Collaborations

Some of the most interesting things happen when two people with different skills and a shared sensibility decide to make something together. A Creative Pause was built with collaboration at its heart — and if you're reading this, there's a chance we might be a good fit.

This isn't a formal pitch process or a fixed product. It's an open invitation to explore what we might create together — whether that's a one-off workshop, a series of events, or something neither of us has thought of yet. If you’re curious about how we might be able to work together, I’d love to hear from you.

WHAT COLLABORATION LOOKS LIKE

Three kinds of
creative partnership.

Interior view of a cozy room with a blue door open to a garden, a colorful floral painting on the wall, a small wooden shelf with art supplies, and a lamp, bathed in natural light. A Creative Pause art studio

Fellow Creatives

You have a skill, a practice, a following — and an instinct that combining it with a shared creative experience could create something genuinely special. A yoga teacher, a florist, a ceramicist, a jewellery maker. If your work asks people to slow down and be present, we're probably already speaking the same language and I’d love to hear from you,

Outdoor dinner setup with a long table decorated with flowers, surrounded by wooden chairs, under string lights at dusk, with people socializing in the background.

Aligned Brands + Experiences

For brands whose values genuinely align with creativity, connection, and slowing down. Not a sponsorship, not a logo on a banner — but a real partnership that gives your community an experience worth having. If your brand stands for something, let's make something that shows it.

Women gathered around a table with a large bouquet of yellow flowers, an example of a communal painting session at A Creative Pause

Coaches & Therapists

If you run retreats, workshops, or group programmes and you're looking for a creative element that deepens the experience rather than distracts from it, A Creative Pause can sit beautifully within your existing work. A shared painting session opens people up in ways that are hard to replicate.

IN PRACTICE

This is already
happening.

Collaborations so far have brought together a yoga studio, a local florist, and a craft workshop facilitator — each one different, each one creating something that neither of us could have made alone.

The best ones start with a conversation and a shared sense that there's something here worth exploring.