green janie
 
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tree mosaics on discontinued pattern glass sample tiles
The “Shop Local” and “American Made” movements are drawing new customers to handmade items this holiday season. Many of the people who attended the Opener Art Festival were looking for locally made gifts and especially appreciated the many vendors using up-cycled materials. That was fun to see. It is a wonderful trend, though it may require a bit of reeducation of the shopping public. While they might desire unique handmade items, many are used to big box retailers and used to that price point. Hand-made could evoke both culture shock and sticker shock. 

Most artists I know struggle with pricing. You can price according to time and materials but how do you price appropriately for things like creativity and beauty? Some projects require so much time they could elicit a small fortune if you paid yourself by the hour.
An artist I admire recently gave me this advice, “if you love something and don’t mind keeping it then price it accordingly. Get what its worth to you.  If you really want to sell it, do your homework and price it to sell.”
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a great location. Lots of natural light
Doing my homework includes: knowing the market, the venue, consulting with other artists, friends and gallery/shop owners.  I often go to Etsy or Artfire and search similar products. Even with all of this, guessing comes in  pretty handy too. It is important to know the real costs you have into your work. Consider things like, insurance, marketing pieces, show fees, commissions, and packaging as well.  
While all artists struggle with this, repurposing artists also have to overcome the perception that working with discarded items means you have no costs to consider.
Some people really get the cool factor and are willing to pay for it. They want beautiful handmade wool mittens that were once a sweater.  They feel good about a purchase that keeps trash out of the landfill.  Other people like the idea but feel that your materials are free – therefore your work should be cheap. 

Consider the work it takes to reclaim/salvage “trash” into useable material.  I can’t just scoop broken glass up off the floor, hand it to you and call it art or a functional product.  If you consider time and supplies needed to convert trash into a usable medium you could have more money into that than any ready-made material. 

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This year I made 6 beautiful, sparkly, glass ornaments for the Art festival. I love them.   They were a lot of work but the result was worth it. I heard a few times that my ornaments were priced too high.  I did my homework, considered my costs and landed on a fair price. They were admired by many and bought by no one. I considered keeping them for myself but overall sales were a little slow this year, so I ultimately lowered my price.  I sold 3 but still heard “too expensive for an ornament” by a few a customers (as they whispered the name of a big box store where you could get half a dozen ornaments for the price of one of mine).

 I could have explained that they can definitely stretch their ornament dollars by going to the big box and buying the same ornaments that everyone else has – mass produced in china and now available in unbreakable shinny plastic (blech). I have no interest in competing with that. That isn’t what I sell.
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I sell one-of-a-kind, handmade, glass-on-glass mosaic ornaments made from reclaimed tempered glass pieces. I painstakingly pieced hundreds of glass bits together taking hours and hours for each ornament. The process I use makes the ornament far less breakable than the traditional glass ornament. Each one has a back story. The green ones, for instance, were made from glass I salvaged when my own car window was broken.   The real story is the message: what was once broken and thought useless can reemerge as something beautiful. But hey, that’s not what they were looking for. Or was it? I guess I will never know because I didn’t take the time to properly tell the story.

The lesson:  If part of what you are selling is the story – tell the story.  The tags explained a little but an art fair setting is not conducive to leisurely reading. We talked a little about the materials and process but missed the magic.
I need to rethink my presentation. I wasn’t thinking someone would outfit an entire tree with these orbs. I hoped to sell them alone or in pairs as a special gift.  What if I had told them the right story? Perhaps someone on their list has felt broken and is trying to rebuild their life.  This ornament would have been a perfect sentiment for that. 

Overall, the day was great. I noticed people looking for gifts versus buying for themselves.  Let’s hope many people find a special handmade gift under the tree this year.

green janie

Update:  Before I even had a chance to post this I received an order for 12 of the ornaments from someone who just really loved them!!


 
 
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May through August are normally the busiest months in my “real job” at the glass shop. So far this September has them all beat.  It's like living in the eye of a storm.  We have been short staffed for three weeks which adds duties to my jam packed days.  To add to the fun, I teach Continuing Ed classes on Ethics and Auto Glass Safety to insurance agents this week.  It takes an incredible amount of prep and detail to coordinate. Ideally I should have cleared my schedule for the last two weeks and concentrated on this one thing only.  But that isn’t how I role.

In addition to my bottle and jar addiction (see previous blog post) I am also addicted to being busy.  I may complain when I get overbooked but I really wouldn’t have it any other way.  I tend to pack on the projects because I secretly fear that I will someday get it all done and have nothing to do.  (Ha!)

This is why I enjoy art projects so much. There is always something to do, always something in the works.  I get a little down in the dumps when I have neglected my work for a while. As soon as I get back to it I feel that familiar surge of joy and come up with 10 new ideas.

I have several fun things in the works right now.  My two talented friends Trish Barthorpe
http://www.photobytrish.com and Jill Bitker http://www.netzersfloral.com  and I are the featured artists at the Cabin Coffeehouse and Café for the month of October. Our collaborative show, “Autumn Inspirations” is going to be fantastic. We are doing some interesting interpretations of the change of season with flowers, broken glass and photography.  In my spare time I have been working on pieces for that show but there is still so much to do.

This Thursday is Pecha Kucha Night in Bemidji! Have you heard of it? It is a fun, faced paced storytelling/presentation event done all around the world.  Bemidji is one of the two cities in Minnesota to put them on – Thanks to my other talented friends, Samantha Nienow and Eric Evenson.  This link will give you better details:  
http://www.pknbemidji.org   Check out this link to see if there is one near you:  http://www.pecha-kucha.org . I have the extreme honor of booking artists to display work at PKN Bemidji.  I love this duty so much.  It is such a nice way for artists to get more exposure and I get to meet so many creative people. Come check it out if you are in the Bemidji area on Thursday.

Next week is the Minneapolis premier of my sister’s film: Of Dolls and Murder. I have been waiting a long time for this!
http://ourwildestdreams.blogspot.com

This past weekend was all about preparing for my classes. Still, I found a little time to work on some glass pieces and make spaghetti sauce from tomatoes my husband grew in his garden.  It did my little green heart good to reuse a few jars and freeze some of that sauce for the winter.

What else? Oh yeah – my son turns 12 Wednesday! Must make a cake, buy presents… candles, I need candles.  I already blew school picture day and canceled plans to go to a football game with him so I really have to pull it together on the Mom front this week.

An advantage to being hurricane Jane is never being bored.   I think I equate bored with lazy. When we were kids, if my sister and brothers and I uttered the words “I’m bored” to our parents, we immediately received a broom, rake, shovel… in our hands and spent the next few hours wishing we had kept our mouths shut.  If only we had tried just a little harder to entertain ourselves.

 Maybe that’s it! I keep myself as busy as possible so no one ever makes me mow the law.  It’s working too.

Stay busy!
 green janie