Results seemed mixed this year. Some artists were having terrific sales while others were disappointed.

Friday was quite slow for the artists in my area. I stuck close to my booth since sales were steady, but mostly for low end stuff. It was not the kind of audience one would normally expect for this show. Lots of bargaining and "Do you have this in a smaller size?" while holding up a fifteen dollar piece of a size I plan to get rid of as soon as the economy improves. If not sooner. Saturday was quite a bit better.

Friday and Saturday were perfect, weatherwise. Sunday sales started out very strong. The local weatherman happened to be on the stage behind me at one point and announced the expected rains would not show up and we could expect nice weather for the show. So of course the rain started around one o'clock and quickly became heavy. The show died at that point and around three thirty they announced we could start packing. People with phone radar passed the word it would be better to wait an hour instead of packing up in the downpour. Fortunately the winds weren't too bad.

I did not go to the award dinner and did not know who the winners were this year. None of my stuff got picked and I selfishly lost interest. The first judge seemed very interested in one of my barber shop photos until he learned I use Photoshop. Then he ejected. His dot lady wished me good luck with the show before scrambling to catch up. I missed the second judge.

Judge number two came by for a second time later in the day Friday wearing a vaguely desperate expression. When he got in my booth he reminded me of someone looking for a wrench the hardware store was out of. He left quickly. I heard later they felt they had not picked enough stuff.

A photographer who has been struggling with unappreciative crowds elsewhere came in at 6K, rain and all. An artist in front of me did about 1500 for the show, which was down from 6K two years earlier. The fellow who was selling hats did very well. I won't quote the rumors on his total take. An old time photographer who has done the show for years said the crowd was not what he was used to for that area. We're talking funnel cake vs foie gras type people.

An artist who does wonderful gourds was not having a good show. A painter not far from me got lucky when someone he'd never seen before bought thousands of dollars worth at one shot. Still another photographer reported disappointing sales.

My total was a bit over half of my 2007 sales. Had the weather stayed nice, it might have been off only a third.
Ann was with relatives in Colorado this weekend so I didn't have the time to talk artists who weren't nearby.

Setup was not bad at all and teardown was OK. Some people had to dolly, but it's a small complaint when you're in this kind of a show. I plan to apply again and if they take me back I hope the weather and economy will be better.





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  • The picture does not look like Winter Park, Colorado FYI, please add location of show. I think this must be Winter Oark, FL?
  • The real highlite of Winter Park is the bowling after the awards dinner. Organized by Bill Kid and Matthew Hatala, over forty exhibitors met at the bowling alley at Fairbanks and Orlando Avenue. Great fun. We bowled till eleven pm. Andy Shea
  • This sounds like a repeat of our last exhibiting at Winter Park. We had done well the previous year, this time we had an excellent corner space on the street, won an award, it started raining like crazy halfway through Sunday, chose to not go back ever again -- a long way (Michigan to central Florida) to go for one mediocre show. So disappointing.

    Surely there are going to be some good reports! Vicki and Lance you helped out last year -- where is everyone? We need more details on this big event. Please.
  • I was there, too. Sales were about 30% of my last visit there, pretty disappointing. Mostly just little stuff. I did get the nod for an award though, as did Chris Honeysett, across from me. I took a chance and showed all black and white / sepia. It's all "Photoshop" now, although I use Lightroom much more than I use Photoshop these days. I think Chris Honeysett's BW is now digital as well. There were five awards in a row on our little "street" in the park.

    Sunday started out strong, but died as soon as the rain started. A pity. We put all the art away when the show closed and zipped the tent. Went to Starbucks for a coffee, then after the rain stopped got a spot for the Artanic on Morse and were able to dolly out effectively. Just got home today and dried out all of the tent panels.

    I don't think there's been a show in the past six weeks that I've done where it didn't rain at least for setup or teardown. I'm still shaking the water out of my shoes.
  • That is the longest "very brief impression" I've ever read. Good job Bill! I was at Art At The Ranch last weekend. I'll try to write a little write up about it soon.
  • Nice write up, Bill. Great photo, also. I had a river running through the back of my booth at one point - I think I had about 4 inches of water running into the drain behind me. I was real sorry to see the rains come, as Sunday had always been my best day here in the past. As you know, I had a good show, so I won't complain. :) Luckily, I didn't experience the bargainers, and I sold a fair number of framed pieces.

    I did go to the award dinner. It was nice, they had a cheese/pasta dish, salad, chicken, cookies and brownies, and wine and beer. I believe the only photography that was picked was B/W, so I can see how the idea of photoshop might have turned them off. Folks need to realize that in this day and age, if you use a digital camera to its highest capabilities, ie, shoot in RAW format, you HAVE to use photoshop, or some sort of image processing. Oh, well, I'll get off my soap box now...
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