newbie (5)

What a weekend! I've been a patron for the Main St Fort Worth Arts Festival for years...and I mean all the way...taking a long weekend off from work so I could attend on the less crowded Thursday and Friday and spending all day, just taking a break for my Schmidt's bratwurst and cream puff...I'd check in with all of my favorite artists and look for treasures to bring home to add to our collection.

So when I felt like I was ready to apply for my first art festival, I picked Main St. It's a personal favorite, it's close to home (about an hour away), and it has an Emerging Artist program, so I could give it a try without investing in a tent. The downside? I'm a felter and I heard from a lot of friends that the DFW area is a tough market for fiber artists, especially in April when the weather can be in the 80s or 90s.

But I screwed up my courage and applied. A quick word for other newbies. If you're thinking about this, check to see if a local festival has an emerging artist program. It's amazing to have training wheels like this. I was able to apply without submitting a booth shot, I received plenty of communication from the festival organizers, they supplied the tent, and I was able to participate at a lower emerging artist rate. It's an amazing opportunity. I also made sure I attended the open jury day, allowing me to see what my jury photos looked like on the big screens (yikes!). 

When I was accepted, I vacillated between being incredibly excited and terribly nauseous. I wasn't sure if I could pull together enough work for the show, but decided that it would be worth the experience...could I survive a four day show and would people be interested in my work? Plus, it would give me a chance to take a booth shot in order to apply for other shows. 

So what did I learn? 

1. Bring twice as much work and business cards than you'll think you'll need. I was running low on pieces by Saturday and could tell my sales slowed down when my pickings looked too slim. I was prepared to talk to people about doing custom pieces, but when I ran out of business cards I was in trouble there too. 

2. Have two versions of your explanation of what you do or what motivates you. A lot of people visiting with me weren't familiar with hand made felt and some were interested in the longer explanation and some got the "glazed over, I have somewhere else to be" look about 20 seconds in. I had to pull together a graceful fallback short form explanation.

3. Be ready to smile all weekend. Mostly it was easy. People were friendly and interested and even the people who looked at the price and noted that they were more than they were prepared to pay were gracious about it. 

4. Know what your answer is when people ask you if you're willing to discount. I think everyone determines their own answer, you just need to know what it is so you don't fumble. I had one person ask if I discounted for cash, but my pieces just weren't expensive enough to make that worth while so I declined, but I hesitated. Would have been better if I knew my answer before she asked. She still bought the piece, just decided to use her card instead.

5. Make your hotel reservation the second you get into the show. I thought I had a few weeks to book at the artist rate before it expired and when I called, I found out the hotel had sold out at that rate very quickly. Even if you're not sure, make your reservation. You can always cancel it later, but you can't get the good rate if you miss out.

We wound up getting rained out on the last day so I have to guess that I would have made it the full four. It was exciting and fun and I'd definitely do it again. It was a real honor to be included in a show with so many artists whose work I respect and admire. 

Oh, and I'll need to rent a tent to take that jury shot. I found that some of my display ideas didn't work out quite as well as I'd like and my booth was cast in shade the first morning so I couldn't really exert any control over my jury shot. I'll need to rent a tent and put it up in a more controlled environment to give this a shot again.

Ok, that's all I have time for now, but I'll add to this thread if I remember more things. Final thoughts? I had a blast!

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All a Newbie Needs to Know... And More.

Got this email today from someone I don't know, asking for information on starting out with shows. I spent more time than I intended answering his questions, and thought some of your other newbies might benefit as well. Here's his email:

My name is *** and I’m a photographer...  As a fellow photographer I would like to ask you a few questions regarding art fairs.  

I’m exploring the idea of participating in a few art fairs for the 2014 season; I anticipate my start up cost to be approximately $10,000, does that sound right to you?  This start up money would buy a tent, print enough material to have on hand at the show, and traveling/art fair cost?   I assume subsequent shows won’t cost as much; is it safe to conclude each art fair thereafter would cost approximately $6,000?

How do you determine the number of prints to display; do you sell the display pieces, and if you do, does the customer take the purchased product at the point of purchase or do you keep it until the show is finished?

How many smaller unframed prints do you carry to each show; for example, do you bring twenty 8x10”, ten 11x14”, and two 14x17” of each picture?

In taking with other photographers I am aware that I want to look for shows that are juried, is that your opinion also?

My last question is a bit sensitive and I don’t want to make you feel uncomfortable, however, I appreciate any advice you can provide: Roughly, what kind of sales may a photographer expect to see at an average size art show?  I know there are a million factors that come into play but I’m looking for a rough idea on what to expect.

So here's what I wrote back:

That's a lot of questions. Fortunately there are a number of resources to help you get started, and to commune with your fellow artrepreneurs!

First off, let me suggest http://www.artfairinsiders.com

There is a lot of material there, much of it based on questions similar to yours. There are forums for just about every media, and many of the subjects come up time and again. There is also a photographer's forum.

On Facebook, there is a group for art show photographers. Started by Larry Berman as a Yahoo forum years ago, it's morphed into a group that sees some activity. Feel free to join, ask questions, lurk. If you're already on Facebook, here's the address: http://www.facebook.com/groups/artshowphoto/

There are several good books devoted to selling and setting up at art fairs. Among the best is Maria Arango's book:

http://www.amazon.com/Art-Festival-Guide-Artists-Festivals/dp/1430319763

and Bruce Baker's CD set on selling:

http://bbakerinc.com/store/

Check out the NAIA organizatoin: http://www.naia-artists.org
Some helpful information there, too, although you have to join to get most of the meat.

Show information is much easier to come by these days. Several pubs deal this out:

http://www.artfaircalendar.com/


http://www.zapplication.org is the main online art show application application. Most of the big national shows list on here. One thing to keep in mind: once the deadline is past, the show drops off the Apply to This Show list. You can find a list of all the shows that list though, under a separate navigation topic.


http://www.juriedartservices.com
This is the other major listing application. What isn't on ZAPP or JASV is on Entry Thingy

Greg Lawler's Art Fair Sourcebook used to be worth the subscription price, especially for those starting out. Now, maybe not so much, but take a look at it anyway. http://www.artfairsourcebook.com

Your cost estimate isn't too far off.  You will need display materials inside the canopy however, and those are not particularly cheap.


Flourish makes the most solid tent. Solid steel frame, heavy vinyl, heavy duty zippers. You can trick it out any number of ways, but a basic Trimline will run you about $1000.
http://www.flourish.com

You can start with an EZ-Up, a Caravan or any number of other cheap folding tents, but I wouldn't advise it if you can afford a stronger tent.

A set of Propanels (9 x 38" x 7') run another $1000 or so. Depending on if you buy braces and lights, you can spend more. Their site is instructional.
http://www.propanels.com

Armstrong Display products makes a similar set of panels for about the same cost.

Jury fees set me back about $1000-1500 per year, depending on how many shows I apply to. If I'm accepted, the booth fees run anywhere from $200 for a small local show to upwards of $1500 for the very top shows in Coconut Grove and Sausalito. Most good juried shows fall into the $400-600 range for a single 10x10 spot. I do about 20 shows a year, which run me on average $500 per booth. That come to about $11,000 just to play. Some shows are less, some shows charge you extra for electricity, if they have it, or a corner space, or a double.

You should have liability insurance. Some shows require it. That may cost you $350-650/year, or you can insure per show with a company called Artists, Crafters  & Tradesmen Insurance http://www.ACTInsPro.com

Miscellaneous show equipment:

  • Weights for your booth: at least 50 pounds per leg
  • Awnings
  • A chair
  • Some sort of write-up desk
  • Bins or folding racks to display matted prints
  • A credit card system. Most people use the Square now, or PayPal's swiper, or Intuit. You can still open a merchant account and use a wireless terminal. Square requires that you have an iPhone or iPad, and a cellular data plan or access to wireless. Same for the others. Lots of research on this.
  • Office supplies: stapler, tape, duct tape, bags, all kinds of miscellaneous stuff.
  • A flashlight, lantern, or headlamp
  • Raingear
  • Plastic tarps
  • Bungie cords
  • A-clamps
  • A dolly to move stuff back and forth to your vehicle when you can't drive to your booth location
  • Plastic tubs to carry matted prints in


Travel costs depend entirely on how far you plan to range for shows. The further you go, the more it will cost you. $6000 / show is way high, though. For a two day show, you might have three days' of hotel, two days on the road, meals, gas, etc. Priceline, Hotwire, Orbitz, other sites all help you reduce travel costs. If you stay within a 50 mile radius of home, you can probably sleep in your own bed and cut out travel costs entirely. But you can't make a season of shows too easily doing that. You can get a couple of practice shows in.

A transportation system. This stuff needs more than a Honda Element to cart it around in. Although I know a painter from Canada who can do shows in an Element. Most people drive big white vans or Sprinters. I haul a trailer with a pickup truck. If you are going to use Propanels, you'll need something more than an SUV, unless you go with the knockdown panels. (I had those for a season -- got rid of them at the same time I bought my first trailer).

There is way way more to this than the summary above.

You single biggest cost over time will be inventory. You absolutely must have framed work or canvas wraps, or metal mounted prints, or some other sort of work to hang on your walls. As far as the number of pieces to make? Only time and experience will help you here. As a rule of thumb, you need a couple different sizes of matted prints, and a couple different sizes to hang on your walls to draw people in. I hang about 20-25 pieces, maybe have another 40-50 choices in the flip bins, in multiple sizes. You can start smaller than that, but you will need 4-6 pieces on each of three walls as a minimum. You are better off making fewer larger pieces than a whole passle of little dinky ones.

Selling

When you sell a framed piece off the wall, people usually expect to take it with them. You wrap it up, either in a black garbage bag (tacky and cheap) or using premium materials that show the work off as it walks down the street. It helps to have a postcard with your logo on it that you can slip into a clear bag. Sometimes you will have to deliver a piece if it's too large for the customer to take home. Every once in a while, you can keep the piece till the end of the show and the customer will return and pick it up, but that's the exception not the rule. Mostly the framed work is there to sell matted prints or smaller version. If you have two pieces, one bigger and one smaller, people will mostly opt for the less expensive of the two. Not always, but mostly. It helps to have a few extra framed pieces to fill in the holes when you sell one. Near the end of a show, it sometimes helps to leave a blank spot or two to indicate that you're selling out.

Sales are wildly variable, based on the show, the attendance, the weather, the competition in your media, the competition in other media that compete for wall space (paintings, drawings, prints, 2-D mixed media), how good you are, how cheap you are, how exclusive you are... I have grossed $0 at more than one show; I have also made close to $10,000 for three days work. Keep in mind that $2000 gross at a show where you can sleep in your own bed and sold nothing but low cost items will make more profit that $2000 at a show that you had to drive two days each direction to get to, with hotels at $100/day and a booth fee of $500. Make yourself a business plan that gives you an idea of what you have to sell in order to be profitable. If you don't you will lose money steadily for several years before you figure it out. There are very few photographers making good money at shows these days. I know most of them, and even those guys are not making what they did ten years ago.

Keep your presentation cohesive. Don't show a little bit of wildlife you shot at the zoo, some pictures of barns in the snow and the shots you took on vacation. That stuff will NOT sell anymore. Trust me on this. Develop a point of view, and DO NOT steal other people's ideas. You will need an artist statement that says, in 100 characters or less, what it is you do, and what makes your work different. Start there, and develop a few key images around a concept. Otherwise you will be throwing your money down a rathlole. People can get cute kitty cats and lions sleeping at the zoo on the interwebz for much less than you can sell them at a show.

You will need a booth shot showing how your booth looks when setup for a show in order to jury for shows. If you don't have this, some shows will let you apply in the emerging artist category without one. Ann Arbor, the Original, for one. Main St. Fort Worth, for another. Do your research. Start with the local shows, closer to home. Call the show if you can't find the answer online. But look online first. Check the show websites.

You will need a website. Something simple at first, that can showcase your concepts, highlight your show schedule and maybe sell some work for you in the off season.

Be prepared to work very, very hard. Be prepared to get very, very discouraged. This is not a business for the faint of heart. It helps to have deep pockets, because you will lose money learning.

And lastly, you can check out my blog for some personal ideas. I haven't updated it in a while, but there are some useful posts there.

http://www.parkerparker.net/studio/blog

Okay, I'm sure you all have your own tips and tricks to add to this, so I'll leave it at that.

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This is my first year of getting back into doing art shows after an almost 20-year hiatus.  As such, I am very much a newbie and relearning the ropes, including what types of shows to watch out for.  Reading the call for artists for the Old Town San Diego Art Fair, I was expecting 20,000 customers to come through  with money to burn.  Oops.  Not so much.  Of course, part of it can be blamed on the fact that gas prices leapt by 40 cents per gallon that very weekend (!) and perhaps a lot of San Diegans were reluctant to get out and about, but I think that my husband's observation of Old Town being a tourist destination was also a valid point.  Many of the artists I spoke with were having a stinker of a show.  A couple of nearby booths seemed to be hauling in the bucks, however.  What I noticed about them was that they had great price points for impulse buys, such as less than $25.  I mention impulse buys because one customer said to me that my prices seemed high for impulse buys, and so I learned something here: tourist destination shows are something very different from shows that people go to specifically to buy art.

The show was organized by two entities: West Coast Artists and the Old Town San Diego chamber of commerce.  The people I met from these groups were VERY nice and helpful at the show, but I had some issues about getting juried into the show: 1) Artists had to pay the usual application fee, but also had to pay the booth fee up front at the time of application.  I had never seen this before, and I didn't like tying up my money, not knowing if I would be accepted.  I would not apply to shows like this in the future unless experienced artists told me directly that the show was worth it.  2) The organizers were very slow in letting me know if I had been accepted.  When I called West Coast artists three weeks before the show to ask about my status, I was told that the Chamber of Commerce people hadn't even sent them my photos yet.  As an out-of-towner, this gave me short notice for being able to arrange lodging and send out announcements to my email list.

I would love to get feedback from seasoned pros about what to look for in shows where the art buyers go, and what to watch out for in the future.  Thanks!

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OKC Festival--just got back from seeing it

I havn't been to my first art festival/fair yet as an artist--that is coming up at the end of May. So when I went to the OKC festival tonight I was looking at everything from a different viewpoint than I ever had before. I never paid attention before to how people lit their work, or whether they had a rug of some kind in their tent, or what color their walls were, or if they have a sign what does it look like. 

It's my understanding that OKC festival is a little different in that they provide the artists with walls and the tent, and they aren't supposed to sell reproductions out of their booths. 

Anyway this is a break down of my newbie observations from a not-an-artist-there point of view: 

-A lot of people still had their own propanels or other walls to add to their booth space. 

-One booth had red fabric on their walls and it stood out and caught a lot of people's attention/caused them to stop and look at their paintings (which were complimented well by the color in my opinion)

-There were a lot of the same artists there that I see every year, and a some amount of them had the same stuff they had last year. 

-Most people framed their paintings. 

-Jewelers all had large nice photos of their jewelry hanging on their walls so you could see from a distance what their stuff looked like

-I overheard a couple artists mentioning having sold quite a bit already. And I saw a couple red dots on paintings (never knew what that meant before) 

-There were a lot of very brightly colored landscape paintings. 

-A lot of people had Oklahoma-themed art. I wonder if that sells better?

-The print tent was emptier than I've ever seen it before. I asked one of the print tent volunteers about it and she said "not a lot of artists gave us prints this year" and "I think a lot of them are selling them in their booths"

 

 

 

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I was able to get into this local show on very late notice. This was the first year for the Windsor show and the committee that put the show together gets kudos from everyone I talked to about the smoothness of the operation, how they took care of everyone with multiple volunteers bringing water and snacks, a great reception on Saturday night and a solid organization.


















<1. Roy Schneider was absolutely correct in Jaws when he said 'You need a bigger boat'. Weights and a top line tent are critical.
<2. We were allowed to stake down in addition to weights. In fact we were encouraged by the organizers to do so. That's right! The locals know their weather and had clearly checked with the park on sprinkler line layouts. I did and so did my neighbors.
<3. It looks like there is safety in crowds. Only the one end tent appeared to be damaged in the main group. I was on an east end and we were really swaying for awhile. There was 30 ft gap to my east and then a jeweler with a Trimline that rode out the fury unscathed. (Note to self: Don't take a ridge line. She was located up there and asked to move on setup day). One of flimsiest, saddest looking, blue topped ez-up which should have blown away with a sneeze came through unscathed. It was in the pack and had what looked like 90 lb massive concrete blocks on each corner.
<4. If you have an iPhone, iPad, laptop or other device that you can look at weather maps learn how to use it and get to some of the excellent radar sites available. WeatherUnderground, Intellicast, NOAA, FAA weather. Can help give you an early warning.



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