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started doing what I call 'crafty stuff' when my kids were little," Crow said. Now her works have evolved into true pieces of art. Crow said she began taking classes in altered arts before she retired three years ago. "But it really started when my daughter got married and I wanted to do a scrapbook for her." Crow said she's not a person who follows the norm "Rulers and I just don't get along," she said so she designed her own free form book. "Her wedding scrapbook bulges because it's just full of three dimensional stuff," Crow said. "It all just sort of snowballed from there." The business takes its name from Crow's mother, whose maiden name was Estes. Genealogy research traced the original family name back to the Villa d'Este in Italy. "We wanted some way to incorporate my mother into our feminine lineage," Crow said. "She had a stroke at age 58 and lost a lot of the use of her hands, and her speech, but she took painting classes . and she did some beautiful stuff." Crow said that "silver thread" of artistry runs through the family, but her former position in curriculum design didn't foster that creativity. "That's one of the reasons I knew that wasn't what I wanted to do anymore," she said. "I wanted to go to that artistic space that place I had to push down for so long." Now her house is a delightful collage full of colorful projects, and her Web customers come from across the globe. Along with her other art pieces, Crow creates opulent patchwork purses roomy, soft bags made from crazy quilts or vintage fabrics, richly embroidered and embellished with textural fringes. The one of a kind handbags sell in the range of $150 $300. "I did turn into a bag lady," she said with a laugh. She also creates jewelry, altered books, mixed media paintings, fabric art and other indescribable works. Crow scrounges for "found objects" at thrift stores, garage sales, estate sales and flea markets, she said. "I never see an item for what it is. I see it as it could be," she said. "The screwier it is, the better I like it." Her daughter said she uses the artistry to escape from the stresses of her own job as a title attorney. "I needed some kind of creative outlet," Beckert said.