Emily Taylor

Emily Taylor

Illustrations / Digital Art CANADA
Emily Taylor’s patterns and illustrations are marked by organic line, a cheerfully nostalgic palette and lighthearted imagery. Her designs have found homes across a variety of products spanning beauty, fabrics, apparel, stationery, and more. Emily has put pencil to paper for a range of clients, including Anthropologie, Papyrus, Hallmark, and West Elm. Based just north of Toronto, Canada, her work is most inspired by frequent visits to vintage markets, childhood enchantment, and escapes into nature.

Emily Taylor Collection: Vintage-Inspired Puzzles, Paper Goods, and Giftable Finds

If you are drawn to artwork that feels a little bookish, a little botanical, and full of charming detail, this collection gives you that right away.

Emily Taylor's designs move through seed packets, bookshelves, bouquets, stamps, sweets, and paper-inspired motifs, so the page feels cohesive without feeling repetitive. As you browse, the artwork stays recognizable across different product types, which makes it easier to find pieces that suit your own routines or gifting plans.

Are you looking for something decorative, but still easy to use every day?

That is one of the reasons this collection works so well.

Emily Taylor puzzles are a strong choice when you want detail that stays pleasant to piece

If you tend to enjoy puzzles with lots of visual interest, this is the part of the collection to spend time with first.

A few of the puzzle designs here show especially well how Emily Taylor's style translates into puzzle form, with enough variation to stay engaging while still feeling calm and cheerful on the table.

A few things stand out here:

  • Layered imagery like books, labels, florals, and packaging details helps the image stay interesting as you work.
  • Vintage-inspired themes give the puzzles personality without making them feel overly formal.
  • Giftable presentation matters too, especially if you are choosing a puzzle for someone who cares about the artwork as much as the activity.

If you want to keep browsing nearby categories, our Jigsaw Puzzles, 500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzles, and Flowers & Nature Puzzles are the most natural next stops.

The paper goods feel thoughtful, not filler

This is where the collection becomes especially useful if you are not only shopping for puzzles.

The paper pieces keep the same illustrated identity, so they feel connected to the rest of the page rather than added in as extras. That makes a difference when you are trying to choose something small that still feels considered.

The shaped notecards are especially nice examples. They carry the same floral, vintage-inspired look while giving you something you can write, display, or include with a gift.

If your taste leans toward small practical pieces, the magnetic bookmarks fit neatly into this collection too.

Shopping for a gift?

This collection is one of the easier artist collections to shop when you want something that feels personal without needing a very specific niche interest.

You can go in a few different directions depending on what you need:

  • For a birthday or celebration: a greeting card puzzle can make the card itself feel more memorable.
  • For a small but thoughtful add-on: magnetic bookmarks or shaped notecards feel easy to give and easy to use.
  • For something practical with personality: the packable tote bags add the artwork to an everyday object.

The tote side of the collection is especially appealing if you want something useful that still feels tied to the artist's world. Options like the Grow Your Own Way Packable Nylon Tote Bag or the Ever Upward Botanist Bookshelf Packable Nylon Tote Bag keep that same printed, vintage-inspired look.

Small details make this collection feel more distinctive

When you browse artist collections, some of them are led by one big visual idea.

Emily Taylor tends to work differently. The appeal often comes from the accumulation of smaller details: labels, florals, stamps, books, sweets, envelopes, and decorative touches that feel lifted from old paper goods and illustrated reference books. That is part of what makes the collection easy to return to. You notice more as you keep looking.

That also helps the collection carry across formats.

A shaped notecard, a bookmark set, and a puzzle can still feel like they belong to the same world because the artwork is doing the work of holding everything together.

Where this collection fits in the wider Galison assortment

If you already know your way around our artist pages, Emily Taylor sits naturally within our artist-led puzzle grouping under Jigsaw Puzzles.

You may also want to browse across nearby collections if you are comparing styles:

If you already know that florals and nature themes are usually where your eye goes, Flowers & Nature Puzzles is another useful page to explore alongside this one.