Decades ago, Wisconsin was home to a vintage shop named Juju and Moxie, which specialized in flapper attire.

โ€œI always thought the name was so cool,โ€ says Rachel Rausch who is from Wisconsin but now lives in Tucson.

The shop eventually went out of business, but its name stuck in Rauschโ€™s mind โ€” eventually leading her to start her own brand under the same name

โ€œWhen I started looking into it, โ€˜jujuโ€™ means luck,โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s usually known as โ€˜bad juju,โ€™ but โ€˜jujuโ€™ can be bad or it can be good.

โ€œโ€˜Moxieโ€™ is your energy,โ€ she says. โ€œIn my feeling with creativity and life in general, luck and energy go hand in hand, almost in an infinity loop.โ€

Around 2016, Tucsonโ€™s own Juju and Moxie was born โ€” but not selling flapper dresses. Instead, Rausch calls it a boutique brand, creating everything from paper goods such as postcards, prints and stickers, to earrings, pins and ornaments.

Most of Rauschโ€™s designs are digital โ€” sometimes starting as sketches in notebooks, but eventually going into programs such as Procreate and Illustrator. But items such as her earrings and ornaments are more hands-on for her โ€” her earrings are made with resin and her ornaments are made out of acrylic.

Some of her products are Tucson-themed, such as earrings with images of prickly pear, or prints that show off iconic Old Pueblo spots such as Hotel Congress or Italian restaurant Carusoโ€™s.

โ€œMy creativity is in full mode all the time,โ€ she says.

Rausch started Juju and Moxie after working as a sign artist for Trader Joeโ€™s for five years.

โ€œWhile I love lettering, thereโ€™s a part of me that loves working with materials in my hands and I didnโ€™t get that with the 2D version of laying paints on boards,โ€ she says.

โ€œ(Juju and Moxie) went from a hobby to just trying one show to five more shows to getting agreements with shops in town to getting online sales.โ€

Rausch says sheโ€™s always been creative, though she wouldnโ€™t say she was always artistic.

โ€œI had a fourth grade art teacher โ€” from fourth grade until I graduated high school โ€” and she never supported me and never thought what I did was that great,โ€ she says. โ€œI bounced around in college and tried different majors and nothing had anything to do with anything artsy. But I had kids and I was like, โ€˜Now or never.โ€™ If you think you can do it, just start doing it.

Rausch doesnโ€™t have any formal training when it comes to art, but she says: โ€œI have many, many hours put in of working through the process of trying to get better.โ€

โ€œCreativity is great, but repetition over and over will get you places.โ€

As for what inspires her art, Rausch says: โ€œI wouldnโ€™t be a Tucson artist if I didnโ€™t say the desert.โ€

โ€œThe desertโ€™s ever-changing palette throughout seasons and the time of day is just amazing,โ€ she says. โ€œI like really bold, bright, vivid colors and I love living in Tucson because of that.โ€


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