The weather did not cooperate on Thursday- rainy - we had a small turnout. Friday night was spectacular though (temps in the low seventies) so many people came and they were having a great time.
I got a lot of good feedback on my work from other artists as well as the general public. Many people had never seen needle-felting before or if they were familiar with this art form they had never seen figures before only animals. Next year I will have to demonstrate. I did bring my needles and a bit of roving so I could explain the process to people but it would have been nice to have been working on a piece as people came by. Something to plan for the next time.
Besides participating as an artist in the walk, I also was part of the planning committee. My job was to create a system in which sales could be negotiated and catalogued- not an easy task considering it was an entire community event. In the end, twenty seven artists had their work displayed for sale. I created individual sales cards for each piece (more than 100), catalogued the entire show, and developed a easily manageable system for two cashier tables. The one thing I completely forget about was "petty cash". The very first question one of the cashiers asked me was "what do I do if someone comes up with a $4 item and a $10 bill in their hand?" Yikes- a quick run to the bank solved the problem but it was a stupid omission on my part. Well, something to remember for next year. In the end I sold three pieces. It was nice to see a customer's delight was the result of something my hands created.
Part of my display area. |
Entire left wall space |
Harvest Fairy on adjacent wall |
Your work looks very well displayed and I'm pleased that you sold some work. It sounds like a wonderful event. I really do think your bottle dolls...for want of a better term...are so unique:)
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