Big Mouth Unique handmakes clothes, more
By Michael Giotis
Known first as a custom fabric arts atelier, the artist collective known as Big Mouth Unique started to get ideas of grandeur during recent successful โopen studioโ nights at the multi-tenant Studio 2410 in Santa Rosa.
โA nice little community version of Art Trails,โ explained Matilda Amiot, one half of the seat-of-the-pants art power couple.
โPeople were always like, โWhat you’re making is so cool, where can I buy it?โโ said Amiot. โAnd we were like, โUh, just come on over.โโ
The informal setting was not always working. It was time for a change. For the last year, Big Mouth Unique has been available on Etsy and at one or two local pop-up markets each month.
I saw the work in the volume of cloth when I visited the multi-level, indoor-outdoor atelier, workshop, chill-pad. โMind if I look around?โ I asked.
Joshua Thwaites smiled, โYou can touch everything.โ
The professional and romantic couple have gathered several lifetimes worth of upcycledโwe will come back to that term laterโodds and ends, from clothing to wood work and ceramics.
Or as Thwaites said with a glimmer in the eye, โFabric and thread, and buttons, and googly eyes and glitter, and like all the things.โ
Amiot and Thwaitesโ studio is an explosion of fabric across the spectra of material weight and good taste. It is clear it is all there to get reused.
โThe whole fashion industry [is] totally not environmentally conscious โฆ โzero wasteโ or the โrecycledโ [get used as] words, but they don’t really mean anything anymore,โ said Amiot, adding, โthere’s no way to check.โ
Big Mouth makes more than just clothes. Many projects are custom orders created to the whims of the buyer. Custom pieces need not be clothes. Said Amiot of Thwaites, โHe’ll make canopies and awnings and more.โ
Some of that work was on display when I visited the Big Mouth Unique at HEAD WEST at The Barlow in Sebastopol. They had the most impressive of the many booths I visited.
โGenuinely at The Barlow we especially stand out because [we are] the only people that get to put up an umbrella,โ said Thwaites. Actually, the booth had three umbrellas, each with tassels. โWe also push out into the row.โ
โI believe that what we’re doing is really wonderful and that people enjoy it,โ Thwaites said.
Like, hanging behind me during the interview, were floating eyeballs everywhere on a sheer, full length cape. Oh I see you, fabulous.
โWhat can you say to other makers about how to work?โ I asked Amiot.
โI make things that I wish I had already,โ she answered. โI only make things that I think are cool.โ
One favorite approach is to develop whole cultures as a backdrop for the creation of original pieces.
โPretend traditional clothes, cultures that are fanciful. [I imagine] cultures that don’t actually exist and like, pretend that I’m making their traditional garments from their country,โ is how Amiot described her process.
Given the amount of upcycledโanother โgreenwashingโ word Big Mouth prefers not to useโmaterial on hand, cloth often drives creativity. โIt’s the materials that I have that often Iโm like, oh this is a nice texture; it would be good as a jacket. I don’t really plan it out ahead of time. The material dictates the thing.โ
โThat sounds hard,โ said Thwaites.
โYeah, he doesn’t work the same way,โ Amiot laughed.
It is clear that these two makers have something truly unique they are bringing into the world. Thwaites and Amiot have different ways for creating and talking about art, and thatโs their strength. They clash just right, like freakishly weird swaths of cloth pulled together into a radiant garment.
Follow Big Mouth Unique on instagram: @bigmouthunique and Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/BigMouthUnique.










