Holiday Weekend Sale, etc.

July 2nd, 2009

HOLIDAY WEEKEND SALE - 20% off EVERYTHING in my Etsy shop including already discounted items. The sale runs from 12:00 a.m. CST on Friday, July 3 until 11:59 p.m. CST on Sunday July 5. The discount will be applied as a refund via Paypal after your purchase has been made but before it is shipped.

I would like to do some more regular-type blogging by Wordpress’s dashboard (the blogging interface) is still all crazy and nearly unusable. I can’t link, add tags, or insert pictures to name a few things. It’s really great.

I will say that my garden is in full bloom and has already provided us with a few cucumbers. If Wordpress wasn’t so wonky I’d show a photo or two of it.

On Vacation June 19-26

June 18th, 2009

I will be on a road trip to the west coast from late, late tonight until late next Friday. We leave at some ungodly hour tonight/tomorrow morning and will be traveling through Yellowstone, Washington, Oregon, California, and back through Nevada, Utah, and Colorado. It’s a quicky, with only a short amount of time at each stop, but I’d rather take this trip than not take this trip.

All orders/correspondence received from 6/19 until 6/27 won’t be attended to until next weekend.

See you in a week (or so)!

REPOST: My hotly anticipated summer blockbuster

June 10th, 2009

Food Inc., everybody:

Back online, sort of

June 10th, 2009

I used my free hosting credit from GoDaddy and re-uploaded Wordpress, and have been trying to get this blogsite back to normal. Apparently “free” means being forced to display an obnoxious ad at the top of this page. I’m going to do some shopping around for cheap hosting (or free w/o ads) but for now I’ll take what I can get.

Yard sale + art = Yart Sale

June 10th, 2009

I should also mention that from June 10-14 I am participating in the Etsy Yart sale. 20% ALL ITEMS IN MY SHOP, INCLUDING DISCOUNT ITEMS. Buy while the buying is cheap….

Hmmmm

May 27th, 2009

I haven’t had a sale in two weeks, which I think is a record since I’ve started consistently listing/re-listing items.  I’ve also only updated this blog a few times this month - coinincidence?

New gallery news

May 20th, 2009

(Not really a representative image of the gallery, but I like it.)

Today I took the first step in what I’m sure will be many towards becoming a part of the art gallery system.  Up until this point I have gotten by with craft fairs, farmer’s markets, and online sales but I feel like my work is to the point where it feels appropriate for it to be displayed in a gallery setting.  So I just mailed off three boxes full of work to be sold on a consignment basis.  The venue in question is the Bambi Project, located in Philadelphia, PA - a doubly excellent location since the city is the location of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia.

I sent a group of vases, jewelry trees, pendants, and a set of goblets, with the possibility of more work in the future.  There’s not much else to say about this other than if you happen to live in the Philly area you should stop by, perhaps as early as this weekend (if the packages get there safely by then.)

I also have consigned some shot glasses and a jewelry tree or two with the Nebraska State Historical Society gift shops.  This is the second attempt to consign work to a Nebraska themed store after a few pieces at the From Nebraska gift shop languished for months without selling.  Fingers crossed.

In other, more trivial news the baby birds have grown up and flown away.  This was inevitable I suppose.  I see one or two of the young ‘uns around the property every now and then, still learning how to navigate with their newly found gift of flight.  I also have the garden fully planted and should write a post about that whole operation; maybe once the plants grow a bit more.

Cute nature blogging

May 13th, 2009

In my back yard: rabbits!

rabbit01

rabbit02

STAY OUT OF MY GARDEN THERE ARE NO CARROTS HERE.

And baby birds!

birds

The robin’s nest is located on the outlet right above the hot tub, which is underneath the patio.  I first noticed it there a month ago or so and didn’t have the heart to move it.  This past weekend I discovered that in addition to the mother robin there were 5 (maybe 6?) newly hatched young ‘uns.  Oh it’s like a Disney film just outside my door!

Communication blockade

May 11th, 2009

Requests for wholesale orders: no response back from the potential customer

Request for consignment: no response back from potential retailer

E-mails about residency: no response from anybody

Combine this with past non-responses regarding job applications and I start to think that I’ve been blacklisted.

Another reason art school is a joke

May 6th, 2009

I’ve been meaning to write about this for a few days but it has taken me a few beers to get in the right frame of mind for a proper rant. This article brings to light many issues I’ve had with graduating with an art degree, though it certainly can apply to most creative disciplines (music, creative writing, etc.):

As many undergraduates fret about graduation, at least one subculture of students in the expensive college landscape is exuding a decidedly morose state of mind: art students. Like many undergrads seeking specialized humanities degrees, student artists wonder what viable place they can occupy in a tightening economy, which now is luring young people into more stable careers in government, the sciences, health care or consulting.

Whoops, you chose the wrong career path!

“Are these prints going to be hard to sell?” Perkins said she asked herself one day inside the studio. “I’d like to think they wouldn’t be, but it’s such a basic topic, and they don’t really teach you these things. That’s what makes me mad. If I wanted to sell it, what are the steps you go about to sell it? Who are the people you go to, and what are the things you say to them?”

Fortunately services such as Etsy now exist where a budding artist can market and sell their work with low overhead and minimal fees.  But, speaking from experience, it’s still tough to get your work seen and even harder to make sales. (And making a living… good luck.)

But this is the key paragraph that REALLY ticked me off:

Perkins’s professor, Dennis O’Neil, chairman of Corcoran’s fine arts department, said he wants to start a course in the fall that will teach self-marketing skills. “Knowing how to write a grant, how to talk to a curator, how to put together an exhibition, how to write and speak about it — these skills are critical for an artist. But somehow we haven’t done it” as part of the curriculum, he said. “Now we’re putting it in place.”

“OKAY SORRY ABOUT NOT PREPARING YOU FOR THE REAL WORLD WITH PRACTICAL ABILITIES BUT NOW WE’RE IMPLEMENTING THESE ESSENTIAL SKILLS AFTER YOU’VE GRADUATED GOOD LUCK WITH LIFE!”

Yes, thanks a student loanful. Of course I’m sure one could take a course in marketing and selling one’s art for the bargain price of $800/credit hour. Viva la educación!