Forest to fashion: Manitoba handbag designer's work up for international award - Action News
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Manitoba

Forest to fashion: Manitoba handbag designer's work up for international award

Adam French says he's been creative for as long as he can remember. Now, one ofthe Manitoba handbag designer's creations is up for a major internationalaward.

Adam French, who sells bags under the Adan Ballou name, nominated in best handmade bag category

Adam French designs and creates his handbags out of a small shop on his property north of Brandon, Man., in the rural municipality of Elton. (Riley Laychuk/CBC)

Adam French's high school hobby, designing bracelets out of found items like brush bristles, has blossomed into a high-end handbag business and now one of his creations is up for a major international award.

One of French's Adan Ballou handbags is a finalist in the best handmade bag category at the Independent Handbag Designer Awards in New York but the recognition is not what he works for.

"Every bag that I make is unique, every bag is an evolution," said French."Every bag is an expression of me, and I'm learning. That's the fun for me."

French, better known as Adan Ballou in the world of handbags, has been designing purses and other accessories for the last decade. The moniker is made up of two parts Adan, the Spanish translation of Adam,and Ballou, his great-grandmother's maiden name.

Love for leather

French used to work in IT. The self-described computer geek wouldspend his days in a server room, swapping out memory chips or installing new LAN or wireless connections.

Hislove for leather started when he went into Tandy Leather in Calgary. He wanted to make a seat for his motorcycle.

"I went down and fell in love with the material," French saidduring an interview at his small workshop on his property in the rural municipality of Elton, just north of Forrest, Man.

"Here was leather and it was like, 'Wow, I can do everything I want with this. It's something I can use,' " he said.

"It took me five or six years to come around to wanting to make handbags the way I do."

His products sell for hundreds of dollars, sometimes going for upwards of $1,000. Buyers have come from as far away as Europe. They're sold online and in some boutiques, including Lennard Taylor in Winnipeg's Exchange District.

In 2017, he was a finalist at the Independent Handbag Designer Awards in the most socially sustainable category. This year he plans to drive to New York with his wife for the ceremony on June 12.

"People who come out of this contestcan have a really big launching pad to quite a career," he said.

Handmade and sustainable

He feels his approach from drawing the designto using recycled materials andcrafting each bag by hand, meticulously making each stitchsets him apart from other designers.

"I look at it and say, 'Well, that was a good learning experience,' " he said about finishing a bag.

They can take six months or longer to create.

"Oftentime what comes out is the little pieces I'm happy with," French said.

"I think that's probably a lot of the reason I make the way that I make, as an artist, not as a mass-producing designer."

French's products are created using sustainable methods, whichis also important to him.

"It's an enormous part," he said.

Deer hides for his bags are from local hunters. Sometimeshe finds deer hides dropped off anonymously at his home which can be a headache, he said, if he can't track where or who it came from.

The hides are fleshed, scraped and preserved in a salt solution for up to two years, he said. When he's ready to use a particular hide, herehydrates it with water from the well on his property, works the hair or fur out and stretches it again.

The dyes for his leather comefrom items such as onion skins or even flowers from his flowerbed. Scrap brass is melted down and formed into a mould for a buckle or other metal piece for the bag.

French says sustainability and knowing where each part of the bag came from is important to him. (Riley Laychuk/CBC)

"If we can track from farm to table, we should be able to track from pasture to purse," French said.

Sustainable items areincreasingly popular and customers are willing to pay for them, he said.

"We are participants in this environment and we should kind of respect it that way," he said.

The $750 bag up for an award this year was left a natural white, meaning it wasn't dyed.

The interior is lined with a blue agave cactus silk he bought in the souks of Marrakech a marketplace in Morocco.

Confidence

French isn't sure what the future hold for him and his business, but looking back, he's gained a lot more than skills and money along the way, he said.

French is nominated for an Independent Handbag Designers Award in the best handmade bag category. The awards are handed out in New York in June. (Riley Laychuk/CBC)

"I can design with confidence," he said. "I've come far enough to believe in myself, that I can make something that's beautiful that people will appreciate.

"And frankly, I think that's probably the most valuable thing I could have got."