Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Journal share - 52 Questions

Tuesday, March 31, 2009
in the interest of posting more content every week i'm hoping to share one of my journals or gluebooks. this week's book is a tag journal. i am using it to answer 52 questions posed by emily falconbridge. there is a flickr group to check out everyone else's tags/journals as well.



this is obviously the cover. it's bound with a ring from the office supply store so i can easily add tags as i go. although this is a shipping tag, i'm not being particular about size. i like the random sizes and shapes.

inside cover and page 1
1. hopes for 2009

page 2 and a small extra tag
2. am i scared of change?

3. do i believe in fairies?

4. when i look into my eyes i see.....

5. how do i feel today?

6. if i could do it all again, would i change anything?

7. what would you do if you knew you could not fail?
8. what was the last thing that made you laugh out loud?

9. what was the last brave thing i did?

10. name 5 movies that inspire you creatively (i skipped this one)
11. what keeps me awake at night?

12. what are you grateful for right now?

this is a tied folder at the end that keeps all the questions.


in other news my son, cameron, and i started this year's seeds friday. we already have 3 inch plants for many of them! wow. we planted:

onions - white and yellow
carrots
spinach
simpson lettuce
bibb lettuce
mixed salad greens
brandywine tomaotes
cherry tomatoes
sugar snap peas
blue lake beans
radishes
beets
crookneck squash
bell peppers
cucumbers
canteloupes
watermelons

yum. i can't wait. we'll rent a tiller next week to break the ground.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Determining Your Business's Specialty - Any Thoughts?

Friday, March 27, 2009
I received a wonderful article in my email today from Molly Gordon as part of her email newsletter Authentic Promotion.

In Praise of Small Ponds: Why Being Picky Is Good for Business.

Who wouldn't love to work exclusively with clients that fit "just right"?
But in a down economy, who can afford to be picky?
You can. In fact, you can't afford not to be.

In any economic situation, the quickest way for a tiny business to fail is to:

  • Be as general as you can to attract the widest possible range of potential clients and customers.

  • Take care not to turn anyone off; tone down your personality.

  • Be careful not to scare people away by talking about price.

  • When you do discuss price, quote the lowest price possible.

This approach ensures that your tiny business will get lost in a very big pond.

And, for small fish, the key to success is to make the pond smaller, not bigger.

You Have to Shrink the Pond

The key to standing out is to be very, very specific about the client that fits just-right. Rather than trying to promote what you do to the largest number of people, focus on addressing the concerns of the just-right client.

Here's how an image coach might shrink the pond for her business.

First, she thinks about the women she's worked with and realizes that she's gotten the greatest delight and given the best work to women with cancer.

So, she builds her Web site around those women. Instead of stuffing it full of dry credentials and desperate calls to action, she thinks about what a woman with cancer who is struggling with her changing body would want.

She realizes that her just-right client needs validation and reassurance. She wants to know that the treatments, products, and resources she sees are safe for someone receiving chemotherapy or radiation. She may be feeling ill and have low energy, so she needs information in short, easily accessible forms. And she wants support and companionship.

Our image coach chooses colors and imagery that make her just-right client feel at home. She writes short, upbeat, articles that solve practical problems. She has a Q&A section where visitors can ask questions anonymously and receive an expert response within 24 hours.

Once she begins to build her site around her just-right client, it's easy to think of ways to add value. The site becomes more and more attractive to the very people the coach wants to work with.

It doesn't matter if there are fewer women with cancer than women without. What matters is that the just-right client will be able to find the Web site and will know she's home when she gets there.

Think of your customers and clients. Which ones "light up" as a result of your work? Which ones are most engaging and interesting to work with? Look for the common denominators and start building your Web site around them. Tell their stories. Speak to their lives. Then no persuasion will be needed for you to establish a mutually beneficial relationship.


This article really made me think. How many of us try to stretch ourselves too thin? I have a few photographs over on Imagekind, some watercolors on Etsy, I'm planning on teaching visual journaling classes this summer locally, I might become a Creative Memories consultant demonstrating how traditional scrapbook products can be used in non-traditional ways, my husband and I have things on Cafepress... there's probably some other things, too. My thoughts were always "Well, something will appeal to somebody." This is completely wrong thinking! I need to choose one thing and do it well. Stop dabbling in this and that. It's not professional and it's not bringing the desired results.

I'm good at reviews. That part of my site is not going anywhere and will only expand, in fact. But as far as income goes, I think I will concentrate on my visual journaling; teaching classes and demoing/selling products for use with them. And put all the rest back in my "hobby bag" where they belong.


Info on Molly Gordon's article:

This mailing is part of a regular series of more or less weekly newsletters and informational mailings about our products and services. It is sent only to confirmed, double opt-in subscribers who have signed up at mollygordon.com, shaboominc.com, authenticpromotion.com, learntolovemarketing.com, or by emailing a subscription request or signing up at a partner Web site.

Publication and Reprint Info

U.S. Library of Congress ISSN: 1530-311X

Unless otherwise attributed, all material is written and edited by Molly Gordon, MCC. Copyright (c) Shaboom Inc.(r) 2009. All rights reserved. Visit our extensive archives at www.mollygordon.com . You may reprint material from Authentic Promotion in other electronic or print publications provided the above copyright notice and a link to http://www.authenticpromotion.com is included in the credits.

Earth Hour Tomorrow


We will once again be participating in Earth Hour this year. We haven't decided what we'll do yet. Last year it was a family dinner by candlelight. It also segued into one evening a week with no electronics i.e. computers, tv, gamesystems, ipods. We'll see what changes it brings about this year; what conversations about conservation it sparks.

I encourage each of you to go and read about Earth Hour if you haven't heard about it. And just commit to one little hour. Tomorrow 8:30 your local time

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Free for First Five - sort of like Pay It Forward

Thursday, March 26, 2009
Gift for the first 5 to respond

The first five people to respond to this post will get something handmade in the mail from me!

This offer does have some restrictions and limitations so please read carefully:

- You have no clue what it's going to be.

- I will do this in a timely manner (one month)

- Even if you have signed up for someone else's giveaway you are still eligible for this one.

- Even if you're new to my blog please feel free to comment! That's how we get to know each other. :)

Here's the fine print:

In return, all you need to do is post this text into a note of your own and make 5 things for 5 others. What could be more fun!

Some ideas you could do for others: mix CD's, collage, journal, painting, send chocolate, art doll, photography prints nicely matted, a book, etc... It doesn't have to be big but please put *some* effort into it. Even if it's not handmade, you can package it very prettily.

Oh, and you will need to provide me with your snail mail address! You can send that in a message or e-mail.

Ready, Set.....GO!

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Big News - I'm not a secret agent!

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

I have the official go-ahead - I am a craft reporter/reviewer for Craft Critique. yay! I'm really excited about this opportunity. It also dovetails with other review work that I've been doing. Perhaps one day I'll be back in magazines but this time reviewing books instead of with artwork. Although, who knows? Maybe I'll submit art again someday, too. We can never know where our path will take us.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Coraline Mystery Box Swap

Monday, March 23, 2009


I've long been an admirer of Myra over at My Little Mochi. And I'm crazy about Coraline, the movie. And, and, and I was so intrigued with the boxes that the crew of the movie sent out. So when Myra proposed a swap. I jumped on it. Because of a mail mix-up I thought the inactivity on my blog disqualified me and I didn't know I was in the swap until I received my fabulous box from Sarah of A Small Fox. (more on that and pics later) So I sent an emergency email to Myra and quickly got started on a box to send. Several days later, living in pajamas, and the fam being VERY understanding and here it is...



The original boxes had their items pinned in place with straight pins. I used corsage pins and there is styrofoam under the red felt base. The letter is in the envelope on the lid. It is sealed with gold sealing wax and a black button.


The box contains a handmade popcorn box with a needlefelted kangaroo circus mouse, two "cotton candy" cones, and a button-eye kit.


The button-eye kit is in a vintage box from Woolworth that apparently contained horoscopes for July.

It is lined in a vintage salmon fine welt corduroy and has a needle, thread and black button eyes glued in place.



The circus mouse was the most time intensive of all the items. He is approximately 4" high not including that tail. Sixteen straight hours of needlefelting, then a bit more for sewing his little jacket. Nine episodes of CSI and four episodes of NCIS. Netflix, you are my friend. I took bathroom breaks and one other to throw together a meatloaf and veggie soup on Saturday night. :)

Here are a few more small details.



Coraline Box Swap and exciting news




I will not only post more images from this Coraline box that I sent out but I have some exciting news to share. Oh, but I don't think I can share that yet. Well, poo. At least I can show pretty pictures and I can share the news later this week. 'kay? :)

Oh, and I'll try to get pictures up of the box I received. but only if you have the drool-guard installed on your keyboards.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

We Dare You: Scrapbook Challenges About Real Life

Thursday, March 12, 2009


We Dare You: Scrapbook Challenges About Real Life
by Kristina Contes, Meghan Dymock, Nisa Fiin, and Genevieve Simmonds

I am not your traditional scrapbooker. In fact, I haven't really touched one since my sixteen year old was in her crib. But I wandered into a new scrapbook store in town to see if they had any supplies for "real" art. I'm snooty that way. ;) Where have I been for 15 years? There was so much fun to be had! And I had to have one of each.

So I came home and turned to my best friend, The Google, and researched scrapbooking. After doing a messy visual journal for years it didn't take long to find the kind of personal scrapbooking I like. If I find it a bit challenging it's only because it feels a little self-absorbed to be scrapping only about myself. However, the finished product is something my children will love to have someday.

More and more people are documenting their stories, their daily lives, sometimes their own minutiae. And they're not doing it in nice neat orderly rows, either.

While searching for scrappers online, I came across Kristina Contes and was blown away by her stuff. One thing led to another and I ended up on the EfferDares website. Naturally, I had to order the book.

This book is filled with many one and two-word idea prompts to get you started. Each prompt is explained. Then each of the artists' interpretations is shown. The chapters are titled The Good, The Bad, The Ugly, The Silly Wacky Funny, The Random, and The Best. There are a couple pages about the contributors and several detailing the supplies used and sources to find them.

The dares do more than scratch the surface. They encourage you to document your inner dorkiness, your inner loveliness, your collections, your regrets, fears, and guilty pleasures. Put it all down!

If you're looking for prompts and eye candy, this is your book. Being a beginning scrapper I still need other sources for how-to and sketches. We dare You is not marketed as a technique book so I wouldn't count this against it.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Attention Art/Craft Book Authors

Tuesday, March 10, 2009
and I know there are several of you out there!

Are you a member of LibraryThing.com? It's been around several years now and is growing strong. It's another place besides amazon that you might want to keep track of your reviews. (it's not just a place for personal libraries. it's such a vibrant community.)

Also, several authors have pages there. http://www.librarything.com/librarything_author

There is also a LibraryThing-run group called Early Reviewers where authors and publishers give away books to generate "buzz" or in exchange for reviews, as well as a member giveaway group where they, along with regular members, can give away books in exchange for reviews (on LibraryThing or Amazon), just to clear space, or just because. :) I have yet to see an art/craft book being given away in the several years I've been a member, though. It's mostly fiction.

I would love to see more art and craft authors on there. Especially several of you from the altered books, mixed-media world as well as those from the other blogs I lurk on - Alicia from Rosey Little Things, Amy from Angry Chicken, etc. I sent an email to Therese Laskey from Softies Central about it as well.

Please pass this on as well. The art community is sorely under represented there.

Help the Sheridan College Graduates while snatching up some fun art!!

copyright Rosemary Travale
http://www.rosemarytravale.ca/
I had a sketch drawn by Rosemary Travale in exchange for a VERY small donation to help the 2009 graduating class of the BAA Illustration program at Sheridan College. They recently lost the funding for their graduate print book and Rosemary is an alumni trying to help raise money for them. This will be the first time a class has not received a book. There's more information here. http://piratecore.livejournal.com/126815.html

Please help them if you can. It's a wonderful cause but even if you don't do it for that, look at what you can get in return! She is an amazing artist practically giving away her work. You can get a digital file for $2 CAN or a physical sketch for $10 CAN.

You can request whatever you want or leave it up to her. I just gave her a couple guidelines when doing ours. I'm thinking I need to send a couple pics of my kids because these would make great accessories in their rooms. :)

Tomorrow night at 12 pm EST is the very latest you can forward your paypal receipt to her and get in on this deal.

I have no affiliation with Rosemary Travale or the school. I am just so pleased with my sketch.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Zakka Sewing 25 Japanese Projects for the Household by Therese Laskey and Chika Mori

Monday, March 9, 2009


I just received Zakka Sewingfrom Therese Laskey in a giveaway this past week and I already have many projects dogeared to make as soon as possible. The room shoes/slippers will make the top of my list. After that, I believe I will make several things as gifts for loved ones.

The book begins with basic terminology and techniques, both about Japanese trends and sewing. It also explains some common fabrics and materials used in the book. The patterns can be enlarged and printed, tiled, on regular paper. You can use those as the pattern pieces or if you find that too stiff, trace them onto tissue paper from there.

I found that several of the projects were perfect for my 16 year old daughter who has only been sewing for about 6 months. And yet there were projects that were nicely challenging for me, someone who has been sewing for 20 years or so. Conveniently, each of the projects is rated one to three buttons based on difficulty so you don't find yourself in over your head.

The household goods and personal items included are both functional and beautiful. How lovely would the covered tape measure be in a gift basket of sewing supplies for a seamstress? Perhaps with a copy of this book. :)