My girls made Christmas gifts for me this past year as well. An adorable little wooden TARDIS – the door really open and everything. I’m trying to decide what to keep in there. And the cute black cat keychain. The cat has green eyes just like our Meeko kitty. I’m undecided where to keep that one too. The bag I use the most is also black and I’m afraid it won’t show up well. So I suppose it would be best on my small purple purse. The downside is that I don’t use it as much, but maybe that would make me worry less, because if I break it I would be super sad.
These kids have leveled up in a major way this year in their crafting skills. I’m just so – Wow! about these.
Tag: handmade
Possibly Closing Karabu’s Etsy Shop in the New Year
Due to the new regulations in the Consumer Protection Safety Improvement Act, there is the very high likelihood that I will be closing down my Etsy shop early next year.
I have two small children of my own, and was just as outraged as the rest of the country at the ridiculous number of toy recalls we’ve seen over the past year. I’ve had to throw away recalled Diego toys in the night to avoid tears. I’m very pro-safe toys.
The problem is that in terms of this new law, it seems that using lead free supplies isn’t good enough. All toys must be tested after they are made. Testing costs $75 per component (I wrote to a certified lab to ask). One of my I-spy security blankets has 27 components (26 different fabrics plus thread). Total = $2,025.00 for testing. Plus the tested item is destroyed. That’s fine when you have a run of thousands. I make runs of one.
Many small, and ever mid-sized children’s product companies are going to be in trouble early next year. There are a lot of folks trying to get the details changed so that smaller manufactures have a hope of being able to comply, but the law is already passes, and this process is slow. I saw one person comment that maybe the handcrafters of the country should ask for a bailout to afford testing costs. I got the giggles from that.
I’ve read the 63 page law and it is very difficult to understand. My local Small Business Development Center couldn’t answer my questions via e-mail but recommended my coming in for individual counseling with their fabric product specialist. I’m going to try to work that meeting into my schedule somehow just so I can at least fee more informed.
There is a lot of folks trying to get the word out and get people to write to their representatives about altering this law. If you want more information see this article on Etsy:
http://www.etsy.com/storque/craftivism/handmade-childrens-items-unintended-consequences-consumer-pr-3056/
Thanks all.
Easy to Make Baby Shoes that are Cute too!
I wanted to write this blog a long time ago, but I never got around to taking pictures of the shoes I made. Now that my daughter has outgrown them, I can’t find what I did with them. So still no pictures to share.
Ah well. I loved making them so much, and they were so nice to have, I’m going to blog about this free soft baby shoe pattern anyway.
The baby shoe pattern was created by Stardust Shoes, and they are both darling, and simple to sew. Even if you’re a beginning sewer, you can make these shoes.
Now I didn’t exactly follow the directions (I’m not normally a troublemaker, but I am lazy, and I don’t do things that I can get away with not doing). Also, I was not trying to make shoes that would last. I knew my daughter wouldn’t be wearing the shoes I made for very long, so I didn’t worry about cutting corners a little. While the shoes I made turned out very nice, and actually held up very well, if you plan to put them to serious use, or want them to last awhile, I recommend following the pattern’s directions more closely.
I didn’t use the bonded fleece for the sole; I just used canvas for the whole outside of one pair, and vinyl for another pair. I lined both pairs of baby shoes with flannel, and didn’t bother with any interfacing since both the fabrics I was using were fairly thick. I liked how the fleece made the insides soft and cozy. The vinyl pair of baby shoes was cute, but probably wouldn’t have been a good choice for a baby that was beginning to walk, as I think they may have been a little slick on the bottoms.
Soft baby shoes were much easier to make than I thought they would be. If you’ve ever been tempted to try it, download the free baby shoe pattern and give it a try. If you like the look of these dhows, but don’t want to make your own, I know several great EtsyKids sellers have some really adorable baby shoes in their Etsy Shops.
The Quilted I-Spy Sceurity Blanket
When I was little, I remember laying in bed and studying all the different pictures, prints, and fabrics on my bed quilt. Some zigzag lines in orange and blue. Little girls in hats – there were several different versions of this same print, each with a different accent color. Then there were some solid colored squares. Even though there weren’t that many different patterns, I loved to look at them over and over again.
So I blame my grandmother, who made that quilt, for instilling the love of patchwork in me. The only thing that could have made me love that quilt more would have been even more neat fabrics to look at.
When I had my own baby, I was a fairly new quilter myself. I started collecting neat prints so that I could make her a bed quilt with as many different fabrics as possible. The one I made her has literally hundreds of pictures. And she loves it.
But, I also wanted something simple we could play baby games with. Learn colors. Make animal sounds, and learn animal names. Play peekaboo. The idea for the I spy security blanket was born.
I always include one square each of the basic colors. Colors are easy to learn, and babies love to show off when they know where the red square is. I think it breaks up all the prints to throw in some solid spaces too. The other squares are full of as many different, bright, fun prints as I can find. The easiest way to cut squares is with a rotary cutter, but I just can’t settle for that all the time. With larger prints, it’s too easy to get only the bottom half of an animal – or just an ear. What fun is that? The extra time and effort it takes to carefully cut out specific images from fabric, so that I get a perfectly centered animal, or truck, or whatever, is what makes these so special. I really love the way they look in the end.
Because they are so small, only twenty inches square, they would be to bulky with batting in them, so they aren’t true quilts. Yet two layers of thin cotton would be flimsy, so I use flannel for the backing. It’s soft, and provides just the perfect weight. Then I go ahead and stitch around each block, just like it really is a quilt. Those extra stitches let my blankets stand up to all kinds of rough treatment, and wash after wash after wash.
I keep thinking I should make new blankets for my new baby, but the ones I made four years ago are still in great shape. They aren’t just used for peekaboo anymore though. They’re superhero capes, and baby doll blankets. Something new everyday it seems at times.
And that’s why I love to make them.
Pricing
This is a topic that comes up whenever two or more professional artists/crafters get together. What’s a good pricing formula?
I’ll admit upfront that I don’t have all (or maybe any) of the answers to the pricing dilemmas, but thought I’d point you toward some resources that I’ve found useful.
In the Etsy Storque, there are many pricing related articles, I think the older ones are the most helpful:
Etsy Storque Pricing Articles
Also, an Etsy seller, chrisparry, developed a very detailed spreadsheet that they are offering for free that helps calculate selling price:
chrisparry blog
I have a few issues with this formula, at least for my personal situation. I’m sure it works great for some types of items. I think the spreadsheet recommends taking equipment into consideration. That part is good advice, but it says, for example, that I’d need a new sewing machine every 5 years. Don’t think so. The machine I have now was my mom’s, and I believe she had it since before I was born, so it’s well over 30 years old, and works just dandy (thank you very much). I understand that someday it’s inevitable that I’ll need new equipment, and I need rotary blade, etc. rather more frequently, and all that needs to be accounted for.
I also have a bit of a philosophical problem with the “decide how much money you want to make then divide that buy how much stuff you make” philosophy. I’ve seen this advice in many places, and it never sits well with me. Just because I’d need to sell my I-spy blankets for $80.00 each to replace my job and live my dream of working at home does not make them ‘worth’ $80.00, no matter how much love I pour into them. Don’t get me wrong, I love my blankets. If I could make only one thing, that’s what I’d pick. My daughter still plays with hers all the time after 4 years. But, come on.
Sure, maybe someplace there is some celebrity super-high-end market for an $80.00 I spy blanket, but I have zero interest in finding, developing, or catering to such a market if one exists. It isn’t me. And I don’t want to change who I am for this.
Now these types of decisions are very personal. I don’t presume to tell anyone how they should run their business. Pricing is complicated, and I don’t believe in a one-size-fits-all formula, even for businesses that sell similar items or services.
What I’ve learned, for my own business, from my pricing research is that, no matter what formula I use, I will NEVER be able to give up my job to come home and sew.
I wanted to be a professional, but I’m a hobbyist. I was upset at this realization for about 30 min. Now I’m okay with it. The upside of these epiphanies is that now that I know that sewing isn’t the most efficient use of my time in my quest to work from home, I’m free to move on to other endeavors. Now I can sew for fun, for family, and to sell with out all the pressure. I can make things when I want, for whom I want, and if they sell – wonderful! If not, it’ll make a nice gift at the next baby shower I’m invited to. But my garbage bill won’t depend on it.
My 15 Minutes
Parents Magazine (yes THE Parents magazine) did a little blurb on Etsy, and included my Soft Fabric Animal book.
Excuse me for a moment while I do a happy dance.
*dances*
Yep – I’m kinda excited.
The other items are cool too. I actually just bought some toys from Stumppondtoy for my kids. His shop has been on my favorite list for awhile now.
Greeting Cards
I’ve wanted to make greeting cards ever since I had the idea to start a second shop for my writing. Not the typical cards that you learn how to make in scrapbook stores and such. Although I like those cards, I’ve bought them on Etsy before, that isn’t what I wanted to do with my own shop. My shop was for my writing. I want my cards to say something; I want to write them myself.
I’m planning a line with some humor (those are my favorite kinds of cards), silly rhyming poetry (that’s the only poetry I write), and inspiring famous quotations. I made my first two cards (actually I made three because the first one sold already – Whoo Hoo!) today and posted them in my shop.
A new line
You know I love good quotes. Well, I made some quotation bookmarks for my paperandwords shop, but they were so simple, they look, well, just . . . bla. No fun. Then I got the idea to make them out of fabric. They are still simple (I’m a simple gal, what can I say) but I think the turned out really cool. I’m keeping one for myself.
They are cotton fabric (my favorite) with a stiff interfacing in them so they aren’t floppy.
The quotes I started with –
“I cannot live without books.” – Thomas Jefferson
“Outside of a dog, a book is man’s best friend. Inside of a dog it’s too dark to read.” – Groucho Marx
“Imagination is more important than knowledge. . .” – Albert Einstein
I have a few more in mind, but have to pick out neat fabric that goes well with the quotes.
I love it when I find ways to combine things that I love. In this case: books, and sewing.
Thank You (part one)
First, from Keiki Boutique – http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=62359ser_id=62359, I got this really nice, and incredibly handy diaper and wipes pouch:
It’s one of those things that once you use it for awhile, you wonder how you ever got along without it!
She told me that the shawl can also be use around her waist as a cover-up. I hadn’t thought of that – but it would be perfect! I also got a yellow headband with a flower, but I left it at Grandma’s house when we last visited there. Gotta get that back! Isn’t this too cute?
And from ficklefaerie, http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=108801, and made by mamaziel, http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=5089760, I got these great burp cloths –
These have been used non-stop since I opened the package. So great!
I can’t thank these great sellers enough. Thank you thank you thank you!!
One more thing to juggle
Well, now that we’re finally getting into a nice routine for sleeping, and my cold is starting to fade, I feel ready to start trying to get some work done again. I have a half dozen projects near completion that I haven’t been able to get to in weeks. Thanks to grandmas – the house isn’t a total disaster, but it could definitely use some work.
So I’m looking forward to getting my new listings up on Etsy – my mom gave me a new castle to list, I have a doll quilt almost done, as well as a soft fabric shape book. I’m making one for numbers too while I’m at it. Have several new tooth pillows started in different colors, and I finished drafting patterns for the pocket quilts I want to make.
On top of that, I’m combining my passions a bit, and creating a zine with some of my short stories around a ‘family’ theme. This won’t be for kids – but some of the stories are about kids – and about parents, grandparents -husbands, and so on. When I begin listing my pet items, I want to do another zine with an animal theme. Now that I’m feeling more like myself again, it all feel exciting – not overwhelming like before.
I’ve spent a lot of my ‘down’ time reading and learning about marketing. I’ll share what I’ve learned in another post soon.