Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Centering Larger Pieces


Often the limiting factor of how large you can throw is, how much can you center? I have a new (free!) video on my Patreon page demonstrating a method of centering for larger pieces that will help you get around that limitation! Check out the preview clip here, then head over to Patreon to watch the whole thing (again - this one is free &available to everyone!) If you find it helpful, you can subscribe (free, or starting at $1.50/month) while you are there. :)


Saturday, January 18, 2025

It's time to think about...

 ....the Maine Pottery Tour! 

Oh, wait, no it's not!! As proud as I am of the work I did building up the tour to the event it is today, I am only delighted to have handed off that work to Milly Welsh and her team. Now is about when I would be sending out an email checking in with studios to see who would be participating this year. 

I'm almost giddy that the tour will go on but I don't have to do it. 
One of the big things I am excited about is putting the time & energy I was spending on the tour as a whole towards promoting my own event. I haven't been unhappy with my turnout but I do feel like there's room to grow.

So! While I do not have to start thinking about the tour yet, I will soon. Soon, but not today! Today I am sorting, pricing, & packing pots to go to my consignment accounts, finishing some leatherhard ware, and hopefully making a video for my Patreon page. I'm going to try This One Weird Trick I saw on instagram & make a succulent planter. It's very fun & easy! I love contrast of the rough, tree-bark-y exterior surface with the smooth, refined interior. I think the soda kiln will be a great surface for it & preserve the craggy, natural quality of it. Picture it with Hen & Chicks or Zebra plants in it. 


That vid will be for paid subscribers, so if you are interested, subscribe today! Paid subscriptions start at $1.50/month. 

Thursday, January 9, 2025

Slip Transfer

Every once in a while I go down a rabbit hole & get very interested in slip transfer techniques. Image transfer doesn't really have a role in my work (which is not to say that it never could) but one of the great things about teaching classes is it allows me time to explore all kinds of techniques, even if they have no immediate use for me. 
I'll have a tutorial up on my Patreon page about this - hoping to do a quick video when I demo this for my class - but honestly it's so simple it hardly requires a lesson. I just brushed slip on newspaper, let it dry to a satin shine, then pressed it onto leatherhard clay with a rib. 
I love the eroded quality of the stripes, like paint peeling on a fence. 

Thursday, January 2, 2025

Aaaaand, It's Live!

After a two day review period, my Faire shop is live! Faire is an online venue for store owners & buyers to find new work to carry. It's a wholesale ordering platform so it will be in addition to, rather than replacing, my online retail shop.

If it's like every other online platform, its success will depend on how well I promote it and maintain it. I'm excited to have this shop up & running just in time for trade show season! I'll let you know how it goes! 

PS. I think it helps me in some algorithm way if you click the link? I might be misunderstanding that...but just in case! If you want to help me out with minimal pain in the ass to you, you could pop in for a look! 

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

New Year, New Idea!

Please forgive any typos; Finn is sleeping on my right hand, so I am typing one handed with my left. (If you have cats, you understand this. It's against natural law to disturb a sleeping cat!) 

After reading of a few people's good experiences with them, I decided to give Faire a try. Faire is an online wholesale marketplace, where buyers can find makers. It makes sense to me as an alternative to wholesale shows, that require you to haul your ware sometimes thousands of miles, stay in hotels, pay thousands in booth fees, etc. The same for the buyers! This seems like a better option. 

Unlike many potters, I like to do wholesale! My favorites are the buyers who come & choose from the inventory I already have, but orders are good, too - they let me plan a bit, knowing when I can expect payment & how much. 

(Oh! There's my hand back. Thanks, Finn! I was starting to lose feeling in it.)  

I have a dim recollection that I considered this once before & decided against it, but I'm not sure I am thinking of the same site, because while I bumped on a couple of things - we'll get to those - nothing jumped out at me as unacceptable right out of the gate. Wait! Was Faire the one that I didn't know I had to apply to & got rejected anyway? Can't remember. I hope not! If I get rejected from something I didn't know I had to apply for a second time that will be a discouraging way to start the New Year! 

You pay nothing on Faire unless you sell, in which case you pay a commission of 15%. This is a little steep, considering wholesale price is traditionally 50% of retail, and Faire asks sellers - well, requires sellers - to agree not to charge more on their site than elsewhere; or rather, it sounds a little steep, until you compare it to the costs I outlined above: booth fees, travel, time out of the studio. In the case of those costs, you pay whether you get orders or not! 15% only on actual orders is starting to sound a little more reasonable. 
Speaking of costs, though, the other thing I bumped on was pricing: I see a lot of items that I can't imagine how they are making money. Someone was offering mugs at a suggested retail of $5, which would make their wholesale price $2.50! That was just one, but there were several on the first page of the search offering mugs at a suggested retail of $25, which I also could not do. I did a big more poking about, though, and found some sellers at more reasonable price points, including one who told me Faire is about 30% of their business. 
There is an algorithm to learn; the seller I chatted with, Gravesco Pottery, suggested starting with 8 - 10 items, then adding new listings in groups of three; that seemed to keep their shop on the front page for up to a week at a time. 
Right now my shop is being "reviewed," so not yet live. I plan to offer only one slip-trail design - flax blossoms - as that is the quickest & easiest, so the lower price I'll be getting won't be unsustainable. I only have one listing, because I need to photograph some items in that design & I need to make a few more. In addition to making cornbread (for prosperity in the new year) I will be doing those things today.
I know I have mostly potters reading this blog; have any of you used Faire? What has your experience been?


PS! The December photo dump is up (free!) on my Patreon page!