color. There, the landscape is very brown and the people wear very bright colors,” she said.
After studying fiber arts and ceramics at Skidmore College, Olmsted graduated in 2002 and worked for an architectural design firm before attending graduate school at Philadelphia University. She moved back to Saratoga Springs in 2016, where she lives with her husband Peter, two sons; Emmett and Wells, and two dogs, Winnie, 13 and Hank, 2.
It’s a busy life where making art doesn’t wait for inspiration to strike.
“I have to do it whenever I can,” said Olmsted.
From her studio, she can keep an eye on what’s happening around her, invite her boys in to color and create (without worry) on the concrete floors, or duck behind the dividers to focus on production.
The sliding barn doors and the original iron lattice horse bay partitions separate the work space into distinct sections. The dye kitchen is Olmsted’s chemistry lab, where she experiments with pigments and inks. The second stall is where she paints her quirky watercolor designs and uses her computer to digitally prepare them for print. In the final section, a wall of finished fabrics is stacked, ready for shipping.
“In the studio, things can get very messy. It feels like this space was made for me in a way. It divides things up nicely. It’s all about function and flow,” she said.
CHANCE VENTURES
In addition to creating a great product, taking care of a million little things a day is what has built up the Betsy Olmsted brand into one that has been featured on HGTV, in Country Living magazine and has resulted in multiple collaborations, wholesale and licensing deals.
“It’s a big, huge, time-consuming thing that takes time away from being able to paint,” said Olmsted. Some of her most fortuitous business opportunities however, have happened by chance.
Just after Olmsted moved back to Saratoga Springs, she met Virginia Fretto, owner and designer of Razimus Jewelry, at the school where their children both attend.
“She said to me, ‘I think I’m using your fabric for my jewelry’. That was like instant friendship,” said Olmsted.
At trade fairs she met a representative of Windham Fabrics (a textile producer of fine quality quilting and sewing fabrics that she now designs for) and was approached by an acquisitions editor to write her own book.