Up close with Amanda Li Hope
London based, Fairtrade & Fairmined Gold Jewelry Designer.
As part of our “Because, Love Comes First” series, SupaDupa.me was invited to glimpse behind the scenes with Amanda Li Hope - an aspiring jewelry designer maker who juggles two jobs as an architect and jewelry designer working seven days a week in pursuit of her passion.
Amanda invited us to her Clerkenwell studio to try to get a better understanding of her motivations as a jewelry designer and what it takes to turn a passion into a sustainable business which she started from scratch.
For more information about Amanda Li Hope please click here to visit her jewelry boutique.
New feature: Orders search!
If you’ve got a ton of orders and need to look through them, how do you do it?
Well, what’s the big deal?
You can now search through your orders using any of the following parameters:
• First name
• Last name
• Country
• Delivery address
• Billing address
• Product title
• Product SKU
New feature: Orders .CSV file export!
To make those boring task slightly less boring, you can now export your orders in .CSV format directly from your orders list. Useful when doing your accounts or if you have special stock keeping requirements.

“This is the first time in my life when I’ve just felt absolutely on the right path.”
Local farmer Megan Paska has witnessed beekeeping as it morphed from an illegal (and possibly crazy) habit to a sustainable, community-supported skill. Mirroring beekeeping’s own ascendance, she found more than just a living.
New Feature! Personalized products
Until now, it has been a fairly cumbersome process to offer product personalization to customers wishing to customize the items you sell. The suggested workaround to deal with the inability to take special instructions from customers has always been to ask the customer to write in with an email containing their request after they have placed the order specifying exactly what they wish to personalize. We have always regarded this as a poor alternative to anyone who is serious about running a business based on personalized goods.
As of today you can offer full personalisation services with ease:
- Choose to personalise any product in your store
- You decide what questions to ask
- You can still apply product variations of size and colour etc.


- Your product appears in the same way as any other product in your store

- Your customer is prompted to answer your questions at the checkout
- Customisation options can be applicable to one or multiples of the same product e.g. when a customer buys 20 units of the same T-Shirt they can customise all of them with the same instructions or choose to apply different options to each T-Shirt in turn.


- The customisation options are saved together with the order
- Customization Instructions displayed together with the line item they pertain to at fulfilment


Here are just a few personalization examples we love:
Personalized T-Shirts


Personalized leather tags
CestSuperbe make these brilliantly conceived leather tags for honeymooners!


Mesa Dreams make custom leather products ranging from dog collars to luggage tags.


Personalized stationery
Pinhole Press offers a wide range of beautifully designed personalized stationery and photo based products.




Personalized wine bottle labels


Personalized artwork
Lisa Swerling recycles disused drawers into eye popping personalized works of art where the piece itself incorporates a whole host of customisation options ranging from the colour of the characters eyes to names imprinted within the piece.




KAL BARTESKI is a professional artist who specializes in painting, writing and design. She also offers hand written works of art based on her enchanting broad brush calligraphy which can be customised to order.



Sarah & Bendrix creates delicately framed paper artworks which can be personalised to reflect the occasion they are for.



Personalized jewlery

We hope this opens up some creative product opportunities for those of you who might have been toying with the idea.
Please write in with your suggestions and examples of how you are using this feature for your business.
There are a bunch of new features heading this way imminently so please like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to be the first to know.
What it means to be an influencer
Remarkably Made Monday
Yesterday at Pick Me UP , the Contemporary Graphic Art Fair, I came across this amazing duo: Jodie and David who saw eye to eye on robots, kittens and evil monkeys since meeting at University in Leeds.
They began to work under the name of Peskimo in 2004, and together they have crafted a vast array of characters and creations that have won admirers far and wide. I am one of them!
Peskimo’s world is teeming with monsters and bunnies, pattern and texture, combining quirky details and streamlined design with a generous pinch of nostalgia to create art that has appeared on tshirts, magazines, newspapers, billboards and nightclub walls.
I love their Food Groups illustrations!
New! - Add new pages to your store
We have now added the ability for you to create and add your own pages.
This feature can be found under Shop Settings / Info Pages
Have fun…

Rocco Malatesta, Berlin based Italian designer
What’s your name, what do you do, and where do you come from?
My name is Rocco Malatesta, I am an Italian freelance graphic designer and illustrator currently living in Berlin.
What company do you work for?
I currently work with several design agencies here in Berlin: Moccu Kreativagentur and Metadesign, to name but a few. Soon I will begin a collaboration with Studio-Good and Iconic and I have several clients scattered around here and there.



What do you focus on / specialise in as a creative?
I have been working in the field of Communication for the past 15 years and I have always been a graphic designer. If you ask me what is the thing that interests me most, I can say I’m very interested in creating identities. Whether it’s the cover of a book or a video game or a company logo.

What makes you unique?
I focus a lot on the study and research of a project before I begin. If I design a logo, for example, I keep drawing and redrawing until exhaustion. I am almost obsessive in this. At the end of the work I have a hundred versions of the same subject. Research is a fundamental part of my whole production process.
How did you get started with that / with your business?
What was your key motivation?
I remember perfectly the day I decided to become a graphic designer. I was about 11 years old and at school they distributed to everyone an orientation booklet for future school choice. And there it was my school! For me it was very clear, as if it were not written in ink, but carved in stone: Graphic Design School. My favorite subjects were all there, drawing, life drawing, graphic design, history of art and photography! But there is one thing .. I didn’t say the exact name was: Female Professional Institute of Graphic Design and Advertising. Female, yep. What an injustice (I thought), but then I called and asked if I could have access anyway and luckily they said yes! I don’t deny that at school was strong enough embarrassment when, in public, everyone had to tell the class their future choice. I remember my Italian proffessor teasing me in front of the whole class: “Rocco it is a girls’ school” with a smile …

Did you study the art of what you are doing or was it something that you have picked up naturally or through other circumstances?
As I said right away I started to study graphic design very young and I keep learning everyday.
Has your city, geographical backdrop influenced what you do or how you do it?
I grew up in one of the most seedy and degraded place in the periphery of Milan during the ’80s, called Cesano Boscone in Italy. Honestly It wasn’t so bad for me. I had a good time and still have my family there. Things have changed and now no longer has a bad reputation. Criminals, jailbirds, nasty people, were all in my neighborhood. I’m now living in Berlin, which for me is very strong inspiration for my work. I consider myself lucky to be able to live and work in a context so interesting and lively. Cues are on every corner here. The context from where I come and where I am, certainly influence what I do, I’m sure.

What made you realise you can or want to sell your work?
Friends and people who are close to me basically. Those, who, when they saw my work showed great interest.
How did you get your first sale?
Was sort of a moment was that? It happened that I designed a poster for a personal project and I published it on my website. Suddenly and unexpectedly for me, this poster appeared in loads of blogs in the world and this thing gave me great visibility. I never thought it would attract so many people.
How long has it taken you to get to where you are today?
Well, hard to say. It was a long process made of constant commitment and determination, as far as I’m concerned. The motivation, then, has played an important factor in my professional career. It is certainly not a passing passion.

Were there ever moments of doubt where you thought you should give up and try something else?
Fortunately not. Of course I found myself without a job on several occasions, but the important thing is knowing how to rise above it and lift yourself up always.
Is there anything that has become symbolic of your success or coming of age as a creative?
There’s one thing above all: the enthusiasm that I put into doing things. I have understood for some time that with enthusiasm you can just do anything.
What’s sort of relationship do you have with money?
What value do you place on having/ earning it?
I like to spend it on food and I’m not obsessed with money.
Do you have an office, studio, garage you work from?
I work from home, I have a small studio with my tools, colors, books and pens. I alternate my days between drawing and cooking. Working from home I can afford to do what I really love: cooking!
What do you spend most of your time doing?
My biggest passion is cycling, so as soon as I have free time I go out to do some ‘miles. Sometime I like the basketball court near my place. I read a lot and draw. I always have a sketchbook with me on which to draw or write something, wherever I go.



What are the two most important things you have done to grow your business?
Research and consistent effort.
What’s your secret weapon?
I think the enthusiasm.
What’s the best tip you can give to a jewelery designer / photographer / artist / fashion designer / T-Shirt designer etc.? or, what three pieces of advice would you offer creative entrepreneurs starting out today?
Believing in what you do, pay no attention to anyone or anything. Be straight on your way like a train. Sooner or later the results come in some way. And if not, well, patience. If you really believe in what you do, you don’t have any regrets. Better to try and fail, than the other way.
Learn more about: Rocco Malatesta
Remarkably Made Monday
Indoor by Elisa Cavani is a street door, a table, and a studio desk. I love how Elisa merges old and abandoned things together with recycled materials to create and reinvent beautiful objects.
[ I really like the idea that in every object is held somebody’s life.
All her pieces are totally unique and one-offs. Check her Il Fausto Tricycle Lamp as well, genius!
Remarkably Made Monday: T&F Slack Made to Measure Shoemakers
The creative genius of husband-and-wife team Tim and Fiona Slack based in Notting Hill, London, just around the corner from us, T&F Slack Shoemakers is a force dedicated to making made to measure modern classics.

T&F Slack create some of the most beautifully crafted footwear.

I love their coloured soles collections plus the fact that all their shoes are made here in their UK factory.

