Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Friday, October 15, 2010

Seeds of Inspiration

Seed pods from my backyard with their wonderful spikey geometric shape offer interesting design possibilities to artists.

Last night I noted that several people in the Promotional Frenzy thread in the Etsy forum http://www.etsy.com/forums_thread.php?thread_id=6652194


were talking about the need for refueling their inspiration and motivation, so I slept on it and woke up to the idea today to take pictures of all kinds of textures, lighting, shapes, perspectives, and colors that might jump-start creativity for my own and others' future works.

I found more than enough subject matter just within my front, back, and side yards!

This little wasp's nest was attatched to my screened porch and I placed it on a yellow leaf so that it would stand out better.
There is alot one can do based on this design (and I've seen some fascinating ceramics and jewelry created with this in mind).

For those of you who do steampink styles this drainpipe with its accordian design could pur some new, innovative work!



I've provided several different perspectives that could be incorporated into jewelry, papercraft, ceamic, sculpture, etc.

This folded puppy pen would also offer a unique subject for one's work;

It would make an interesting background for screen printing, as would this screen
Shadows can also offer numerous ideas to artists looking for effects to use in their work.
This is one I captured on my wooden security fence.


Shadows can be really lovely and can be used in all mediums from jewelry to sculpture, to watercolor, to mixed media art.

Here I captured myself taking the picture in the driveway scattered with acorns! Now how about that for perspective!

Jewelry artists and sculptors might especially like this chain link fence cap;

and this hinge might inspire hinges on jewelry or handmade boxes, for instance;



And my favorites are almost always patterns from nature like these!

I love the perspective you get when looking up a tree!

This tree in my backyard has an owl hole near the top where it broke off a few months ago during a storm.

For those of you who love leaves these photos should give you alot to think about!





And for you dog-lovers I've got these;

This dog recently moved into the house behind mine;
 I had to lean over the fence for this first one! Just look at that black tongue on this dog. He must have Chow in him!
And a regal headshot from behind the fence!

I haven't forgotten about all you Carmella fans!


So get out there and see all the beauty this world has to offer, then come back with a headfull of ideas...and create!


Monday, October 11, 2010

B&R Treasury and
"Promotional Frenzy"
Art of Amy started a new BNR (Buy and Replace) Treasury on Etsy;
http://www.etsy.com/treasury/4cb36da3b3b06d91a2ec35af/open-fun-games-bnr-28-sales-total-7?page=19#comments

It's open tonight and wil stay open until 2:00 AM!  It's hopping right now, so drop by, leave a comment, look into the featured shops, and who knows; maybe you'll find something you just have to have. If you have a shop on Etsy yourself let your purchase do double-duty and get you some more promotion for yours!

Note that there will be 3 rounds in this treasury and that it will open again at 6:00 PM tomorrow night after being moved to another link (to be announced).

Galla15 has posted a new thread that is a spin-off from 30 Minutes of Fame called Promotional Frenzy. It has a new twist, some new ideas, and some new participants as well as the regulars from the Fame thread!

Tomorrow night  (October 12th) will be the first of our Promotional Frenzies.
Be here at 9:00 PM EST ;
http://www.etsy.com/forums_thread.php?thread_id=6652194&page=1

We hope to attract alot of Etsy sellers and would love to see a variety of different mediums represented. If you have a food shop, we'd love to see you too! The holidays are coming and that means lots of feasting on all kinds of goodies! This is a wonderful opportunity for cross-promotion, so come and tell your friends to be there too!

Saturday, July 31, 2010

30 Minutes of Fame-A Clever Way of Marketing Art-based Businesses Online


If you don't know what 30 Minutes of Fame refers to check out this Etsy forum thread!
http://www.etsy.com/forums_thread.php?thread_id=6585117&page=1

In a nutshell, this is how it works; for 30 minutes one Etsy shop is promoted intensively by the participants in the thread. That lucky shop gets links posted in the thread, on twitter, facebook, blogs, and/or other places for that half-hour, and hopefully sales! The "famous" person is chosen by landing on certain number posts in the thread and then scgedules the time and date they would like within a 72 hour period of winning.

Tonight we have two scheduled, and any and all readers are invited to attend and share in the fun!

*************************************************************************
30 minutes of FAME!!!

Saturday July 31 at 9:00 pm EST:



Famous Shop:
http://Angelaspaperart.etsy.com


And at 9:30pm EST:
Famous Shop:
http://www.etsy.com/shop/myhandmadecrafts

***********************************************************************

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Groping Around in the dark
It has been several months now since any of my jewelry has sold on Etsy and I'm not sure what gives. I feel as though I'm groping around in the dark trying to find a foothold. Tonight I watched American Idol and noticed that a number of the singers were having the same problem. What they thought would appeal to people seemed to miss the mark with the judges in some vital way in many cases. Only one or two seemed to hit the nail on the head in enough areas to get that unhesitating "Yes!" response that all artists strive for, the kind of response in which the beholder doesn't have to think consciously about what worked, but knew unequivically that it did. Even after polishing their act taking into account all the feedback they'd been given, still several of them were told that they veered left when they should have veered right, or that they'd gone too far in one direction that they'd been told to go in the previous week and over-corrected.

I thought about how visual art is similar. It's like that game "pin the tail on the donkey where you're blindfolded and have to rely on often ambiguous cues and instructions as to when you're getting "hot" and when you're getting "cold".

As artists it seems that often we come kind of close (and someone may like something we've made enough to compliment but maybe not heart it), or at times very close (and then somebody will heart it but not buy it), then on those lucky occasions when all the conditions are right... bingo! (Somebody buys).

Those moments to an artist are like a juicy steak set down in front of you at the end of a long day, but what are they made of? Better yet; we all wonder how we can repeat them, yet the formula seems to elude us and remains a moving target.
Sometimes it seems as though an art-based business is more like trying to win the lottery than other jobs in which you can be sure your pay is going to continue week after week. Althought ironically with all the recent lay-offs the two might be more on a par with each other now more than ever.

It is alot like going fishing. You choose where you think is a good fishing spot, attach the worm (choose types and decide on your methods of promotion), then drop your line in the water and see if there are any fish around to see it, and whether they are interested (is your demographic where you're advertising and do they want what you have to offer on this day?)

Sometimes they see it but stay where they are, not making a move forward. Other times one comes close and even takes a little nibble.

I remember when I was a kid out on the pier many summers waiting patiently to catch "the big one" and it did come around. It's presence massive, an impressive creature, fins glistening like polished silver, sunlight glancing off it as its muscular body maneuvered effortlessly through the water below. My heart seemed to stop for a moment in anticipation. I was afraid to breath for fear I might scare it away.

It was these fish that were hardest to catch, as they all seemeds to have grown to this size by narrowly escaping capture any number of times. Some even had remnants of hooks in their mouths which had partially healed over. These big granddaddy fish would glide up to my hook and appear to sniff around at the juicy morsel attached, assessing whether or not to go in and chomp down. More often than not they'd nibble around the edges, avoiding the hook inside as if they knew that there was a price to be paid for not controlling their hunger. Then they'd dart off if there were any sudden moves, or seem to get distracted while staring at it and lose interest, sailing up to, then beyond my offering, eyes focused forward.

I never could figure out what the determining factor was to their deciding to bite down solidly versus the other two responses. To this day it remains a mystery.

In my jewelry design process I have alot of versatility and often challenge myself to look at trends and then create my own twist on elements that seem to appeal to a number of people. I don't want my work to look like everybody else's but at the same time I often wonder if there is such a thing is going too far off the beaten path.

I have read that certain shapes such as circles appeal to most people and afford them a kind of security. Maybe there's something to be said for predictability in an increasingly unpredictable world. Sometimes I will look at work that does not seem very unique and see that nevertheless it is selling pretty regularly.

Two questions keeps raising their heads; "How plain should I go before the work becomes boring? How complex or unusual should I go before the work is too far afield for viewers to relate to it?

It is easy to go too far in either direction, but where that line in the sand exists is not well understood.

Tomorrow between 1 and 3 pm someone is coming to look at my poor kitchen floor that the other repairman tore while moving the refrigerator and Carmella continued to peel back.

I will be relieved to have that work done so that I can mop it without worrying that it will warp. I want to wash the floor with bleach as soon as I can in case Carmella's foot microbes re-deposit onto her while she's walking in there.

You can see when you look close-up that these torn areas trap hair, and stains, and all kinds of unwanted stuff. Yuck!

Carmella's second day wearing the cone has been touch and go. She has found ways to get around the thing now and then and either stick a back foot inside the cone or slide the cone down her neck toward her shoulders and then reach her front feet. I have to keep pushing it forward. I hope this infection gets better soon because I can't watch her every second of the day and keep re-adjusting that thing or I'll go nuts! Luckily she has fallen asleep on the chair in here in the computer room. I almost hate to wake her up to bring her into my room and put her onto the bed, but I can't leave her by herself to wander around the house unsupervised. There's no telling what sort of mischief she'd get into and how much it would cost me to replace whatever in here she might destroy with that deadly micro-snout of hers.

Goodnight to you all! Keep reading and commenting, and if you see any big fish be sure to send them my way! Minnows will work if you have enough of them but it's nice to have a big meaty Salmon at least once in awhile.
http://Giftbearer.etsy.com/

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Carmella DeCesare...NOT!

It's Carmella the first puppy to beat Distemper in the US. Out of curiosity I decided to do a Google search to see how many times my Carmella came up, and to my disappointment found page after page devoted to the same sex industry star. It was as if her promoters bought the entire fist 20 pages on Google! ***Well, psyche!*** Every once in awhile the little guy prevails.

I thought, "No wonder Etsy seems to be the only place through which people are finding my blog!" With such a monopoly I was hard-pressed to find any other Carmellas. There were maybe 2 others that I could find links to (and I had to search for quite a long time).

However, one thing that was encouraging was that when I searched Giftbearer and Etsy other bloggers' features of my shop and my blog came up fairly often because of the 90 Day Challenge I started last year around the holidays. Those blogs that featured me continue to come up on Google with my name or blog referenced long after the original post, so maybe the key to getting the word out is for multiple bloggers to write about Carmella in their blogs as well.

A year ago I had theorized that such an approach would work to boost Google ratings and not only did it turn out that I was right, but the long-term effect was even more positive than I'd anticipated! The one post on each participant they blogged about had residual visibility again and again!

So if you feel like you just can't compete with the paid Google position folks, don't dispair. There is more than one way to skin a cat...(and sometimes it's with a dog, hee, hee). If any of you are interested in trying this experiment blogging about Carmella I would be very interested to see how it turns out and to report in my blog what kind of impact we have. Here's one more way the community can come together to help Carmella. Maybe we'll attract some dog-lovers from a variety of other places in addition to Etsy.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

90 Day Challenge Status Update, Health, and Thoughts on The Economy

The medical mystery continues and I may be starting with a new doctor fairly soon if everything works out and this referral I got from another autoimmune patient takes my form of insurance. It looks hopeful but I won't know anything until at least Monday. I still am not able to spend much time online without feeling worse so will have to post the rest of these intermittantly (whenever I have a short window of time that I feel better) until all 90 are completed.

We still need 16 more participants to join before we reach our goal, so if you have not signed up please go to the link on the right and post your blog link on the Etsy forum thread. A number of people taking part have already reported that this challenge has improved their business, and it can do that for you too. The key is to make this collaboration as big and as highly visible as possible! I would love to see everybody benefit from this project and to have it be a working model of how to stimulate the economy through collaborative effort. A federal tax refund is all well and good, but a true economic stimulus requires more than a one-time payment of $300.00, it requires that citizens like you and me frequent the businesses whose livelihood depends on our cash. This is what really makes the world function.

If you are an online shopper reading this, please take a look at the shops in this challenge and choose some of these artists to buy your handcrafted gifts from, and make sure to let them know you heard about them through the 90 Day Challege.

Valentine's Day is going to be here sooner than we realize, so why not treat someone to something really unique instead of shopping at a commercial jewelry store for the one you love. If you are single and unattached there is no rule that says you can't buy something for a friend, your mother, your daughter, or somebody at work who would be touched that you thought about them enough to give them something special.

If you are a seller who also buys on occasion, believe it or not, spending money will come back to you in one form or another. I have experienced that first-hand. I bought some artisan lampwork beads and within just two days I sold something! It wasn't a big sale, but after about 4 months of no jewelry sales at all what were the chances of that? And this has happened to me more than once. I look at cashflow as a pipeline. If the pipeline gets stopped up nothing can move (either out or in). Like they say, "An object in motion tends to stay in motion, and an object at rest tends to stay at rest".

When money circulates around a community (be it within the 90 Day Challenge, within Etsy as a whole, or the larger surrounding marketplace), its ripple-effect sooner or later reaches everyone. Since the world is not infinite and it has parameters, the money you spend is not "lost" into a void, but it changes hands many times and in a subtle way returns. Even though that effect is so far removed that you can no longer trace its path (and often where your results come from), there are a number of core principles at work which benefit not only others but yourself.

When you buy, you are in a state of receptiveness, and the outflow of that amount of money you just spent allows you to make room to receive something in its place. It also sends a message to people that you appreciate what other artists have to offer. Like setting a candelit table in a restaurant, it sets the stage for a mood of receptiveness and generosity. Engendering that feeling leads to action in those in your general vicinity. Until you analyze it one may be unaware of doing this in many areas of one's life unconsciously and not even be aware of how or why it achieves positive results.

One part of successful selling is about the product itself, and the other variable (less controllable or measurable) is the buyer's mental association he or she has to you. Call it chemistry, ambiance, or whatever; there are lots of subtleties beneath the surface that determine the difference between looking/bookmarking, and deciding to press that Buy Now button. I am still trying to get that down to a science. Perhaps the buyer likes the blue you use in your banner because it reminds her of a favorite dress her grandmother made for her as a child, or a shape in a pair of earrings that reminds her of earrings her older sister wore and she coveted all through high school. Maybe something in the description of an item makes the customer feel this particular piece is relevant to his/her life in a profound way, or that a piece the buyer bookmarked a month ago is the perfect color for a particular new outfit and it appeals even more now that they have a "reason" to buy it.

By the same token, if an artist continues to list his/her wares for sale and pays to do so, continuing to list beyond a certain time-frame if customers are not buying is no longer cost-effective. However, if those items begin to be bought up, room is freed up (both physically and emotionally) for that artist to create more and with a refreshed perspective. This freeing-up cycle of resources and creativity must continue in order to maintain a strong economy where all will benefit.

Even with all of the unconscious positive motivating factors, people tend to react and respond in some respects to that which goes on around them. If they see alot of other people buying then it is just human nature for them to follow suit. By the same token if they see people putting the breaks on their spending they are likely to do the same.

With all the publicity on television about debt, news of lay-offs, and open-ending federal budget depletion due to the war in Iraq, it is easy to get stuck in a mind-set that dictates we can't spend any extra money, to go way to the extreme, clamping down our collective sphincters and resolving to tighten our belts in anticipation of a long, hard famine, but doing that will only perpetuate the problems that plague our nation, prolong the duration of the slowdown, and force us to live in a constant state of self-denial, and in so doing we deny others.

We need to take this economy into our own hands to the extent possible and make the conscious decision not to become victims of the status quo. That is not to say that one should spend thousands of dollars every week and run up credit card bills that would take a lifetime to pay off, but if each of us buys on a consistent basis and we think of each person we buy from as a living being with a mortgage or rent, utility bills, food and transportation expenses, etc, and be conscious that this person relies on these sales of their art product just as you might rely on your weekly or bi-weekly paycheck from your employer to fulfill your financial responsabilities and to feel viable as a citizen, we begin to understand how our buying decisions help maintain the necessary balance and flow of society.

As artists we step out on faith each time we buy from our suppliers in hopes that what we choose to work with will appeal to the public once we perform our magic on it transforming raw materials into a useful or recognizable art object. Without our business these suppliers would dry up and disappear. Like us, they are mothers and fathers, wives and husbands, people with lives who have to hope that the demand for their products today will still be there tomorrow. Any blockage in the pipeline will adversely effect people both upstream and downstream from us.

You could say that money is the fiber that flushes out the colon of the US economy! Fiscal constipation can be every bit as problematic as physical constipation if it is allowed to continue. Do what you can to support artists by keeping the cashflow going!