This Studio is to Dye for

Jessica Kaufman has moved her operations to a more user-friendly locale.
Photo by Nicole McConville

After running her business from a warehouse full of shared makers’ spaces, Jessica Kaufman, a woman with a knack for teaching crafts and a Masters degree in Crafts Education to prove it, decided she wanted to open her own shop in West Asheville. Kaufman’s business, WAXON Batik & Dye Studio, is aimed at sharing the beauty of creating traditional hand-dyed items, updated with stylish twists. 

The studio allows for visitors to shop, buy, and create — all in the same space. “I really want to serve a hole in the community,” explains Kaufman. “We have a lot of glass and clay studios where you can visit and make your own art, but we need a hands-on fiber-arts studio for all ages.” Ultimately, she describes her studio as a paint-your-own-pottery studio, but for tie-dye and apparel.

Kaufman has been teaching for the last 15 years, in private and public elementary and high schools, for private clients in Brooklyn, and as a long-time counselor at the residential summer camp Gwynn Valley in Brevard. Besides hosting her own workshops in the new space, she wants other fiber artists to schedule their own, as well. WAXON also offers mobile tie-dye services: Kaufman and her two shop assistants take their van to music festivals, birthdays, office events, and more. 

Kaufman will be teaching at John C. Campbell Folk School April 7-13, leading in-depth instruction on Indonesian, Indian, and American styles of batik. Students will have the chance to practice with wooden blocks that Kaufman got from a fifth-generation batik master when she visited India.

Meanwhile, back in Asheville, “I’m thrilled to be standing in the physical manifestation of what I’d hoped for,” says Kaufman. “My little workshop/dye-studio idea has come to fruition in the way I imagined.” 

Photo by Nicole McConville

Jessica Kaufman, WAXON Batik & Dye Studio, 726 Haywood Road, Asheville. Visitors can call or e-mail the studio directly to set up a lesson. The studio workshops can fit 4-16 people, although they welcome individuals and couples to schedule sessions. For more information, see waxonstudio.com or e-mail waxonstudio@gmail.com. 828-367-7537. Instagram: @waxonstudio. Facebook: WAXON Batik and Dye Studio.

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1 Comment

  1. says: Katherine

    Hi Jessica
    I love textiles and all the dyes you use. I have taken a Eco dying class where we dyed silk scarfs and I have my grandmother Batiks that she did back in the 60’s! Right now I’m experimenting with marble painting and I love it! Today I marbled dyed a silk scarf with acrylic paint but it only prints on one side. In the above photo that Nicole McConville took of the two scarfs are beautiful. How were these done? I follow your web sight bu5 I’m not a Facebook fan. Keep up the good work teaching your craft. Thank you

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