Egg is off to the hospital. Although she has her own hospital gown, hospital bracelet and IV bag, she is mostly going to be a good friend and share the experience with a brave little girl. Going to the hospital for children and their parents is a bit of a scary time (we've experienced this more than once recently). Children don't like being poked with needles and IVs and their parents worry about the medical issues and their child's happiness and comfort. So Egg is hoping she can help everyone just a little bit.
More Fancy Nancy
Introducing Fancy Nancy
Sneak peak of a custom Fancy Nancy I've recently completed. More photos later today...
Four new dolls on Etsy
I have finally listed a few new dolls on Etsy. Here's the preview. Hoping to have some spring clothes up soon, too.
New Dolls for Etsy
Just a few more photographs, unfortunately daylight is fading despite the time change. So might be tomorrow.
Fancy Nancy's Hair
I have been asked to make a custom Fancy Nancy doll. For those of you who know Fancy Nancy, you may have noticed...she has fun hair. But what you may not know, is that as fun as her hair looks, it is even more fun to make.
Hand-dyed Fancy Nancy Hair, Round One
Off to Australia
Phoebe is off to Australia to start a new adventure and maybe escape this endless winter.
Sneak peak at some new dolls
I've been hard at work on some new dolls, both custom and for my Etsy shop. I should have four new dolls for the Etsy shop--Tuesday I'm hoping. Here's a sneak peak.
Waiting for faces.
Just what is it about handmade?
From ittybittybag on Etsy.
In 2007, I made my first Etsy purchase. It was a paisley padded laptop cover for my oldest daughter, who was going off to college. It was about $70 and I knew from the description we would need to wait for it to be made. A month later, when it arrived, we could see it was cushy, perfectly constructed, beautiful and different from the usual. We loved it.
In the intervening seven years, the laptop cover grew a little less vibrant, but I can hardly say the same of Etsy, or the handmade marketplace. The past seven years has been a bit of a handmade renaissance. Last year was Etsy’s biggest year with well over a billion dollars of sales. Although there were sales of vintage items and craft supplies, a bulk of those sales were items made by hand.
Etsy alone cannot take the credit for creating this thriving handmade marketplace. And although some credit goes to the thousands of artisans whose efforts and shops populate Etsy, this renaissance would not be happening if there was not a growing demand for handmade goods.
Why? Why are more of us deliberately buying handmade? It isn’t cheaper. It is often less expedient. And it is a bit of a gamble. And inventories are always low, many items having an inventory of one.
I asked some Etsy shoppers why they buy handmade.
And this is what I heard:
The care that went into making the item was the answer that rose to the top of the list. With this care and attention to detail, buyers felt handmade things can claim more value than store bought.
Many people said they enjoy the connection to the buyer. As a seller and a buyer, I love that connection. This connection brings me to the next two reasons—the item can be customized and it has a back story. Etsy buyers are a more holistic bunch. They like the idea that the seller also has a story. The product isn’t merely plucked from the shelves of a store. The product comes with a creator, a why and a how. Many buyers thought the story and the connection gave the item more value.
People like the ability to customize. They like talking to the seller, gauging how the seller thinks and creates and then seeing how they can respond to their needs. And the communication that leads to the customized item is an experience that has value. This is the flip side of expedient. We don't always want Amazon Prime.
The uniqueness of the item was another common reason. Low inventory becomes a positive.
A few people felt buying handmade was voting with their wallet. You are supporting small business. Sometimes even micro business or a specific cause.
This is not the first handmade movement to emerge. The first was the Arts and Crafts movement. This push toward the hand crafted was driven by a group of artists at the end of the nineteenth century in industrializing Britain in an attempt to preserve craftsmanship in a world that seemed to be moving in the opposite direction.
Maybe we are experiencing something similar. So many of our daily activities are now conducted on phones and laptops, including shopping. Maybe we crave the human element in our lives, and specifically in our non-tech products. Handmade gives us that in so many ways, even if we are reaching for handmade through our laptop.
Earrings from FiberBungalow.
Bag from MondayMorningStudios
Slow is Good
Slow hands
I had a great day.
I took the day off from my day job today. That means I had the school day to sew, stuff, blog, knit, clean, catch up, there were many possibilities.
I spent the seven hours turning, stuffing and ladder stitching two and a half dolls. Two and half dolls that were already stitched together yesterday. For those of you who make dolls, you are familiar with turning, stuffing and ladder stitching.
They are slow--these activities cannot be rushed. But that is part of their attraction. Although to those who don't create, it would appear that creativity propels this process. Creativity is one ingredient. But those who make things by hand, the main attraction is the actual making. The slow, often methodical, process of carefully putting bits together, whether it is stitches in a hand knit sock or the meticulously threaded hair on a doll's head, is what we love. And it is often these slower more mundane activities that allow the time for our more creative ideas to percolate.
To those who aren't into it, it probably sounds painstaking. For those of you who craft, most likely you feel as I do, this is relaxing, joyful, and why you do what you do.
It is the zen of crafting.
I love my slow days.