERWISE IT'S A WASTE OF TIME. AND TRUST ME, TIME IS SOMETHING WE DON'T HAVE A LOT OF. AND ALWAYS REMEMBER, COMPARISON IS THE THIEF OF JOY. FOCUS ON YOURSELF AND YOUR OWN ACCOMPLISHMENTS."

- MANDY KELLOGG RYE, FOUNDER OF WAITING ON MARTHA

VIA WAITING ON MARTHA, BY KATHRYN MCCRARY
DO WHAT FEELS RIGHT

DO WHAT FEELS RIGHT

"OWNING A BUSINESS IS NOT EASY, BUT WHEN I'M FACED WITH A DECISION, I JUST DO WHAT FEELS RIGHT. WHILE I CAN'T SAY THAT EVERY DECISION I'VE MADE FELT RIGHT, I'VE LEARNED TO TRUST MYSELF, MY GUT AND MY INSTINCTS. BY LISTENING TO MYSELF, I'M ABLE TO DO WHAT FEELS RIGHT, WHICH IS ALWAYS THE BEST FOR ACPR, AND ME."

- ALLYSON CONKLIN, FOUNDER OF ALLYSON CONKLIN PUBLIC RELATIONS.

READ MORE FROM ALLYSON'S POST, THE BEST BUSINESS ADVICE."

VIA RUSTIC WHITE FOR WAITING ON MARTHA
PERSEVERE THROUGH THE GOOD AND THE BAD

PERSEVERE THROUGH THE GOOD AND THE BAD

"FAILING IS INEVITABLE, BUT SUCCESS COMES FROM PERSEVERANCE"... MY DAD ACTUALLY SAID THAT!

CREATING SOMETHING FROM SCRATCH IS HARD, AND IT'S STRAIGHT FROM THE HEART. WHEN YOU COMBINE HARD WORK AND YOUR HEART IN A PROJECT, IT CAN SEEM DEVASTATING WHEN THE PROJECT DOESN'T COME TOGETHER EXACTLY HOW YOU FIRST ENVISIONED, AND YOU CAN QUICKLY THROW IN THE TOWEL BECAUSE OF THAT. BUT IT'S REALLY IMPORTANT TO REMEMBER THAT JUST BECAUSE THIS EXACT PART OF THE PROJECT ISN'T WORKING, THERE ARE MANY OTHER WORKING PARTS. AND IF YOU TAKE THE SUCCESS, THROW OUT THE FAILURES AS LESSONS LEARNED AND TRY AGAIN A DIFFERENT WAY, YOU MAKE PROGRESS!

- ASHLEY BROOKE, FOUNDER OF ASHLEY BROOKE DESIGNS

VIA ASHLEY BROOKE DESIGNS
BELIEVE IN WHO YOU ARE

BELIEVE IN WHO YOU ARE

"PROBABLY ONE OF THE BEST PIECES OF ADVICE I CAN PASS ALONG CAME FROM MY FATHER. I ALWAYS STRUGGLED THAT I CARED SO DEEPLY AND OFTEN SEEMED MORE AFFECTED THAN EVERYONE ELSE. I THOUGHT IT WAS A WEAKNESS UNTIL HE MADE ME REALIZE THAT IT WAS STRENGTH. I REMEMBER DISTINCTLY SITTING ON THE STAIRS TOGETHER AND HAVING HIM TELL ME HE WOULD BE WORRIED IF I DIDN’T CARE AS MUCH AS I DID.

WHETHER IT’S GOOD OR BAD, I’M ROOTED IN PASSION WHEN IT COMES TO WHO AND WHAT I BELIEVE IN, WHICH ULTIMATELY BECAME ONE OF THE REASONS I STARTED MY OWN BUSINESS, IS WHAT LED TO MY CURRENT BUSINESS PARTNERSHIP, AND IS THE CORE OF HOW WE DO BUSINESS SUCCESSFULLY YEAR AFTER YEAR.

WHAT YOU MAY SEE AS A WEAKNESS MAY BE ONE OF YOUR GREATEST ASSETS. KNOW WHAT YOUR INTENTION IS AND SHOOT FOR THE MOON. WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO LOSE? YOU CAN ALWAYS TRY AGAIN."

- CAREN WEST, FOUNDER OF CAREN WEST PUBLIC RELATIONS

VIA WAITING ON MARTHA, BY RUSTIC WHITE
BE TRUE TO WHO YOU ARE

BE TRUE TO WHO YOU ARE

"DON'T TRY TO BE EVERYTHING TO EVERYONE. STAND CONFIDENT IN YOUR BRANDING AND SAY NO TO PROJECTS THAT DON'T ALIGN WITH THAT. AND ALWAYS OPERATE WITH THE HIGHEST OF INTEGRITY. IT IS THE FOUNDATION OF YOUR BUSINESS."

- JULIANNE TAYLOR, FOUNDER OF TAYLOR BURKE HOME

VIA WAITING ON MARTHA, BY RUSTIC WHITE
 BE PATIENT

BE PATIENT

MY DAD ALWAYS SAYS, “ROME WASN’T BUILT OVERNIGHT.” (SIDE NOTE: HE HAS A HILARIOUS TENDENCY TO MIX UP IDIOMS, LIKE “LET’S PLAY IT BY EARS. IT’S A DOGGY WORLD, ETC.”) I KNOW HE MEANS “ROME WASN’T BUILT IN A DAY.”

BUILDING A BRAND AND A BUSINESS ISN’T EASY. THERE ARE SO MANY CHALLENGES, UPS AND DOWNS, AND ROADBLOCKS. SOMETIMES IT DOES FEEL LIKE YOU’RE BUILDING ONE OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST METROPOLISES ALL ON YOUR OWN! BUT DRAMATICS ASIDE, AS AN ENTREPRENEUR AND FEARLESS LEADER OF YOUR OWN, IT’S IMPORTANT TO BE PATIENT AND TO PERSEVERE THROUGH THE BEST AND THE HARDEST DAYS. THE DETERMINED WILL ALWAYS MOVE FORWARD, AND HARD WORK WILL ALWAYS PAY OFF ONE WAY OR ANOTHER!”

- ROXY TE OWENS, FOUNDER OF SOCIETY SOCIAL

VIA SOCIETY SOCIAL
BE OPEN TO NEW (AND UNEXPECTED GROWTH

BE OPEN TO NEW (AND UNEXPECTED GROWTH

"STARTING A BUSINESS IS AN EXCITING ADVENTURE, BUT IT CAN TOTALLY SEEM OVERWHELMING AT TIMES. YOU’VE GOT THIS AMAZING SEED OF AN IDEA THAT YOU’RE READY TO PLANT AND LET GROW INTO A FLOURISHING BUSINESS. SOMETIMES THAT SEED TAKES ROOT AND BEGINS GROWING IN NEW AND UNEXPECTED WAYS…GOOD WAYS, BUT NOT NECESSARILY WHAT YOU WERE ENVISIONING WHEN YOU STARTED. IT’S SO IMPORTANT TO CULTIVATE THAT AREA OF GROWTH AND ALLOW YOUR BUSINESS TO EXPAND IN WAYS THAT MIGHT SURPRISE YOU."

- LAURA MCCARTY, FOUNDER OF MARKED BY LAURA MCCARTY

VIA WAITING ON MARTHA, BY KATHRYN MCCRARY

Featured image, Rustic White for Waiting on Martha

Back to Blogging

What 3 months "off" and a Hallmark Movie taught me
Filed Under > Let's Talk

I’ve been sitting here staring at the computer cursor blink for going on two hours now.  Is it possible to have so much to say and so little at the same time? 

To catch everyone up, this past May I made the decision to take the summer off of blogging.  I was over-committed with the other areas of my life and creatively burnt out.  The months leading up to my break all I kept thinking was; “Did I even want to blog anymore?” In a world where it seems that everyone has become a blogger is there anything left to say? “Do I have anything left to say?” And apparently, since I’ve been staring at this blank page for the past two hours, maybe I don’t have the answer I was so sure I had a short time ago.

When I pressed pause in May I felt a huge wave of relief rush over me. By saying no to photo shoots, contracted partnerships, and having to write and create “fresh” editorial content three-plus days a week I would have time for all those areas in my life that had taken a back seat to WOM. 

I would go to bed at a decent hour. I would re-focus on my health. I would meditate. I would get back into my yoga practice. I would take late night strolls with my husband, barefoot in the grass while fireflies romantically buzzed about. Okay, maybe that last one was a stretch, but you get the point. I would finally have the time to re-focus on what’s really important.

So did I regain my focus? No, but I did gain some clarity. 

May, and I’d say even early June was complete bliss. I didn’t miss blogging at all. My head felt clear. My days seemed manageable. And I had even read an entire book, Emily Giffin’s “All We Ever Wanted,” it was GREAT, read it! But by mid-June somehow my calendar had filled up again. 

I signed five new contracted social media partnerships, moved our entire WOM operations to a new space, opened a summer WOMH Outlet (WOM downstairs), hired two new full-time employees, decided to re-brand and re-launch all of our websites, and began the first steps to start two new businesses. That was June.

Then sometime after the fireworks of the Fourth, I sat up late one night crying to my husband that I didn’t understand why I had NO time! And there deep in my wine-fueled waterworks I realized it; the problem doesn’t lie in the Blog, the problem lies with me. 

Sure I’ve always known that I’m not great at balance. That I’m either going full throttle or basically dead-to-the-world-in-bed.  However there was a big difference in always knowing something, and actually seeing that something in action.

But regardless, that way of doing life has always in my opinion been a secret to my success. It’s allowed me to say yes to a plethora of opportunities. It’s allowed me to juggle a lot of different things at once. And it’s allowed me to persevere when many would have folded. 

Which brought me to the question that filled up my entire month of July; if that all-or-nothing, do-do-do mentality has played such a large part in what I’ve built then is it really a problem?

Sure, I needed to set boundaries, and really give this balance thing another shot, but was it really a problem-problem? And just as quickly as I had tried to talk my way around that thought I remembered a quote from one of my favorite authors Shauna Niequist. “The very thing that makes you YOU, that makes you great is also the thing that left unchecked will ruin you.”

I remember the first time I heard those words. I re-read them over and over again. “The very thing that makes you YOU, that makes you great is also the thing that left unchecked will ruin you.”  It was a true Oprah “ah-ha” moment.  Of course, taking time off from blogging didn’t give me more time, because I filled that time with new opportunities, new projects, new commitments.  My desire to build what’s next was rearing it’s ugly unchecked head in all its glory. I mean do you know how many yoga classes I had taken by this point? If you guessed zero you’d be right.

So as August approached and my lightbulb moment still shining, I had finally figured out that the Blog wasn’t the reason for my lack of time. Which left me at a bit of a crossroads. If I was truly going to work towards getting a handle on my time management and try to find some sort of balance in my life then I will have to say no to some things.  Would that be the Blog? Do I love it enough to make it a part of my finite daily time? I didn’t have an answer.  Luckily a Hallmark movie did.

But before we get to that, let me tell you about August. August was a turning of the tide. I could feel a desire to start creating again slowly creep its way in. I got back in the kitchen testing recipes. Magazine articles, fabrics, and images got pinned to a new inspiration board. I started slowly sharing on Instagram Stories my latest tips, tricks, and finds. But I still didn’t know if I wanted to translate that all back to a daily Blog.  And then my answer came how one always hopes any answer comes; in the form of a two-hour romantic made for TV movie on Hallmark.  

It was your typical Hallmark romance storyline. Girl moves back to hometown after a failed marriage. Boy, she loved in high school re-enters the picture. Boy and girl rediscover the love they always knew they had and live happily ever after.  In this particular scenario Boy was a big New York City Chef success story (think Bobby Flay-esq). Boy had just inked his third best selling book deal and was about to sign on to his very own reality show. (Stay with me, I promise I’m making a point). He thought he had it all, but after spending a few weeks in his small Texas hometown, cooking in the restaurant he grew up in, and rediscovering the love he thought he lost he realized he was still missing something. So when the time came to hop back on that jet to NYC he looked at his agent and said something along the lines of; “I miss actually being creative; cooking and being in the restaurant. All I am any more is a brand. I sign checks, I manage restaurants, I make appearances, but I miss creating.”

I, like the Boy, missed creating. 

WOM is growing, and I feel like my days are filled more and more with the management of people, analysis of numbers, plotting, planning, and next steps and less and less with why I started WOM in the first place.  To create, to find, to share, and most importantly to hopefully inspire. 

I know that inevitably as WOM continues to grow I won’t be able to be in the day to day creativity trenches. And that’s okay.  That’s a natural part of growth. But that day is not today.

So will I be blogging every day…no. Will I ever figure this balance thing out…maybe. Did I ever get to that yoga class…yes. Two of them actually. Let’s hear it for baby steps. I’m glad to be back friends! Truly, MKR

P.S. Since I’m back to sharing, I’d be amiss to not mention that this Dodo Bar Or Miranda dress is on MAJOR sale right now. Major!
 


 

Photography: Brittany Leigh Photography

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