On the Road, Again

Creative types have a reputation—deserved or not—of being flighty. I’d like to introduce you to a couple artists who have spent the past year on the road… but have learned more about the commitment of seeing a project through than anything else.

Madison-based photography studio Paper Antler is about halfway through Fifty Nifty, their effort to shoot a wedding in every state to raise money for She Dances, a non-profit organization that provides holistic restoration for young girls who have been trafficked and sexually exploited. The Fifty Nifty donation will support a safe home in Honduras for one year. They still have dates available… book your wedding, let them stay at your place or donate directly today!

Power and Light Press, a letterpress studio based in Portland, has spent over 10 months cruising through 47 U.S. states and a few Canadian provinces in The Type Truck—a 1982 Chevy step van equipped with built-in type cabinets and workspace, a mid 20th century sign press and an 1873 Golding Official No. 3 tabletop platen press. The goal was to spread awareness of letterpress, renew interest in the artform and have a great time doing it! Mission accomplished.

Gift Guide: It’s Wedding Season!

Despite the snow on the ground, wedding season must be nearly upon us—I just received my first pearlized envelope in the mail. So what’s a gracious guest to do? Start planning the gift now instead of grabbing whatever’s left on the registry on the way to the reception.

Let’s just get this out of the way right now: Many modern couple just want cash. It’s easy for you, it leaves them free to spend it on whatever they need. Rare is the bride and groom who don’t already live together and really need to stock a new home. I’m not saying don’t go out and get something to wrap up, but if you don’t? Hey, that’s ok. Get a nice card (ahem, we have a few suggestions), throw in some cash and call it a day.

Now on to the more three-dimensional presents! (This is a gift guide after all.) First up: Registries are there for a reason! Believe it or not, nobody wants the $5 set of fish-shaped serving bowls you found at TJ Maxx (true story). Choose something from the couple’s registry, then find a way to make it more fun. Do they want a wok? Fill it with hoisin, soy sauce, rice noodles and a cookbook. Did they register for always-exciting new flatware? Package them up with a napkin and funky napkin ring for each place setting. A box of plates can come wrapped in a tablecloth. You get the idea.

If—and this is a big if—you know the couple really, really well, you may [pause for dramatic effect]… go off registry.

Make sure you’re gift is something they couldn’t register for—maybe something completely custom like the “Story of Us” wall hanging above, or a product handmade by a local artisan, like any of the cast iron pans shaped like Midwestern states below.

Another great option? Find something the couple can do together. Fund a date night (a gift card to their favorite restaurant or wine bar and concert tickets ought to do the trick), give vouchers for a cooking class or start a new hobby (beer or wine-making kit anyone?).

Best friends with the bride?  Give her something truly special: a custom fashion illustration of her dress. Local artist Jen Thompson of Illustrate the Dress created this beauty below (modeled by Miss Mollie Busby on her wedding day).

Whatever you give, do so with love and know that your presence on the dance floor well past 11pm means just as much—if not more—than whatever you set on the gift table 5 hours prior. Happy wedding season!

Andie’s Specialty Sweets

Lately I’ve become more and more intrigued by etsians producing and selling their culinary creations. Are they all professional chefs? Are there any special restrictions for selling food online? Are they making each piece to order? How does it feel to entrust something so vulnerable to the Postal Service?

I thought I’d start with an interview with a master of the most captivating of all foodie goodness: sugar! I’ve had the confection version of the Scrabble tiles below on my favorites list for a while now, and while I haven’t yet found the perfect occasion to order them for, I did get us all a sneak peak into the company that creates them: Andie’s Specialty Sweets. Andie herself took a little time out of her sweet life to give us one of the most informative interviews to date! And it sounds like Andie’s has some exciting things happening in the near future, so stay tuned!

Tell us about your work—why do you create what you do?
There is something inherently delightful about creating anything with a bit of sugary shock value. Besides the sheer enjoyment of the work itself, we like the flexibility our mail order sugar creations give our wide range of customers. For those planning any special event, we know it is not always easy to piece together the confectionery contents, overall structure, finished design, and final price and find all those components that one likes under one roof, or one’s personal kitchen. Throw in a busy schedule …and who couldn’t use a break? We hope to offer one piece of the puzzle, that might eliminate a bit of the challenge associated with confectionery design.

How did you learn your craft?
I am self taught. My background does have a culinary setting with a dad who was a trained chef, and who taught me the thrill of what a dash here and a splash there can do. Making pancakes and pastry dough from scratch was ordinary growing up, and from a young age I was encouraged to read a recipe and get messy. Straight out of high school exciting jobs, with more learning and hands-on instruction than I could get in school, rolled out before me. Each one was a hard decision, knowing I was prolonging a potential degree of some sort, but the outcome served as invaluable to a great extent. By the time I was 21, being in business for myself was natural and wonderful! Before Jason and I began starting our family (which kept coming until we stopped at 4) I was running a productive interior mural and decorative painting operation. I didn’t want to miss a moment with our first baby so choosing a stay at home role let the creativity pour out and into caring for my family. It was here, at the center of making life delightful for those I loved that confectionery bliss spun it’s magic.

Are there any particular challenges to selling perishable goods online?
This is a challenge we’ve endeavored to avoid from the beginning. Thankfully, the majority of our items are non-perishable. We’ve worked really hard from a list of principles and goals to develop recipes that are amazing (taste wise), do not spoil, are as wholesome as possible (without dismissing the sugar), and will stand up against the heat (for travel and outdoor events).

One of the great advantages of chocolate is that it keeps very well. Our chocolate filled items have the shortest shelf life out of all our treats, but still maintain an amazing 8 months of optimal palatability. The biggest problem that can arise dealing with chocolate is if the chocolate is exposed to heat, melts a little, and separates from the cocoa butter which can cause discoloration or ‘bloom’ on the surface. This is due to the fat melting and re-crystalizing. It is not dangerous for eating, but it looks bad and it can effect the taste. We’ve spent allot of time developing our candy shell which insulates and seals our chocolate from any premature unfavorable results, such as these.

What should buyers look for in a confectioner?
What one looks for in a confectioner is an individual prerogative. This is why the confectionery world has such variety – there is a market for it all. Everyone has their unique selling point. Our business has developed from our own personal preferences. As far as preparation goes, there are many things I cannot tolerate. I have one of those overactive minds when it comes to hygiene. One of our many rules is, “No talking over the sweets.” There is not an open mouth when sugar creating is commenced. Another selling point for us is quality – it is everything, and we’d rather savor a special, occasional, exceptional sweet than many ordinary ones.

The irony to this sweet side of our lives, is we may be the most unlikely ones to be the minds behind such sugary delights. Besides subsiding off mostly a raw diet, we fit the mold for the typical alternative medicine, non-fluoride toothpaste, and anti-junk food (minus the looking down on others who don’t do the same) family. The raw diet was a horrible thought when Jason first presented the idea. I could not imagine the simmer of stews, soups, and sauces being replaced with a cold salad and a glass of milk…every night. But now that we are so busy…it is the most convenient way to eat, and has given us astounding energy for our busy schedule. We do, however, believe there is a time and place for everything. And for us, since a treat is a real treat in our household, we wanted to create something worthwhile – not too sweet, full of flavor, the best ingredients, and surprising to the eye.

How has your work evolved? How do you learn new techniques?
Our work has evolved simply from doing it. The more we work with our recipes and ideas, it becomes second nature. Similarly, the more familiar we become with how things work, the more techniques we are able to develop. At this stage, we are most successful in developing techniques from trial and error—we think something might work, so we try it. We’ve encountered some real disasters, inside the privacy of our own studio, but there is so much to learn from failures – inevitably, they make you strong.

What is your favorite thing to make?
Let’s put it this way…there is nothing I don’t like to make, nothing has become tedious or mundane—it is the most fun job we could ever ask for.

What is your greatest challenge?
Our greatest challenge, at the moment, is a need for a systems/business manager….and I already know who it is – we’re just waiting for her to leave her job and all that is secure in her life, and come work for us…heehee. Having someone to take care of all the details of scheduling, customer interaction, budgeting, inventory (and the list goes on) would be like giving us one more Andie. Our production would double and you’d see even more creative works brought to conception.

What inspires you?
A combination of beautiful things and people inspire me. Beautiful aspects of creation, whether intrinsic to our surround or from the hands of collective minds…float through my sphere of enchantment, and I often see them, quite literally…as candy. Equally, I consider people and what might allure and delight them.

Tell us about your etsy business.
Andie’s Specialty Sweets is our full time job. Here’s our walk down memory lane. I discovered Etsy for the first time, after punching in a search for “hand crocheted baby blanket”. It was after several purchases that I thought to myself, “I guess I could list a couple sugar flowers in here and see if I get a job here and there – that might be fun.” Six months went by and no customers. Finally a kind soul noticed I had not refreshed one listing since I opened my shop, nor did I have a shop banner. She generously gave her time to teach me the ropes. It took one year to reach our 100th sale. After that we began experiencing a strange phenomena of sales doubling every month. It was then that we began seeing the potential and decided to go for it, and made strategies for raising 4 young kids while we balanced two full time jobs. We have sense narrowed down our focus and reliance on the sole work and income from Andie’s Specialty Sweets, and it’s rewards keep on coming.

Where can readers find your work?
We’ve decided to wait on retail opportunities, have been very selective and thoughtful of where we would sell our items, and have focused our energies into the quality and integrity of our edibles. And I’m really glad we have. Quality control and maintaining our brand has been important to us. But good things come to those who wait – so keep your eyes peeled. We think we’ve found our perfect resale match, we just can’t tell you yet…shhhhh.

What advice do you have for new etsians?
Everyone should protect their business. Besides being a hubbub for the media spotlight, Etsy is teaming with designers and developers looking for the next best thing. The exposure at Etsy is phenomenal. Everyone should eventually, at some point, trade mark their name and copyright their images. Even if one’s creations are not particularly unique, the photographs that depict their work and name is. This important step will make all your endeavors valuable, to a potential buyer or for personal long term sustainability. It’s a minimal investment, and worth it in the long run.

[Editor’s Note: I can’t help but second this piece of advice with a resounding YES! And supplement it with the fact that the trademark process will be much easier if you choose a unique name. I had a run-in when I first began my letterpress business under a different moniker: Despite googling, searching on etsy and checking with briar press, a few weeks after I started my shop, a woman emailed to say she would be taking legal action if I didn’t change my name immediately. Did my due diligence and the fact that I couldn’t find her three weeks before matter? No, what mattered was that she had been granted the trademark for the name a week prior. Luckily, I hadn’t done much in the way of brand development yet and was only out a couple dozen cards and the cost of a few printing plates—plus I’d gained a little wisdom and began the process to trademark 622press immediately. I hope all small business owners out there can learn from my mistake!]

Jewelry by Johan

Johan’s wood-inlay rings first caught my eye on the etsy frontpage months ago, and every couple of weeks one of his new pieces pops up on my news feed. I’m eternally impressed with the beautiful consistency and high quality of his pieces. Enjoy as he answers a few questions about his art and his business.


Tell us about your work—why do you create what you do?
I love to create things others admire, it is a wonderful feeling, a high.

It helps that I have an inquisitive mind and I am never afraid of starting/making something that others are not willing to try.

I made my 1st ever ring when I was about 12 years old. I took a nut (as in the counterpart to a bolt) that was big enough for my finger to fit through, shaped it with a metal file into a signet ring. I never did wear it. I just had the inquisitive mind to do it.

How did you learn your craft?
I have a “can do” attitude. I believe those that talk about it never succeed, only those that actually do it will succeed.

I did a lot of reading and watching videos on the Internet. I made some rings and found it was easy enough if you know the material you are working with and how it will react when you work it.I have also received some formal jewelry manufacturing training, stone setting and casting rings, mainly for engagement rings with intricate settings.

How has your work evolved?
When I started selling on Etsy I started with a natural wood ring as no one else was doing it at the time. I made the hole with a little hand drill, filed the rest with a hand file, sanded and waxed it. I was pleasantly surprised that it sold in about 3 days. I thought that this was too easy to make money with so I made a lot of wood rings. A few months later I purchased a wood lathe to make the rings faster. A few months later I bought a very small bench metal lathe to make Titanium inlayed with Wood rings. This helped make the rings stronger as wood rings do break easily.
Things happened fairly quickly from there. To date I have purchased 3 big metal lathes and a big metal milling machine, not to mention all the Jewelry tools and equipment.

Now I can custom make any ring the client requests: Platinum, Gold, Palladium, Silver, Titanium, Meteorite, Damascus, Mokume Gane, setting of Diamonds and Gemstones.

What is your greatest challenge?
I have a Patent Pending ring I designed and manufacture out of Titanium. It is called the “Interchangeable Inlay Ring System”, some call it a “Hybrid Ring” [above].

You buy one ring and many inlays. You open up the ring and replace the inlay with another inlay. With this system you will have a new ring every time you exchange/replace the inlay. Some buy up to 10 different inlays, that is 10 new rings.

With a normal inlay ring you are stuck with what you have and it usually costs hundreds of dollars. If something would break with a normal ring you have to throw it away, if it is a wood inlay, the wood inlay can break or if it gets wet it will eventually break as well.

With my system you need only make a new inlay, replace the old inlay with the new inlay. Your ring is back to normal within days, at a fraction of the cost of a totally new inlay ring.

My new patented inlay system solves many problems. I have many clients return and order new inlays from me.

My current challenge is doing the same with Platinum, Gold, Palladium and Silver rings. It is very difficult but I will get it to work.

What inspires you?
A great challenge. If I cannot do it at first I will try and try again until solved. I love to design and develop new rings. To date I have designed 3 rings, 1 of them is Patent Pending. It is a great feeling to know that a ring exists because of you.

It is such a great feeling when people congratulate you on your new ring design.

What advice do you have for people looking to take up a new art form?
Read up about it. If it interests you and you want to give it a try, DO IT. Don’t keep on thinking about it. Get some training if it is affordable and you have the time.

With practice you will get better and conquer it. Everyone starts as a novice!

How does one care for a wood and metal jewelry piece?
Because it is updated with new info I suggest read the FAQ on my website www.jewelrybyjohan.com

Tell us about your etsy business.
I started making and selling rings on Etsy in June 2008. My beginner mistakes include not taking good photos. When I started taking good photos my sales picked up drastically.

Etsy is my full time job. The amount of orders forced me to make it my full time job. My turnaround time has been between 4 and 6 weeks the last 2 years. It is currently 6 weeks because of the wedding season.

Where can readers find your work?
My rings can be found on my website www.jewelrybyjohan.com. I wish I have the time to show my rings in galleries, I have been asked many times. If I get my backlog worked down to 3 days—it is currently 6 weeks because of the wedding season—I will consider sending my rings to galleries.

What advice do you have for new etsians?
My clients are King. I only provide the best service to my clients. Help them whenever you can, even if they are wrong. A disgruntled client has a negative impact on your business. Returning clients and word of mouth advertising are about 30% of all my sales.

Invest in a good camera and only use good photos in your listings. My sales picked up a lot when I started listing with good photos. At first I used a camera with bad close-up, it made the items look small and distant. My new camera shows good close-ups and you can see all the detail.
Make use of all the tags/keys available to you when you list a new item. Think like a client and enter tags that will get your items listed on the first page of search results. Search Etsy forums, they share lots of info on tags and search results.

Search for listings similar to yours, how does yours compare to theirs, look at the keywords, price, tags, description, how far up on the search did they appear, etc. Later on you will be the person others search for and want to copy. You have to keep one step ahead of your competitors, be a leader not a follower.

Don’t Worry, Bee Happy

Oh yeah, that just happened. Well kids, once again life has gotten in the way of ye olde blog, so instead of coming up with new, original content for you, I bring you the words of one of my favorite bloggers (and full disclosure: very good friend), Mollie Shambeau.

Miss Mollie is getting married in just over a month and I helped design her wedding stationery. She was kind enough to feature our work on her blog here.

Her invitations were a fun project, both because she has an impeccable sense of style and wanted to add a little whimsy with a play on her soon-to-be last name: Busby (Bus-bee, get it!?!).

Whenever I have a little down time , I try to pop over to The Mollie Shambeau Show to see what that girl is up to. One day she’s in Wisconsin, the next Australia, then Utah, then who knows! Just over a month ago now (jeez, has it been that long?!), she wrote the loveliest post that expresses exactly why I chose to create greeting cards with my letterpress.

On a day when life was handing me too much, I had dinner with a dear friend who brought such positivity to everything I blabbered on about, I really did intend to send her a thank you card just for being herself. And of course even I—with boxes and boxes full of beautiful ephemera—didn’t follow through on my intentions.

A week or two later, I came across Mollie’s words and after kicking myself for my lack of follow-through, took the same vow:

I vow to try my best to not take anyone in my life for granted

2011 July 6
by Mollie

The last few weeks have been a learning experience for me. Not only because I’ve been living in my parents’ basement (oh yeah) and planning a wedding that’s happening in LESS THAN THREE MONTHS (mini heart-attack) but because I’ve learned a lot about myself and my relationships with others.

And though I should be feverishly working on another set of important vows in my life, I have one I’ve been wanting to disclose here:

I vow to try my best to not take anyone in my life for granted.

It began with a stack of cards. There are people out there (some of whom are probably reading this) that actually thought to send me a congratulations card after Sean and I got engaged. HOW THOUGHTFUL IS THAT? Seriously, it was so thoughtful that I started to question my own track record with cards. Lets just say I came up a little short.

There is something to be said for “card people,” right? Are you a card person? Prior to recently, I was not. Thank you notes? Of course. Birthday cards? Maybe, if I was seeing the friend in person. Cards for lesser occasions (arguably the cards that really matter) like Get Well Soon, Thinking of You, Congrats, etc.? Er, no.

Card people… how admirable are they? You know, that one person in your life who NEVER forgets your birthday, always calls, and makes sure you get at least one card (and $5 to spend on chocolate) on Valentine’s Day. I always thought to myself, “Maybe someday I’ll have time to be so thoughtful.” I resolved I was simply too cheap and too busy to embody the “T” word—two excuses that make me cringe as I write this. Plus, living in Utah a world away from many of my college and high school friends and family  didn’t help to engage my sense of connection.

Well “someday” happened, baby. It’s time I climb aboard the Thoughtful Train… and I would like to extend an invitation to you.

I’d like to hope every woman reaches this point in her life. The point when she realizes that making that extra effort is important. Sure it may not be convenient to respond to an email or send a congratulatory card to a recently engaged pal, but you know what? Life isn’t convenient. I’ve got one hand on the computer keyboard and a sandwich in my other hand while I add, “Pick up dog poops in the yard” and “Write 1200-word story for the paper” to my To-do list and catch snippets on my iPhone from the Casey Anthony trial, all the while cursing my well-intentioned suggestion to watch “Father of the Bride” as tears of nostalgia run down my face (true story).

Life isn’t convenient and it never will be.

Going the extra mile for the important people in your life is—I believe—one of the most imperative and rewarding actions a human can take. Without friends and family in your life, would it be worth it?

Think about it. Hop on the train. Send a freaking card ☺ And have a wonderful day!