For those of you with smaller crafts or items, how do you make sure that you cover your booth fees? Does making smaller items that sell cheaper always equal more sales for you? How do you balance putting the time into making these objects, the cost of your time/materials/etc, and making enough sales to cover your expenses? Are there any tips for specific trades? (ie. making jewelry from wholesale premium materials so you can charge more)
Do you have a formula you start out with to make sure you're not spending too much time making tons of small items? Does time really matter to you, when you're making something you love?
Share the ins and outs here!
Replies
This is a really interesting idea, Leslie! I've not seen anyone offer that at a show. I own a piece of art with a very similar concept: an original cartoon by the animator Chuck Jones (Bugs Bunny/Wile E Coyote, etc.) that includes both the closing cel and storyboard sketches from key action, and I bought it at first sight.
So I think you're on to something!
Jennifer Donald said:
I made 5x7's,,,to get that $20. sale ........but it hurt my 8x10 sales ...which are my bread & butter ...@ $40.
the 5x7s would make my booth fee ....but lost me a lot more in sales , than what they gained .
I stopped making them.
I found people would do the same ......pick up the 8x10,,,and drop it, when they seen the 5x7.
Deb