About Me
Hello! I’m Mariah Palmer — a natural dye artist and textile designer and Local Earth is my studio located in the mountains near Bozeman, Montana. My art practice is deeply rooted in my relationship with the natural world.
I grew up in the mountains near Sun Valley, Idaho, and spent most of my waking hours outside. My parents are my most influential teachers. They taught me the joy of creating and craftsmanship. My father is a builder who creates one-of-a-kind art and furniture with reclaimed wood, and my mother was a gardener and plant caretaker. She was always collecting things from nature and making mobiles or wreaths. To this day, I can feel her presence as I weave willow and dried flowers into wreaths. I studied Clothing, Textiles, and Design at the University of Idaho. In 2016, I co-founded Wilder Goods which featured a carefully curated collection of local art, slow fashion and vintage goods. In that space, I began offering workshops, which sparked a move away from retail and into teaching and hosting workshops rooted in connecting to the land.
Over the past decade-plus, I have pieced together the school of my dreams by attending courses that centered around our local ecosystem, including ‘Master Naturalist’ through the Montana Outdoor Science School, ‘Resilient Homestead’ a permaculture course with Broken Ground—as well as various online and in-person natural dye courses with—The Dogwood Dyer, Maiwa School of Textiles, Textile Arts Center in Brooklyn, and Wild Pigment Project.
Lately, you can find me at my home studio outside Bozeman, Montana — collecting and growing plants for dyes on fabric, designing textiles and one-of-kind clothing, teaching workshops and making dances with my dance partner and local modern dance crew.
Photo by Celeste Johnson