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Amy Flynn has been making her own greeting cards and illustrating her own stories since she was a toddler.  So when a professional illustrator visited her high school on career day and viewed her portfolio, he told her she could make a pretty decent living.  If she didn’t MIND doing childrens’ books and greeting cards.

She clearly remembers thinking "Mind?  Are you INSANE?" 

The trouble was, no one was teaching that stuff when Amy went to college.  So she graduated summa cum laude from San Jose State University in 1982 with a B.S. in Graphic Design/Illustration, a portfolio full of editorial and advertising art, and no clue.  Almost immediately, fate stepped in, in the form of an unemployed friend looking for work in the classified section.  Hallmark was actually advertising in the paper for illustrators to work in their Palo Alto satellite studio.  Amy (and 140 others) applied, and she got the job. She describes Hallmark as “a marvelous training ground, sort of an art boot camp.”

An unfortunate choice of first husbands led Amy to leave Hallmark and spend two years in London.  Upon her return to the U.S., she went to work for Current Cards in beautiful Colorado Springs, CO.  Since the art department there was so much smaller than Hallmark’s, she quickly learned that the ability to paint in a variety of styles led to better assignments.  Most people, upon viewing her portfolio, cannot believe it all came from the same hand.

Following an excellent choice of second husbands, Amy moved to Raleigh, North Carolina in 1993 and has been freelancing ever since.  A few of her clients include American Greetings, Hallmark, Random House, Grosset and Dunlap, Paper Magic, Current, Paramount Cards, Reader’s Digest, Marcel Schurman, the Lindy Bowman Company, Cleo, JeanMarie Creations, Publications International, Midwest of Cannon Falls and Amscan.  Her studio is on the upper floor of an old house that she and Phil (that’s the excellent husband) have lovingly restored. Ozzie, the Welsh terrier, sleeps at her feet.  And to balance the solitude that freelance work imposes, Amy has become something of a minor local celebrity for her appearances onstage in area theatrical productions.

 
     
 

 

Latest Press Release

"DiVaVaVoom" is poised to make it big. REALLY BIG.

May 19, 2007, New York City--Over half the women in this country are overweight--and the other half seem to think they are. Can we safely say this is NOT a niche market? Illustrator Amy Flynn thought it was high time for designs that glorified REAL women--big beautiful divas with voluptous curves and a larger than average zest for life. She calls her collection "DiVaVaVoom", and it's appearing at the Surtex art licensing show in New York City's Javits Center, May 19-21, 2007.

There has been a growing trend to accept a standard of beauty that is not stick-figure thin. The backlash against fashion models with tiny BMI's has been front page news lately. Jennifer Hudson recently became the first full-figured woman to grace the cover of Vogue magazine. One Life to Live's Kathy Brier has won over a legion of devoted fans by playing a woman who more closely resembles her viewers than her chic co-stars. And--gasp!--her character even has a romantic storyline! Who's the plump heroine of today's hottest TV show? Golden Globe winner America Ferrera as "Ugly Betty". Rosie O'Donnell preaches the gospel of size acceptance every day on The View. Even the medical community is slowly coming around; a recent study claims that "people who are overweight (though not obese) actually have a lower risk of death than those of normal weight". After decades of Barbie tyranny, the pendelum has to swing the other way.

"A few years ago, I developed a line of greeting cards that featured tiny, twiggy little people, and I felt a bit guilty about it", says Amy. "They were fun to paint, but they didn't look anything like my friends--or, indeed, most human beings. A lot of my friends are big girls, and there wasn't anything out there they could relate to. When I started painting my Divas, they went absolutely nuts!"

The women of DiVaVaVoom are based on Amy's fabulous gal pals, and feature humorous copy, such as her favorite quote by Dawn French; "If I had been around when Rubens was painting, I would have been revered as a fabulous model. Kate Moss? Well, she would have been the paintbrush." The Divas are brassy, glamorous, sexy women who love life and know how to have a good time. The first twenty designs were published by Paramount cards, and Amy is eager to see her ladies on a variety of products.

"Beauty comes in all sizes" says Flynn, "and it's ridiculous to assume that you have to look like a supermodel in order to be attractive. Not too long ago, women who looked like my Divas would heve BEEN supermodels." As Camryn Manheim joyously proclaimed when she won her Emmy, "This is for all the fat girls!"

Those interested in DiVaVaVoom, or in Ms. Flynn's other work, can meet her at Surtex Booth #2131, Hall 1E, or through her website, www.tootoofaboo.com.

 
     
 
  Not an artist...yet.              
   
Halloween 1963
           
Surtex 2007        
Working on the beach in Belize  
Ozzie
Halloween 2004---Bitch!  
Amy & Phil's 10th anniversary      
Acting headshot