Showing posts with label necklace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label necklace. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 June 2015

A Busy Weekend With Lots of Sales!!!

Wheeeee, finally a great Saturday at the market for everyone, which is so gratifying. I sold several brand new items including a couple that I didn't get a chance to photograph. The blue picasso bracelet with the pewter bird, turtle, horse and feather (I call it the "Four Corners") sold right away, right out of the gate. Lady came by, picked it up, examined it... "Uh, where's the clasp?" "It rolls on." Sold.


Definitely must make more of these.

I also sold the aqua terra and crab agate necklace on the right (the necklace on the left sold quite a while ago) yesterday, matched perfectly with sterling, turquoise and sponge coral earrings. They accompanied my customer and her brand new dress to a girls' night out Beatles tribute show last night.



I went to an estate sale this morning and here are a few of my treasures. We're doing a Nostalgia show at the fairgrounds on September 13th, I think it is, so I'm buying with that in mind. Some pieces will go to our booth at the Antique Mall (Booth 800/847 if you're planning a trip our way).





Aaaaand it's jam-making season. The first strawberries are starting to come in from the fields. There were mountains of them at the market yesterday. For some reason the local grocery store has decided not to carry my favourite low-sugar no-cook gelling powder this year, so my pal George brought me 20 packages from the big city on Tuesday, which I swap for jam. 

What's the name of that Pinterest site? Pinterest Fails -- or similar, anyway. Here's my latest entry in the Pinterest Fail... well, it was a success but SO SLOW! Give me my paring knife any day.

My handy-dandy strawberry hulling setup. The mosquitoes arrived shortly after and settled in to feast on me. 



Putting the straw in strawberries...




Poke the straw through from the bottom...



Pull the core out of the straw...



And you have a neat little hole to fill with chocolate...



This doesn't show how full the bowl was, but it was ten 250ml jars' worth of strawberries mounded up.



Unfortunately, the monsoon rains we had early in the week made this batch of strawberries awfully watery, but a titch extra sugar and lots and lots of lemon juice brings out the flavour nicely. Peaches will be coming along soon. I can hardly wait. There's a type of early peach that is soooooo good as jam. Summer in a jar, especially in the dead of winter.

Thanks for looking!










Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Nephrite Jade, Carnelian & Black Cinnabar Necklace & Earrings...

Hah -- with reference to a discussion with Lisa Yang two posts ago, I had to take apart old jewellery to get one more carnelian bead for the necklace and then, while I was at it, tore apart an unsold bracelet to get two 6mm beads for the earrings. I figured I should make earrings now because the long bicone shape of the jade will be difficult to ever find again and typical customers in my mind's eye do like earrings.

'Scuse also the bad colour -- these really are a dark and dullish jade on the yellow side of the spectrum and the carnelian is a deep orange: not this Christmassy. I will try rephotographing tomorrow.



Necklace is 25.5" long. $125 for the necklace and earrings. I take PayPal and Square. Shipping and handling extra. Please email me for availability.

The inspiration to make this necklace was pure procrastination -- a highly underrated tool, at least in my creative arsenal -- and which came about as I was restringing and pricing bead strands for The Gem Expo. Hard to believe, in seven days I will be packing my truck for the show, and one week tomorrow, unless the forecast changes, I will be driving through snow and whatnot to get to Toronto. I'm really looking forward to being in Toronto. The drive? Mmmm, not so much.

Thanks for looking!

Monday, 16 June 2014

Selling in person versus online...

It seems like every few weeks I see variations on that question raised in some forum or another. Which is better: online, craft shows, bricks and mortar stores? Where are the best sites? Etsy used to be so good for me; where did all my customers go? Why are craft show sales so dismal?

Here are some of my musings on this. I don't know that one is better over another. From looking around and being a customer myself, I think that being more focused and targeted online seems to result in better sales (and that can mean selling a limited range of items and/or spending all your time and effort servicing that one outlet), whereas being a little more of a generalist, at least in the beginning, seems to work better when selling in person -- but a targeted generalist nonetheless.

Then you get into the question of where the best places to sell are and the best price points for a given venue. Over the years I've learned what it is I prefer to do and where my particular strengths lie.

All in all, I still prefer selling in person. Particularly at the Antique Mall, sales seem to happen when vendors are at their showcases or booths, especially on the weekends. Part of it is because, if we're not there, then the potential customer has to go all the way back to the front of the building to the cash desk, ask for someone to come with a key, then walk all the way back (this place is HUGE) and when it's busy, you could wait a long time to be able to take a closer look at a specific item. Quite frankly, most people won't bother.

It just happened that yesterday I was at the Antique Mall rearranging my showcase with Nancy (who I share a booth with, as well) and while at my showcase we ended up having great conversations with all kinds of people coming by -- and sales!

Sold on Sunday, amethyst, turquoise and Bali silver necklace:



The other half of selling in person anywhere is the potential for additional sales. Because I happened to be there, my customer was able to ask if, A, I had any earrings to go with the necklace; and, B, would it be possible to make some, and, C, I could determine exactly what style she specifically would prefer: short, long, dangly. Now, I normally do make several pairs of earrings loosely designed around certain necklaces, but amethyst earrings in particular tend to sell quite quickly. My mistake has been never to seriously track the styles that sell well and then stay on top of making more.

Another consideration about selling at markets and an Antique Mall type of situation versus a one or two-day craft show is having the luxury of time. Weekly venues typically have a limit on the number of any type of vendor (jewellery, soap, pottery, knitting), whereas at craft shows you could be competing with any number of jewellery vendors, as many as 50% or more these days. Weekly markets are not a one-shot deal where you're only there for a few short hours once a year and the customer has a lot of booths to look at and mere seconds as they walk by to decide if he or she spots something compelling enough to stop -- not to mention limited funds. How many times have you heard (or said to yourself), "I'll come back. I want to look at everything first before I buy anything," and they/you never ever do. With steady venues, it's easy to build up a rapport with potential customers. There's no pressure on them and they get to know and trust you. Having said that, the huge downside to weekly markets is exactly that familiarity. It tends to be the same people coming back week after week and no matter how much people love your jewellery and buy from you, and no matter how you evolve and come up with new and creative pieces, eventually they just... stop... buying.

One exception to "craft" shows that I make is The Gem Expo. Because it's held three times a year over three days, vendors can expect to build up a repeat customer base. This I was told is the only way to succeed in this business; some vendors get emailed orders ready before the show, and within minutes of the doors opening on the first day the orders have been picked up and paid for and for the vendors the rest of their show sales are gravy. Slowly, slowly I am building up repeat customers. I'm getting to know what people are looking for and I'm better targetting my own buying. I've evolved from being a jewellery-maker into being a bead seller. But because I offer a few pieces of jewellery made with the beads I sell, I am now building up a secondary clientele at this show for finished jewellery.

I also have the luxury of my friend Ruth helping me out with sales at this show so that I can spend longer chatting with people when it's required. My first time at the show last July, when I was by myself for the first two days, it was crazy busy for me. I felt like I was short-changing so many people by simply not having an extra minute to talk to them or answer their questions more fully. Ruth was a customer I'd given an impromptu wire-wrapping demo to during a lull on the Friday afternoon, ended up coming back on Sunday (with food, no less! in thanks for the demo), stayed to help me out, and in the interim has become a great friend. Ruth has been helping me at each Gem Expo since.

What works for you?

Thanks for looking!



Friday, 6 June 2014

Big Things Afoot at the AntMall... & A Pewter Skull & Seed Bead "Sketch"

At the AntMall, aka the One of a Kind Antique Mall, Nancy and Kate have joined me and started putting things into my small space (Booth 800/801 and... I forget the third number). Our big news is on July 2 we will be in a new 10x10 location just a few feet down from the cash desk. For now, we're in my original 5x10 booth, and we're loading it up with cool stuff. Oh -- and before anyone gets too excited, that crazy painting of the tower with the clock in the spectacular gold frame SOLD just minutes after we all left the AntMall Wednesday afternoon.





Yeah, this painting of a tower with a real clock set into the painting... buh-bye.



Tomorrow, Nancy and I will be adding items to the walls. We scored a pile of pegboard hooks and frame hangers on Thursday at Flim Flam in Brantford (my all-time favourite art and bead findings supply store that's sadly, heartbreakingly going out of business, and they're selling everything to the walls). Over the summer and fall, we'll be scouring estate sales and garage sales to find new goodies. 

Meanwhile, on other fronts, here's a little seed bead "sketch" of a pewter skull bracelet or choker design -- most likely both -- that I think is a keeper. It'd make a great anklet if anyone is interested.



Here are the finished the antique glass necklaces (I believe the beads are from Afghanistan) -- blue tube beads with coloured spots -- that I put together for Brenda, my fellow vendor, who has Showcase 861. She's got great sterling silver pendants and spectacular semi-precious silver rings all at incredible prices. You gotta check her out. 



 Thanks for looking!


Friday, 25 May 2012

Rainforest Gold necklace & some skull chokers for the kids...

...although I suspect some of those kids will be old enough to shave, if not semi-retired. Sigh......... I try.

On a more serious note, I remembered to buy some brass cones in Toronto on Tuesday and was able to finish this necklace. The seed bead mix is called Rainforest Crunch and I bought the beads from Spirt Bear Beads. I didn't get too creative with the beads themselves -- I wanted to see what they would look like as is. Pretty fine, I think.

The brass clasps I made three or so years ago when I first started hammering. I got sidetracked into using silver and copper -- kind of gave up on brass mainly because it's so frickin' hard to hammer! -- but I'm definitely going to be doing more with mixed metals. I still like these. The bought gold donut slides off easily. I like how it has an uneven surface -- it's quite heavy, not tinny -- and it also picks up whatever colours are around it, too.

The necklace is 24 inches long, with the donut, 25.5 inches. It could be temporarily extended very easily with two leather ties.








Howlite skull chokers (while they last), $5 each, plus $5 for shipping and handling.
Rainforest Gold necklace (OOAK), $55 plus $5 for shipping and handling.

Well, now to go make a ring and maybe get to bed before 9:00 p.m. Up at 3:45 a.m. and another market day will begin...

Thanks for looking!

PS: As of right now, 6:45 p.m. on 25 May 2012 I'm at 4,947 page views! Almost FIVE THOUSAND. Whoo hoo! Thanks, everyone!