Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Find Santa and win prizes!

   Find the Santas and win a shopping spree on ArtFire!
   Track down all the Santas in ArtFire shops for a chance to win a gift certificate for $300, $150 or $100.  The certificates can be spent in any of the hundreds of shops on ArtFire.  Shops offer fine art, handmade crafts, vintage wares and craft supplies.  The contest ends Nov. 30.
   One of the artisans on ArtFire put together the contest and asked the rest of us if we wanted to kick in money for prizes.  Sounded like fun to me, so I bought one Santa and have hidden him in my shop. Merchants had the option of paying to hide up to four Santas, so some shops will have more than one.
   The clues to the whereabouts of the Santas are located on the Find Santa blog.
   This is the first group promotion I’ve been involved in on ArtFire. I’m hoping someone I know wins one of the prizes and that a treasure hunter or two will decide they just can’t resist buying something in my shop. 
   Happy hunting!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Jewelry and Metal Arts Guild

   I just joined the Jewelry and Metal Arts Guild on ArtFire.
   Here are some pieces I chose to put in a collection highlighting the skills of members of the guild.
   ArtFire is a web site where artisans from around the globe sell their work.


Thursday, October 21, 2010

Buying a House in Cape Coral - Part III

   Pity the poor sellers.
   It's now 49 days past the date we signed an offer to buy a home in Cape Coral, FL, and per our contract, we can now walk and find another house.
   If you have been following this saga, you know that we put in an offer to buy a short sale home in this sprawling suburban city just north of Fort Myers.  The epicenter of the housing crisis, Cape Coral seemed the perfect place to get a great deal on a vacation home.  And we did.  The homeowners signed the contract a couple days later.  But it was a short sale and now it was up to the bank to approve the deal.
   A homeowner who is behind on his or her mortgage sometimes can get the lender to agree to having the house sold as a "short sale" for less than the amount left on the mortgage.  The lender must approve the sale at the discounted price and often forgives the balance on the mortgage.  Lenders do this to avoid taking the home through the costly foreclosure process.
   But woe to those sellers who face Bank of America.  Despite a "new and improved" short sale process, the bank still takes a pitifully long time in approving these sales.
   In our case, the sellers have been trying to ditch their home for more than two years.   I don't know this couple's back story. I know they have a child or two per the stickers on the wall in one of the bedrooms. Maybe one or the other lost a job. Maybe they were suckered into a complicated mortgage product they didn't understand and couldn't really afford. In any case, they moved out after putting the home on the market and have been dutifully paying their property taxes ever since.
   They got an offer not long after they listed the home.  The buyer waited a month, then two, then many, many more and still no word from Bank of America.  He finally gave up and found another house. The sellers put the home back on the market.  I don't know what happened that time but it got past the home inspection and once again, no sale and the buyer walked.
   There are many reasons a short sale can fall through.  It's possible the second buyer couldn't get a mortgage approved.  It could be the bank would not approve the buyer's offer.  Sellers set the price on a short sale.  So buyers have no idea what the bank might accept. This likely happened here, as the price went up by $6,000 after this deal went south, and the house was back on the market with a screaming headline of a bank-approved price.
  You would think this would make the next attempt at a sale a breeze.  This has not been the case. We not only agreed to buy the house at the bank-approved price, but we offered cash. No mortgage to worry about. No extra paperwork. We put two contingencies in our contract: an acceptable home inspection and a 45 day deadline for the lender to approve the offer. After that, we would be free to walk away and find another home. Our agent was confident the sale would be approved within a month.
   But she did not know then that Bank of America was the god of the sale. If you read real estate blogs, you soon learn that this bank is just about the worst of the lot for failing to consumate short sales.
  So we continue to wait and watch for new homes coming on the market.  And the sellers live in fear that another prospective buyer will fly the coop all because Bank of America can't get its act together.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Homage to Janis

   I enjoy putting together collections on ArtFire, a web site for selling art, crafts and vintage wares.
    Collections are groups of photos showing the work of merchants on ArtFire.
    I sell my jewelry on ArtFire as well as on my own web site.
    Here's a collection  I put together today as an homage to Janis Joplin. Something got me thinking about her song, "Oh Lord, Won't You Buy Me A Mercedes Benz".  I neglected to insert the apostrophe in won't.  Once you post a collection, there is no turning back.  Everyone needs a good editor!



Friday, October 15, 2010

Put me on your Amazon wish list

   Now you can add my jewelry to your Amazon.com wish list.
   The popular website has opened up its wish list feature to all merchants regardless of whether they sell their wares on Amazon.com.  And if you add items from other sites, you can enter a $100,000 sweepstakes drawing.
   I don't know about you, but I always keep some goodies listed on my Amazon wish list and let my family know I would be more than happy to get anything on that list for my birthday or Christmas. In fact, I just updated it the other day HINT HINT.
   I know. I know. It's not even Halloween yet. But we're having our Christmas on Thanksgiving, so we only have a little over a month to get our Christmas shopping done.
   I've added Amazon.com wish list links to my product web pages on my web site and my shop on ArFire.com.
   Amazon has a download that you can add to your web browser so that anytime you are shopping on the internet and see something you like, you can add it to your Amazon.com wish list.
   This is a great little feature I know I'll be using a lot.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

20% Off Grand Opening Sale!

   To celebrate my new ArtFire shop, I’m offering 20% off on anything in my store.
   I’ve spent the last week adding dozens of jewelry pieces to my JewelryArte store on Artfire, an online venue for artists and craftspersons.
   Take a look at my eye-catching sterling silver rings and pendants cast from real leaves.  Or choose one of my lovely plique-a-jour enameled earrings that glow like stained glass.

   You can order from my ArtFire web site or scroll down this page to buy from RapidCart.
   The sale runs through Nov. 1.
   Why wait until the malls are crowded? Take advantage of the sale for your holiday shopping.

   I've also added a link on the right so you can sign up for my e-newsletter.  I'll be sending out occasional newsletters to let you know about special promotions and upcoming art fairs I will be attending.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Buying a House in Cape Coral - Part II

      "APPROVED PRICE!! THE BANK IS READY TO CLOSE THE DEAL.HURRY!!! BRING YOUR BUYER, WE CAN CLOSE IN AUGUST. DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS FRESH WATER CANAL HOME AND POOL"
      That's what the listing said on the house we wanted to buy in Cape Coral, FL.  But that's not how it has happened.
      The home was listed as a short sale, which meant the lender had agreed to accept a price below what the sellers owed on the mortgage.  Lenders sometimes agree to short sales to avoid the costly process of taking the home to foreclosure, and often forgive the borrower the balance on the mortgage.

      We were very excited to find this home.
      It had everything we wanted:  recent construction, one story, pool, on a canal.  And our agent thought it would close within a couple weeks.  After all, the bank had already approved the price and we were paying cash.  An easy transaction.
     Nope.  We waited one week.  Our agent contacted the sellers agent.  It will happen any day, maybe today, she said.  Nope.
     We waited another week.  Same thing:  it's going to happen any second now. Nope.
     In the interim, I read up on short sales.  The worst bank, according to numerous Realtor bloggers, was Bank of America.  I emailed our agent.  Could our lender be Bank of America?  She checked. Of course it was.  Just our luck.
     A month passed and our agent got a note from the seller's agent.  The bank wanted the seller's agent to upload the paperwork into the computer again.  Now we were back to square one.
     This really hacked me off.  Was the sellers' agent a dummy?  Could she have entered the paperwork wrong the first time? Or could it be that Bank of America lost the paperwork  THAT ALREADY HAD BEEN ENTERED INTO THE COMPUTER?  How could that even happen?  Our Realtor informed us that, yes, this was a BofA modus operandi.
     Back on the internet, I ran across many sorry stories of Bank of America short sales.  I also ran across something I had not expected:  a Bank of America twitter account called BofA_help.  I thought I would try it. Amazingly enough, a member of the help staff phoned me the very next day.  She was able to pull up our account and see that the paperwork indeed was in the computer.  That's all she could tell me, but at least I had someone within BofA confirming its existence.  If the paperwork disappeared again, I would have evidence within the bank that they had screwed it up.
     I don't know if this helped things move along, but since then, the paperwork seems to be traveling through the system in a relatively speedy manner.  I'm even hopeful that we will get approval next week and close before the end of the month.
     We shall see.





Saturday, October 9, 2010

The ups and downs of online selling

     I've tried several online selling venues to augment the money I make at art fairs.
So far, I haven't had a great deal of luck -- but I keep trying!
     I made the most money selling my jewelry on a web site called 1000Markets. The site design was very elegant and I made several nice sales there. But alas, the owners sold their company to Bonanza, an eBay wannabe, leaving hundreds of artists and craftspeople to migrate to Bonanza or try to find another place to sell their wares.
     Numerous other venues are possible. The most successful -- at least for the owners -- is Etsy. It gets millions of hits. Some people do well on Etsy. I have a shop on Etsy, too, but I shuttered it for the summer and probably won't reopen because I only sold one thing over a two year period.
     Early this year I set up a shop on ArtFire, another online selling venue. It is sponsored by several craft-oriented retail companies including Jo-Ann Fabric and Crafts Stores. I set up a basic account that doesn't cost anything but has only what you'd expect for free -- just the basics.
     Now that I've lost my 1000Markets shop, I've ramped up my ArtFire shop by purchasing a monthly account with all the bells and whistles. One of them you can see below. It's a mini store that can be implanted in a blog or website. I've set this one up to show a random array of jewelry from my ArtFire shop. I've also got an ArtFire widget on my Facebook fan page.
     So we'll see how that goes.
     In the meantime, I'll work on more jewelry for the shows I hope to do this winter in Florida if Bank of America ever gets around to approving our offer on a short sale home in Cape Coral.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Buying a house in Cape Coral


      My husband and I flew down to Fort Myers, FL., last month to see if we could find a nice retirement home to buy across the river in Cape Coral.
      We focused on Cape Coral because it is one of the nation's foreclosure capitals with many homes for sale at bargain prices. I've always liked a good sale.
      I wanted to get a house in Florida so I could sell my jewelry at the art fairs down there. Michigan and Florida are two of the hot spots for art fairs. This will double the number of shows I can do within a radius of an hour or two from my homes.
      Months before our visit, I contacted a Realtor in Cape Coral about having her show us some homes. She got us a Listingbook account that sends out daily listings of homes for sale in the area. It allows you to mark homes as favorites, rank they by price and features and put notes on the listings.
      Over the summer,I marked as favorites more than a hundred homes I thought might be possibilities. A few days before we left, I culled the list down to under 50. My plan was to drive by the homes and decide which ones we wanted to have the Realtor show us.
      We stayed in Bonita Springs thanks to our daughter's in-laws who generously let us use their timeshare. I had marked some homes in Bonita Springs and several other towns between there and Cape Coral to the north.
      Our first day out, we eliminated more than half the homes we had marked. Since we were looking for cheap homes, many were rundown and in rundown neighborhoods. By the third day, we had our list for the realtor. We had eliminated all but five homes, a disappointment given the long list I had started with.
     One of the five homes already was going to auction, so we viewed the other four. One was owned by a woman who needs to audition for the television show "Hoarders." Another one was on a canal but smelled like cat pee. Another one was practically brand new and on a pretty canal but was close to a busy parkway. Wayne loved it but I hated the noise. We weren't able to see the fourth because our Realtor could not get the owner to consent to a visit that day.
      We were a little depressed at that point. Our realtor suggested that we look at Listingbook again and see if we could find more homes with pools on canals, since those were the ones we really liked. So we traveled back to Bonita Springs and logged onto the internet on the laptop we had brought down to aid us in our hunt.
      We found several more homes to look at and decided to jump back in the car and drive back to Cape Coral to look at those before the sun went down. All but one were duds once we looked at the neighborhoods. But the last one looked PERFECT! It was vacant, so the lawn needed to be mowed and the pool looked scuzzy, but it was only four years old and in a newer section of town.
We emailed our Realtor to have her set up a showing, and we met her there the following morning. The house was just what we were looking for: three bedrooms, two baths, a pool and a canal with a boat dock. And the price was right. The downside: someone had punched some holes in the wall and it was a short sale.
      A short sale happens when the sellers owe more on the mortgage than they can get for selling the house. Short sales are good for the sellers as their remaining debt can be excused. But they have to convince the bank holding the mortgage that they will be forced into foreclosure without it. And the bank has to approve the short sale.
      The interior damage would not be difficult to fix, so we decided to put in an offer on the home at a price the bank already had approved (two prior offers on this home had fallen through). We were paying cash and the bank had approved the price, so our Realtor expected a swift sale and suggested a Sept. 16 closing.
      Alas, that was not to be. I'll explain later.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Applying to art fairs

     Most people perusing the wares at an art fair probably don't realize how much time and money go into applying to shows.
     Long before the snow leaves the ground, artists and craftspeople are filling out applications for shows they hope will generate decent profits. The lead time for applying to the most competitive juried shows can be six months or more, and the fees aren't cheap.
     A juried show is one in which artists must submit slides, digital images or photos of their work to be reviewed by a panel of art experts (sometimes) who decide who will be invited to participate.
      Most shows range in size from 75 up to several hundred artists with fees for juried shows usually running more than $100. The most prestigious shows can cost over $500 with some charging $1,000 or more.
      Last year I was accepted into 10 shows for a total of $2,050 in fees. The most expensive was the Buffalo Grove Show near Chicago at $485. This year I'm staying closer to home to reduce expenses. Luckily, the shows are cheaper in northern Michigan than in the Chicago area where I did most of last year's shows. Fees for the seven shows I've applied to so far total $1,010.
     Most shows require both a jury fee and a booth fee. You pay the jury fee regardless of whether you are accepted. Last year I paid $130 in jury fees for the privilege of getting rejection slips from five shows. That's the gamble you take on the art show circuit. The shows that generate the highest sales usually are the ones that are toughest to get into. So you pay your fees and take your chances.
     The peak art fair season in Michigan is during the summer months, as one would expect. And the summers here are short. So artists often apply to more than one show per weekend hoping to get into the best show but reserving a fall back position in case they get rejected. That way they can ensure a full schedule of shows. But it also means more jury fees down the drain.
     The deadline has passed for a good share of the summer art fairs. Artists now are waiting for their letters of acceptance or rejection. I got my first letter last week, a letter of acceptance to the Summer Solstice Art Show in Charlevoix June 26 and 27. So I'm happy, for now.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Getting your products on Google Shopping


If you make anything by hand, it's always a struggle to figure out how to market your products and get them before the most buyers.

One of the ways buyers search for products is by using Google Shopping. But your products aren't going to show up there just because you have your own web site. Some of the handcrafter sites like 1000Markets and ArtFire do it for you when you list your work on their sites. Etsy, by far the largest site for selling handmade items, is slowly getting their merchants' work on Google Shopping. But it has been frustratingly slow for those of us whose work hasn't made it there yet.

You don't have to join one of these web sites,to get your products posted on Google Shopping, though. You can do it yourself if you have your own web page. And why not? By linking your products back to your own web site, you don't have to pay any listing or seller fees to someone else. You get to keep all your money!

Google has a tutorial on how to do it.

Here is some additional info:

You must create a Google Merchant's account first. It is free.

Each item must be on a separate web page with a description, price and how to pay.
You then list each product in a file to upload to google. The easiest way is to create the list in a spreadsheet and save it as a tab-delimited file. You MUST include certain headers in your file or it will not upload correctly.

WARNING: The example Google uses does not have enough headers to upload correctly, so use my headers instead.

The headers I use are brand, condition, description, expiration date, ID, image link, link, price, product type, title.

For brand, I put JewelryArte. Condition would be new or used. Description is just a description of your product. Expiration date is the date your file will expire off Google. It can't be longer than 30 days from the date you post your list. ID is your product ID. Image link is a link to the image that will show up in the search. Link is the link to the product's web page on your site. Product type in my case is jewelry. Title is what you call your product.

I have only listed three things so far because most of my products are grouped together. I need to put each one on a separate page. Here is how the three I have posted look when I type my name into the Google Shopping search box.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Soap Goddess


The hostess of the goddess party I attended last weekend gave everyone a cute gift when the festivities were over.

They were bars of handmade "goddess" soap. On each bar was a soap sculpture of a goddess.

The soap was made by Mad Mac's Soaps.

I'd like to post a link to their web site if they have one. Couldn't find one on Google. Will update this post if I find out more.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Goddess Party

Saturday night I attended a "Goddess Gathering" hosted by my sister-in-law, Sharon.She lives in a cute farmhouse in Rockford, Michigan, near Grand Rapids.
Normally I don't travel two and a half hours just to attend a party, but it gave me a chance to sell my jewelry to some of her friends and it sounded like fun. I had never been to a goddess party before. Actually, I think Sharon made this up. She had kind of a goddess wedding last summer complete with bridesmaid wearing fairy wings (she called them angel wings but they looked more like fairy wings to me).
Linda, one of my other sisters-in-law and Sharon's sister, rode along with me. Hubby Wayne also came as our daughter-in-law Kimberly was expecting to give birth Saturday. He was banned from the party, of course. It was just for ladies. Sharon kicked her family out of the house for the evening and Wayne got left at Kimberly and Aaron's house.
Sharon prepared a great dinner served with a nice selection of wine including chocolate wine, which I had never had before. It tasted like a chocolate liqueur called "Hot Sex" that I buy when I can find it. It's really great in the summer mixed with ice cream. Linda brought along a bottle of chocolate beer. I'm not a beer drinker but it wasn't too bad. Anything with chocolate is good.
Chocolate was everywhere at this party. Sharon had a table set up with chocolate cookies and chocolate bonbons and choclate mixed with nuts and other snacks that I couldn't resist. I made quite a few trips to that table.
After dinner, one of Sharon's friends put on a fashion show. When I was invited to the party, I thought this would be a show of fashions her friend had created but it was a show of designs by Carol Anderson. She has a company that puts on TupperWare type parties featuring her clothing line. There were some cute outfits but they were out of my price range, so I passed. In between the dinner, fashion show and later events, I sold some of my torch-fired bead earrings. I've got some of them posted on my web site.
Then it was on to the white elephant exchange. I guess I've been missing a lot of girlie things in my life as this was a first for me, too. Everyone brought something from their home that they didn't want and we exchanged items one at a time. If someone got something you wanted, you could steal it from them when your turn came. I ended up with an elephant tea pot that I knew Sharon wanted because she stole it twice from other ladies. I wanted the three-wick candle she got, so when they party was over, we swapped.
Sharon teaches art, so we had to have an art activity: painting on wine glasses. The painted glasses have to set for a day and then be popped in the oven for a while, so Linda and I will have to wait until we visit Sharon again or she brings them up this spring.
One of the women at the party had more tatoos than I've ever seen on anyone. She, of course, was the person who Sharon had invited to do the Tarot card readings. The first card she turned over for my reading showed that someone would be having a baby very soon. Now that was quite accurate, wasn't it? As it turns out, though, we're still waiting for that baby. He or she is not in any hurry and Kimberly is getting impatient.
Sharon also had planned for us to enjoy a dip in the hot tub on the deck off her master bedroom. All the other activities took up so much time that the dip in the hot tub will have to wait until her next party.
We had a lot of fun and I ate enough chocolate that I was not even inebriated as I drove back to Aaron's house that night.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Our cat Dolly



Early this morning I heard a crash in my studio. Then I heard our cat, Dolly, bitching outside our bedroom door. She had caught another mouse.
I'm not sure why mice seem to be invading our house of late. Dolly has caught a mouse three nights in a row. Are they harbingers of spring?
Or are they, in fact, the same mouse. We have thrown the limp and shivering things out the door and each time they have disappeared by morning.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Art shows and booth shots


I have finally finished my income taxes so I'm messing with my blog again.

This year I am applying to art shows in "up north" Michigan towns along the coast of Lake Michigan. I've applied to five so far and plan to apply to five more.

These are all juried shows. The artists must submit photos of their work and their booth setups. Then a jury of art experts (hopefully they are experts) decides which of the artists are worthy of selling their work at the show.

I've applied to shows that are tough to get into and shows that are easy to get into. So I'm hoping I don't get rejected from too many of them.

This past fall I worked on improving the appearance of my booth by adding some large photos of my jewelry, lights and ceramic pots filled with decorative grasses. I've posted a photo of my new display below. The booth shot can be the deciding factor in whether you get into a show, so I am going to see if I have a higher acceptance rate this summer as a result of these improvements.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

First blog post

Well I was preparing to finish my income taxes today and this is why you are reading my blog. Yes, I am a procrastinator.

I was going to start on my taxes but decided I needed to check my email first. So I opened up my Gmail and saw a new tab called Buzz. So I decided to post a Buzz to see if anyone was using this. Then I decided I didn't really know anything about Buzz so I Googled it. One of the links mentioned blogging. So I Googled "Google Blog" to see what that was all about. That took me to the Google Blog site and I thought: What the heck? Everyone on Etsy says you need a blog, a lot of people I know have blogs, so I guess I'll create a blog, too.

So here I am. Now I just need to figure out what to write and how to link this up to other places you can find me such as my web site www.jewelryarte.com, my facebook fan page, my JewelryArte store on Etsy, my JewelryArte store on 1000Markets, etc., etc.

Now I am really, really going to work on my taxes. First I need to get dressed, though, and clean up the kitchen and feed the cat and ..........