Mushroom Club - Four volumes
Volume 01 of Mushroom Club Leans into the lighthearted, whimsical side of the woodland, the kind of scene that makes you smile before you've even worked out what you're looking at. Hand-drawn dragonflies hover over banners and blooms, daisies and flowering vines spill across the frame, and quiet little details, like a weathered urn tucked among the petals, reward a closer look. Every line started on paper before it found its way into the piece, building a world that feels both whimsical and warmly familiar.
Mushroom Club - Volume 02Volume 02 trades daylight charm for something quieter and more towering. Here the mushrooms stack skyward in dense, ancient clusters beneath a hazy moon, their gills and caps rendered in soft greys against a darkening sky. Curling tendrils and floating motes of light drift through the undergrowth, giving the scene a hushed, almost architectural sense of scale, less a garden you wander into and more a grove that's been growing, layer upon layer, for far longer than you'd guess. The hand-drawn detail in each cap and stem carries the same patient process as the rest of the collection, just turned toward something more solemn.
Mushroom Club - Volume 03 Volume 03 opens the collection up into wider, more ethereal territory. Ruined stone archways and floating castle spires rise out of mist and flowering fields, monarch butterflies drift through pale cloudscapes, and soft watercolor skies replace the moonlit groves of earlier volumes. The mushrooms are still here, woven quietly into the architecture and undergrowth, but the volume's heart belongs to the monarchs themselves and the dreamlike, sky-bound spaces they move through. It's a softer, more wandering chapter, hand-drawn and built the same patient way as the rest of the collection, just with its gaze lifted skyward.
Mushroom Club - Volume 04 Volume 04 closes the collection by gathering its threads back together and adding a few new ones. Mushroom towers rise again, sometimes crowned in cascades of foxglove and daisy, sometimes silhouetted against moonlit topiary gardens that feel older and stranger than the daylight scenes before them. Dragonflies and monarchs return to drift through the undergrowth, but the volume also introduces something the rest of the collection hasn't shown yet: carved, watchful faces nestled in flower heads, equal parts whimsical and unsettling, peering out at whoever stops to look. It's a fitting close, hand-drawn like everything before it, but willing to let a little mischief into the garden.
The Mushroom Club collection brings a quietly magical woodland to life entirely by hand, no AI involved. Each piece begins as an original line drawing, scanned in and built up layer by layer, often down to the individual blade of grass. Across its four volumes, towering clusters of mushrooms rise beneath moonlit skies, dragonflies and monarch butterflies drift through fields of daisies and flowering vines, and a vintage urn stands quietly amid it all, declaring "I heart you!" to whoever wanders close enough to look. It's a collection built on patience and pure imagination, where every grass blade was a choice, not a click.