Soon, Bandfield found herself selling her own household’s unwanted goods on Craigslist to make more money for her newfound art project. When the Craigslist customers started asking about the unique planter pots in Bandfield’s home, the artist decided she might be onto something.
Instead of selling household items to support her pot-making hobby, Bandfield decided to shift gears and actually sell her planter pots. Using recommendations she gleaned from a book by Kari Chapin on the art of selling handmade goods, Bandfield reached out to buyers at Portland-area markets and nurseries. Her first buyer was the New Seasons market near her suburban Portland home. Soon, Portland-Vancouver nurseries were clambering to get ahold of Bandfield’s beautifully crafted and unusual planters, which the artist said walk a thin line between antique and space-age.
“One person told me they’d been in the nursery business for more than 20 years and had never seen anything like them,” Bandfield said.
In 2014, after moving to Camas with her then-husband and their son, Gus — now a junior at Camas High School — Bandfield registered her new business name, A Pot Spot, built a website, created several social media channels and kept pushing herself as an artist, incorporating more recycled and sustainable elements into her hand-cast stone pots; casting stone forms inspired by modern architecture and Japanese gardens that would look just as comfortable in a high-end art gallery as they would in a sprawling bed of native plants; and working out a deal with a California company that creates concrete-adhering customized paint colors for some of the nation’s most recognizable corporations — Home Depot, Target, Dick’s and Holiday Inn, to name just a few — so she can add splashes of highly pigmented color to her planter pots while rescuing leftover paint that would have gone into the landfill.
Bandfield’s pots tend to sell out pretty fast. Her Instagram page and website (apotspot.com) show just how many of her creations have sold recently and nurseries can’t stock them fast enough, but would-be customers in the Camas-Washougal area hoping to score A Pot Spot planter pot are in luck. This weekend, Bandfield will join 49 other Clark County artists in Artsta’s annual Clark County Open Studios event and plans to sell a wide variety of color-infused as well as moss- and lichen-covered pots from her own collection.