💜Real Talk — and you might need to hear this. 😢
This isn’t the first time I’ve heard this… and honestly, it still doesn’t sit right with me. A member came to me asking about my Bantu Knots bundle — the same one I gave you the prompts for, showed you how I listed it, and proved sales within hours. This is what I do. This is my job. Then she asked me something that stopped me in my tracks: “Is it okay if I create ethnic clipart outside of my own culture? People around me said I should stay away from that.” Let’s address that. Because that advice? It’s rooted in fear, not facts. I’ve heard the narrative before: “Stick to what you know.” “Don’t create for other races.” But here’s the truth most people won’t say out loud: 👉 Creativity is not the problem. 👉 Disrespect is. There’s a huge difference. If your intention is respect, learning, and appreciation — you are not “doing something wrong.” You are expanding. You are growing. You are creating impact beyond your own bubble. And yes… you are also building a smarter business. Because limiting yourself to “only what you know” is how creators stay stuck, invisible, and underpaid. Let me be clear: In my store, I create across cultures. Asian-inspired designs. South-East Asian beauty. South American traditions. And cultures I’ve taken the time to learn about and respect. Not because I’m trying to “take” — but because I’m honoring. I come from South Africa — a place shaped by deep division, but also deep cultural richness. Respecting different cultures isn’t optional for us… it’s survival. It’s identity. It’s reality. So the idea that you can’t create across cultures? That’s not truth. That’s limitation. And I don’t build businesses on limitations. There’s also no rule, no law, no “creative police” saying you can’t. What actually matters is this: ✔ Do your research ✔ Be intentional ✔ Represent with care ✔ Create with respect That’s it. And here’s what most people miss… When done right, people don’t feel offended. They feel seen. They feel appreciated.