




Ruth Proudfoot-Smith @CornishTiddlers (Sept–Oct 2025)
THE LUCKY BLUE LOBSTER
So why am I only creating one original Blue Lobster artwork EVERY TWO YEARS?
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Well, I have been just a little bit fascinated with rare, electric blue lobsters for a number of years now. Although there has been recent debate about their numbers increasing, it is generally considered that there is a one-in-a-million chance of sighting or finding one in a fishing net, anywhere around the UK coast!
In Cornwall, only two have been caught between 2021 and 2024. The last blue lobster was discovered at Polperro seashore in 2024, and was donated to Padstow’s National Lobster Hatchery. You can read the BBC news article Laura Young wrote about this rare sighting here... The feature from May '24, describes how Chris Puckey found the 'irridescent sapphire' shelled lobster. Then with advice from Polperro harbour trader Jacqui, they decided the rare creature should be protected and taken to the Hatchery. Jacqui told me recently that , "the lobster was actually released again by Chris towards the end of 2024 as the Aquarium closes over the winter months. Also, Lucky Blue had 'berries' (she was carrying eggs) on her at that point – which was very exciting, so Chris notched her tail prior to releasing her."
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(Pictured left: The Lobster Hatchery, Cornwall – ExploreCornwall.com)
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Therefore, I’ve decided to make an original blue lobster polyfusion piece only once every two years, to acknowledge this fact. The artwork pictured here (above) is the first original lobster – which I created from plastic bags and other packaging waste using polyfusion and stitching methods – in 2024, inspired by the above news story. So there will only ever be one original polyfusion framed artwork like this, for sale . No others will be made until early 2026 – when I will create another unique design using whatever soft plastics are available. Again there will be only one of this original artwork available to buy – ever. So watch this space and I hope my rare lobster will be snapped up!
(Pictured: Chris Puckey, Jacqui Spencer, Polperro blue lobster BBC Cornwall. Photograph by Pete Spencer)
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I like that fishermen consider these rare creatures to be lucky. This mostly an orally passed-down instance of wider 'lobster lore' and traditionally believed to appear as a charm or sign – so fishermen tend not eat them. Instead they are set free, thrown back or nowadays, donated to protected habitats which help maintain breeding of vulnerable species and balance the marine ecology. In the last instance, the lobster is also safe from natural predators. (View more about: The Polperro Lobster Hatchery ...)
The genetic abnormality that leads to this Lobster's striking electric blue colour is due to an over-production of the protein crustacyanin, which is thought to make them easier prey in the ocean. In most other lobster types, their shells are a darker, muddier blue/green hue, which helps them blend better into the seabed.
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My new, 2-yearly specialist Lobster piece – to be completed early in 2026 will be called ‘Lucky Blue’ and will act as a commentary on the way plastics are increasing in our seas – so much so, that generally more and more creatures struggle and become more affected as a consequence of this pollution. Nature has made these blue lobsters a thought-provoking rarity and by making one in plastic, I am echoing a wider vulnerability which we all need to consider . . .


