Two Wheels

A few weeks ago, I finished a print I’ve been working on for several months now. Bike Race is a limited edition of 10 prints featuring my bike illustration in five cheery colors. I love this print and plan to frame one for my own home, the rest can make great gifts for your favorite cyclist or anyone who enjoys a leisurely ride.

I also printed up a new batch of one of my most popular cards. I switched the orientation this time around and I love the way the design fits on the horizontal layout. This card is available here, enjoy!

FeYerwerks

I first wrote about feYerwerks way back in 2008, and have been watching what Bob has come up with ever since. As I admitted way back then, I’m quite envious of how his brain works, so who better to give us a little insight into his creative process?

Tell us about your work—why do you create what you do?
I mostly create things because I love to. I actully love making the boxes more for the products but there is no money in that right now. I was trained as an Architect and I am in the process of becoming an architect. Most of what I make on Etsy I use in my daily life.

How did you learn your craft?
My dad was a home remodeler so I have been working with tools since I was a kid. I currently build architecture models for a living.

How has your work evolved?
My work is a constant struggle between doing what I want and trying to do what I think others want.

What is your greatest challenge?
My greatest challenge is marketing and sales. I have the ideas. I even have the patents. I would love to have someone else sell the things I make.

What inspires you?
I get inspired by architects and architecture and art.

 How did you discover etsy.com?
I was referred to etsy by a friend, I mostly use it as a portfolio site. Sales have been minimal. I have been on the site since 2008 and I am approching $1,000.00 in sales. My mini URBAN CALENDAR and URBAN CALENDAR have been published in 2 books as a result of being found on Etsy: Creative Calendar Collection, page 236 and Save 7he Date, Section #5, pages 35 and 36.

Where can readers find your work?
Currently my work is not in any other venus other venues but I would love to have some other venues sell my things!
You can check out urbancalendar.blogspot.com for other ides about on how to use the URBAN CALENDAR.

What advice do you have for new etsians?
Treat it as a hobby or partime deal until things pick up.

Ker-bloom!

What’s with the disappearing act?! Sorry readers, blogging fell by the wayside…again. Luckily, I’ve got a great post for you today that was totally worth the wait. Without further adieu, KER-BLOOM!

When I grow up, I either want to be a full time letterpress artist or produce a magazine… the next artist in the series is lucky enough to do both! For the last 15 years, Artnoose has written, designed and produced an issue of Ker-bloom letterpress zine every other month.

I’ll admit, this post is mostly self-indulgent, I just wanted a peek inside Artnoose’s world. But there’s a lot of great advice below, enjoy!

Tell us about your work—why do you create what you do?
My zine Ker-bloom! is a letterpress-printed personal zine. I started producing it in 1996 because I thought I had enough to say to fit into a zine. At the time I was already doing letterpress printing, and so I honestly figured it would be the most accessible means of production available to me. Over the years my reasons for making it have changed. It has often been my lifeline to the outside world when everything in my life was going to the dogs. It has also been my way of inspiring myself to keep going. After a while my personal identity became sort of wrapped up in it, and I have gone on tour several times because of my zine.

How do you define “zine”?
My shortest answer—the one I give at craft fairs—is that it’s a self-published publication. The defining factors are somewhat vague but often include: doesn’t have an ISBN, not for profit, made by a person/collective rather than a company, not large enough to be a newspaper, etc. There are a lot of publications that dwell within gray areas of the definition, like perfect-bound issues of Cometbus— are they books or zines? I’m okay with the fact that the demarcation lines are fuzzy.

How did you learn letterpress and book arts?
I went to the California College of Arts and Crafts and took the bookmaking class taught by Betsy Davids. I learned letterpress and bookbinding from her. For the next year I was both the teacher’s assistant for the bookmaking class as well as the shop tech for the printmaking department. After that it was just years and years of practice. I still know some basic bookbinding although I don’t use it terribly often.

Tell us about your process—producing a zine every other month for over 10 years seems like a ton of work!
This summer I will have been printing my zine every other month for 15 years, never skipping any or being late. It is a ridiculous amount of work, and it’s funny how over the years my life has evolved into two month cycles. The odd months of the year are my brewing months—when I mull over what I’m going to write about next and what the cover is going to look like. By the beginning of the even month I like to have the topic chosen and sometimes even a draft written up. The even months are production months. I once calculated that it take me 40 hours to physically produce an issue, although I haven’t recounted recently to see if that’s changed. Regardless, I always have to keep my zine schedule in mind when making travel plans or life plans in general. There were times that I was working two jobs, and during those years making my zine was really stressful.

How has your work evolved?
I’m not sure if it’s evolved that much, in that it’s the exact same size as it’s been for 15 years. I’m a little more experimental with my cover design, and sometimes I try to mix things up a little because I’ve been writing it for so many years. For example, I recently made a Mad Libs issue, which is something I’ve been wanting to do for a long time.

What is your greatest challenge?
My greatest challenge is still the self-doubt that comes with doing any ongoing project: is my writing any good, do people like my zine, does public opinion matter, should I be doing this at all, should I do something else? Stuff like that pretty much all the time.

What inspires you? How do you come up with content?
My brain is full of content. Sometimes it’s a matter of just choosing which idea to write about next. Occasionally I’m at a little bit of a loss for ideas, but this has only happened every few years or so. Other times I have my ideas planned out months in advance. Sometimes I have ideas for a zine for years before I actually write them.

Tell us about your etsy business.
I heard about Etsy in 2005 when it first started. Some zine folks told me about it. At the time it was free to list and there were no expiration dates on the listings. I figured it was worth a shot since it was free. At the time I also had an online store that didn’t get many sales. It wasn’t long before my Etsy store far outsold my other one. Listing subscriptions to my zine was also a great boon—I have a lot of new subscribers from people purchasing them on Etsy, which is really nice because they get to read multiple issues and it’s almost always a repeat purchase after a year. My main job is as a self-employed letterpress printer, doing mostly wedding invitations and business cards. Selling on Etsy definitely helps out though.

Where can readers find your work?
My zine is in the following bookstores: Bound Together Books (SF), Needles & Pens (SF), The Long Haul (Berkeley), Powell’s Books (Portland), Left Bank Books (Seattle), Quimby’s (Chicago), Firestorm (Asheville), Internationalist Books (Chapel Hill), Book Thug Nation (Brooklyn), Bluestockings (NYC), and The Big Idea (Pittsburgh). It is also available online in a couple of distros: parcellpress.com and littleblackcart.com. Both of these distros, by the way, have copies of popular issues I’m completely out of, so I recommend checking them out in addition to my Etsy shop.

What advice do you have for new etsians?
Photos are really important for the listing, especially that first photo. I used to have a wider shot for the first photo and then detail shots for the rest, but now I try to have a compelling first picture because not only is that the thumbnail that people see in searches but also because it’s more likely to make it into a treasury. And remember, making it into a treasury is the way to make it onto the front page. So now, I try to think, “Is this picture front page worthy?” when I put in that preliminary photo.

Porcelain lace

Are you all tired of hearing about me and my work? I do apologize, my blog has been a little 622-centric lately! In an effort to correct that, I present a new series of artisan interviews. I hope you’ll learn as much about their craft as you do about starting an etsy shop for yourself! I’ve gotten a lot of requests for advice for beginners lately, so I hope between my writing and recommendations from experienced etsians, you’ll learn everything you want to know!

First up, the lovely and talented Isabelle Abrahamson, a Boston ceramicist who somehow makes solid clay forms seem light as air.

Tell us about your work—why do you create what you do?
My current body of work focuses on incorporating patterns of negative space into functional works of art.

Tell us about the business end of things.
I discovered Etsy by reading an article about Etsy in the New York Times Magazine. I had just started making selleable things and it seemed like the perfect venue for me. I opened my shop that day.

I still sell all of my work myself. In addition to my Etsy shop I also have a website www.isabelleabramson.com , which usually has a little more of a selection of new work than my Etsy shop. My things are so time consuming to produce that it’s never worked to split the profit of a sale with a store. I’m working with Viridis 3D to produce limited edition reproductions of my pieces. These might be available at stores someday but for right now I will sell them on my website and probably on Supermarket HQ (I’m pretty sure Etsy is not down with 3D printed pottery).

How has your work evolved?
I think that my work has gotten more elaborate as I’ve gotten more comfortable working with clay. You can do anything with clay. It’s just like clay :)

What is your greatest challenge?
My greatest challenge has been to keep up stock. I don’t like making the same things over and over, and I tend to be sold out of popular items while I experiment in the studio with new things. I think it will be a huge creative relief to get over the hump of having to make any particular thing just to make money. When I’m focused on being creative my work is always better, though it may happen slower. This has been the draw of getting set up to do 3D printing. When I really nail a design I’ll be able to put in a couple thousand dollars to get it set up as a limited edition print, and it will stay available for a while without me having to try to recreate it over and over. I’ll be able to move on to the next thing and, overall, my collection of work will be much better.
What advice do you have for new etsians?
I would say to any new Etsy shop owner that having good pictures is incredibly important. Partly it draws customers to your item, but also it gives you the opportunity to sell the idea of your item to customers. I think a good picture can even make customers feel better about something after they bought it…. they get to remember falling in love with it. I try to take pictures that seem like they could be in your home. If you look at the earliest pieces that I sold they’re all taken in a photo tent and came out weird shades of pink. At some point I found a place in my house (my bureau in my bedroom) that has the perfect light in the afternoon and a couple spots near windows in the studio and the pictures became so much more inviting (in my humble opinion).

Limited Edition Prints

Lately I’ve been thinking about changing out some of the art I have framed in my house—quite the project…I have a lot. The husband’s only requirement? “Don’t put so many holes in the wall that it compromises the structural integrity of our house, ok?” I’ve been feeling sorry for my poor neglected wood type, so the first order of business was the beautiful numeral print above. I also recently rekindled my love with intricate, over-the-top swashy scripts, so I designed a new plate from my queue of quotes for this “Life” print. I love the contrast of the sleek silver script on fibrous brown paper.