Saturday, October 22, 2011
New Website!
I have always made my own websites for years, and they aren't so spectacular. But I am a DIY kinda girl and lacking a budget to pay a website designer to do it right. I just let it slide for way too long.
One day while looking at some statistics for my Etsy, an advertisement caught my eye. I clicked on it, basically it was a listing on Etsy for 1 page of website design. This got me thinking... I started a bit of an Etsy search and found a local Portland woman and contacted her, asked her for a quote on making me a new site.
I like the idea of working with another creative entrepreneur, not necessarily an established website design business, but another person like myself that lives in Portland and is following her passion. The concept is so much more about mutually beneficial business than just services rendered.
And wow - it worked! I have a site that I love and it promotes my work in focus.
Martha J Baker is the name of the woman, and she is a great website architect. Thank you Martha!
Sunday, September 18, 2011
My Experience at the HelloEtsy Conference

Human scale Economies:a place where prosperity is measured not in dollars but in happiness and durability.
Want to hear about my experience? Here we go.
I am not selling a product. I am selling a part of a journey, a ticket to the game.
Rogue Ales has never made any attempt to grow bigger, they have just worked to get better.

A client of hers, Amy McAuley of Occulus Fine Carpentry, came to Jackie one day for a meeting and told her she had decided to get rid of all her power tools. This seemed shocking, for a struggling professional woodworker to ditch all of her power tools, but she explained to Jackie that she had decided to focus her business on historic window restoration and learning the traditional techniques to do so. In focusing her work on windows created before the introduction of power tools, Amy McAuley had found a incredibly deep and specific niche for her business. This niche was so deep and specific, that within the next few years she became a renowned and sought after historic preservationist and now her business is thriving.
"Community is the key to physical survival in our environmental predicament, and also to human satisfaction."
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Inspiration: Plant Starts
Monday, June 6, 2011
This Friday is THE Craft Party!
Friday, June 10
Open Craft Activities: 11 am–6 pm
Regular Museum admission ($3 adults)Craft Party at the Pendleton Woolen Mill: 2 pm–5:30 pm
Etsy sellers bring your business cards!Craft Party: 7 pm–10 pm
Sliding Scale Donation ($5–$25; Age 21+ only)Museum of Contemporary Craft
724 NW Davis Street
Portland, OR 97209Benefitting Quilts for Quake Survivors and Mercy Corps' Japan Relief Fund
Etsy's at it again! I Heart Art: Portland and Museum of Contemporary Craft host an all-day celebration and an evening party in Portland as part of Etsy's Worldwide Craft Party. We've teamed up with the Quilts for Quake Survivors project and Mercy Corps' Japan Relief Fund to reach out beyond our community and raise money to help those in dire need through our own crafty ways.
Daytime
Drop by the Museum during regular hours, 11 am to 6 pm, and craft in the Lab all day long (regular admission applies). Help sew quilts for the Quilts for Quake Survivors project or choose from three different crafting stations: embroidery, Japanese-style papercutting or a Mighty Ugly project.
See the I Heart Art: Portland blog post for details on the daytime schedule.
If you'd like to participate during the day, please RSVP on the Meetup.com page. The tickets available for purchase through this page are for the evening party only.
Visit the Pendleton Woolen Mill from 2-5:30pm and get a tour, play with the woolen craft products, view some pieces from the archives and network with other craft artists.
Evening
At 7:00 pm, the doors will open back up to the Museum and the real party will start! We're taking over the entire space with complete with food, beer and wine, a DJ, and even more crafting stations. Your door donation will get you an entry into the drawing for a whole slew of crafty prizes (books, gift certificates, handmade goods and more!), some food and beverage tickets, and a lot of crafty fun!
Throughout the evening you can rotate through hand-felting, origami, hand-weaving, and make your own crafty artist trading cards. The quilts made for the project will be on display, and Modern Domestic will have them available for sale and sell raffle tickets.
Is your head spinning yet?! This is going to be the biggest, craftiest and most awesome craft party Etsy has ever seen! Plus all proceeds will go to Mercy Corps' Japan Relief Fund, so you can get your craft on and feel good about giving back to those in dire need of help.
Learn more about the QfQ Project and Mercy Corps' Japan Relief Fund.
Friday, May 13, 2011
Sheer Potential



New: Hanging Lolipop Vase
Monday, March 28, 2011
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
come and get it

this made my day...

Sunday, February 27, 2011
Craftopolis

Okay Etsy sellers - do you know about Craftopolis?! I did not. Now I do. Now you do to.
Friday, February 25, 2011
I Heart Art:Portland Party Friday Night

Free and open to the public.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
I like this green mobile...
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Researching Etsy Traffic Sources

I knew something had caused a wave of traffic to my Etsy shop... its never easy to know why. But its possible to find out!
Dot Mobile
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Glass Eyes
The Glass Eye Maker from Tomas Leach on Vimeo.
Glass eyes... I have always been intrigued. They are amazing, hard to recognize and rarely talked about. A friend in grade school had a little brother with a glass eye (he was born with a birth defect)... my mother had a friend as a child that had a glass eye (he had punctured his eye with a stick)... Did you know Sammy Davis Jr. had a glass eye (he lost his left eye in a car accident). There is always a story behind the loss of an eye, perhaps its the legend that comes with the prosthetic that intrigues me, perhaps its sheer curiosity. Honestly though, I am a glass artist and particularly obsessed with the process of crafting glass, so its the object itself that really catches my attention. Handmade glass eyes - Ocular prosthesis - Venetians began making them in the 16th century but they were fragile and uncomfortable. Later Germany became the source of higher quality glass eyes and the US stopped importing them during WWII. The glass materials were also made in Germany so American makers of prosthetic eyes started using acrylics. Now they are made out of all sorts of materials, I guess we just call them "Glass Eyes", sounds better than "artificial eye". I found this video on Etsy about a London based glass eye maker.
Monday, February 7, 2011
Airplants in Globes

Friday, December 17, 2010
For Sale on Etsy
Monday, December 13, 2010
Awesome Find at Crafty Wonderland 2010


Saturday, November 27, 2010
4 Years on Etsy

Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Etsy Shop Maintenance
