TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List

Showing posts with label Knitting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Knitting. Show all posts

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Searching for Fiber Art Supplies on Etsy


September means that many of us kick into high gear, producing as much as we can to sell or to give away as gifts during the holiday season. That may mean that we might want some interesting supplies to work with. Where to go in this maze of cyber options? Well, I would like to recommend Etsy as a one stop shopping experience. If you are not familiar with Etsy, it is a marketplace for sellers where each has his or her own shop. Etsy's focus is on handmade arts and crafts, but sellers are also allowed to sell vintage items and supplies.

I have a store there, Rayela Art, and have put most of my "eggs" in this basket. I believe Etsy is the best venue out there in terms of affordability, design, and the community experience it offers. The big drawback is that searching on Etsy can be a nightmare. Many of us also sell on eBay where search is based on drop down menus that start at the most general and work themselves down to the most specific. But, eBay is a clutter nightmare, has become expensive and recent changes in feedback make it a less than pleasant selling experience.

Etsy's system is based on tags that each seller uses to describe the item. This might work if sellers understood how to use tags, but many don't. Improper use of the tags creates chaos. And, search is also time sensitive, so if you look for something specific, the closest match that was listed most recently will pop up, even though your exact item might have been listed a few months ago and has since dropped into Etsy's black hole. Although Etsy's system is not intuitive, understanding how it works can help you find fabulous supplies that you are unlikely to find anywhere else. I wrote another post, How to Search on Etsy, that gives an overview into the many "fun" options Etsy offers in a search experience. Both new and experienced shoppers might find new tips in that post. In this one, allow me to give you a tour on shopping specifically for supplies. Click on the images for larger detailed photos.

When you arrive on Etsy, the front page has a column on the left with entries into the site. The images showcased in the body of the page are favorites that Etsy members have compiled into treasuries. Etsy staff pick different treasuries througout the day so that the images are constantly changing. This is a huge deal for sellers. Every time one of my items has made the front page, my store has increased dramatically in activity. Now, let's zoom into the categories. You can begin your search by entering one of these general descriptions. This list is a little deceptive because all of these categories will take you to handmade items only except for Supplies and Vintage. Those two categories make up a tremendous amount of inventory offered by Etsy sellers for the obvious reason that it is easier to list something that you are re-selling than something that you made (in terms of quantity). Almost all of my items in my Etsy store are supplies or vintage, even though they may be handmade. They are not allowed to be tagged handmade, unless I make it myself. I simply do not have the production time to stock my store with my handcrafted items.

Let's zoom in on Supplies:

That takes you to a page with another breakdown of categories, which sellers may or may not use to describe their item. Note the number of items available in this category at the time of this photo: 293,242 !!! Now, notice the category for commercial. Again, all supplies which are not handmade by the seller will be tagged as commercial, even if they are handmade.

We go into commercial and find that there are 245,709 items listed there, more than 90% of the total items under supplies. This can be very confusing to the buyer as this is not clearly explained by Etsy.
Several months ago Etsy changed their search system to default to handmade items only. There is wonderful commercial fabric on Etsy as well as handmade fabric that might have been imported or found in thrift stores that will not show up under a general fabric search. This change affected my sales profoundly as most of what I have does not show up in the default search anymore. Supply and vintage sellers have asked that Etsy remedy this by making these search options more visible to the buyer, but so far there are only promises of long range plans which will offer a better system.

Let's zoom into a specific fiber art supply. I typed "knitting" into the search bar within the commercial category. Now we have only about 50,000 items to look at, much of which will be yarn.

Now, let's say you want bamboo yarn. If you just type bamboo into the search bar, narrowing the results, other bamboo items will also pop up:

So far we have been looking at search results using the List view. You can also see the results in gallery view which gives you larger images and a more attractive buying experience (right, top of page):
If you searched for knitting supplies without going into commercial, you would get only handmade offerings:
I think this separation confuses buyers, pits sellers against each other (there is resentment as all sellers pay the same fees, but vintage and supplies get less exposure). However, knowing that there is division will help buyers to find what they are looking for whether it is handmade by the seller or not.

Even with this low exposure, Etsy supply sellers have the most quantity of inventory offered on Etsy. I haven't looked at any recent statistics, but although they may have the most quantity, they may not necessarily bring in the most revenue as a great part of their offerings are low ticket items, under $10. One way to find the serious sellers who have an abundance of selection is to go into the Buy tab just above the search bar. There you will find the different ways to search on Etsy, including a link that takes you to Sellers.

Once there, you will see that at this time there are 233,695 sellers! The default selection shows who was the last to update their store. But, you can also search by number of listings. If you look at the low end, you will find pages and pages and pages of sellers with no product: dead stores. But, if you look at the high end, you will find the sellers who have taken their Etsy stores seriously, stocked them to nth degree, and who probably have excellent reputations. Savvy sellers will have good descriptions of their store focus underneath their name. If you page through the first 10 pages, you will find that most of these sellers offer supplies.

From Japan with Love has 2,604 items! Now how do you find anything with so many listings? Etsy only allows us 10 categories, so we try to lump things into these as best as possible. You can also search within the store using your own key words. But, beware! The search will default again to Etsy's larger categories each time you use it, so you have to make sure you are searching within the store, using the drop down meny on the tool bar. I typed in geisha to see what Japan with Love would offer and found a nice selection:

I hope those two tours help you find some new ways of searching for wonderful supplies on Etsy. Believe me! If you need beads, yarn, fabric, felt, needles (make sure you take a look at tools), rubber stamps, patterns or anything you can imagine as a supply, you are likely to find it on Etsy. There have been discussions on Etsy about what exactly the word supply means as anything, if you repurpose it into art, could be a supply: toasters, tvs, etc. Fortunately, most sellers on Etsy are pretty good about being reasonable in what they offer.

Finally, Etsy is about building relationships. It's "who you know". Every seller and buyer on Etsy has a favorites tab where they put what they like. Some keep them private, but most are visible to the public. If you see a store you like, click on their favorites and almost certainly you will find another seller you will like. Etsy sellers have organized themselves into street teams and other groups by theme or interest and market themselves together. The Fiber Focus group on Ning that I started, also has several Etsy sellers, and here I want to point to a few who offer some interesting fiber supplies. Click on their image to visit their store:






I would not be a good business person if I didn't also direct you to my shop on Etsy, Rayela Art. My emphasis is on ethnic fabric remnants, textile stamps, and other handmade supplies for fiber artists although I also have a nice selection of commercial cotton fabric. I have textiles and fabric from India, Pakistan, China, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, Guatemala, Indonesia, Thailand and many other countries.

If you enjoy supporting small businesses, then Etsy is the place to shop! All of us appreciate the business and strive to provide excellent customer service and quick shipping. Many of us also sell finished items that are uniquely ours. I hope this post convinces you to start your search for supplies and gifts on Etsy. Sure, it might be a frustrating process sometimes to finally get to what you want, but if you see it as an adventure, you will be thrilled to find all the treasures you didn't know you wanted!
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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

"Baa, baa, Etsy... Have you any wool?"

Sheep with Backup Singers, 10x10 matted fine art print
"Yes, Sir! Yes, Sir! Three bags full!" Actually, Etsy wool suppliers have bags and bags of wonderful eye-candy, wool spun in all color palettes, textures, and blends catering to the knitter, felter, weaver, and wild fiber artist. For those of us living in the Northern Hemisphere, August reminds us that the warmth of Summer is coming to an end. We had sweltering summer days last week here in Kentucky with temperatures over 100 degrees. Today has been on the chilly side, reminding me of my stash of wool accessories made by my friend, Diane the Yin Yang Knitter. Soon it will be time to get out her fingerless gloves, hats, and neck warmers.

I am not a knitter, weaver, or spinner. But, I do come from farm stock and long for connections that bring me close to the earth. Last year at around Christmas time, I read a post on Etsy's forum that moved me almost to tears. I don't remember the member's name, but there was a wool supplier thanking everyone for their support. Etsy purchases of their wool had helped them save their farm. How often do we really think about the impact our purchases really have on the lives of the suppliers? Yes, the wool on Etsy is going to be more expensive than the finds you can get on eBay, but if objects did have spirits, you can bet that Etsy wool is happy wool.

There are scores of suppliers on Etsy, but I just picked a few examples to wet your whistle. I happen to migrate towards texture and color. You cannot ask for more texture than Yarnzombie's, also known as Gaslight Dyeworks, offerings:

ABALONE Handspun Supercoiled Yarn - 7.15 ounces
'Abalone' was spun from hand dyed combed roving
that includes wool, mohair, soy silk, and nylon sparkle.


Yarn Zombie's blog will dazzle you with more textured visuals, excellent narratives and stories told by this Ohio artist.

I found that many of these yarn people have a great sense of humor. Muriel of Willow Acre Fibers warns you not to eat her chocolate-covered cherry roving, unless you are a sheep!

CHOCOLATE-COVERED CHERRIES Handpainted Fine Merino Roving, 4.125 This roving, or combed top, will felt nicely and it's excellent for spinning. It's very fine 21 micron merino and spins like a dream.

She states in her profile: "I usually set up shop out under my huge willow tree, with some music, tables, roving, dyes, and my 1950's retro Nesco! Spinning under the willow is a little piece of surreal heaven as well. I hope all those lovely days somehow infuse into the fiber that wings its way to you!" Talk about happy yarn! Sounds like a dream to me...

Lisa Weisman of Sexy Sheep moved to North Carolina from New York. She's another one who chuckles as she names her wool. She likes to shred ugly sweaters and make gorgeous, chunky wool like this steel grey wad of glory:

Eno River: recycled sweater, marino, yak down, wensleydale sheep locks 104 yards/4.6 ounces, worsted to bulky weight

Lisa writes about her shredding compulsions, of life in North Carolina and shows some of her knitting in her Re-yarn blog. She has a wonderful writing style. Of a hat and booties she made for a friend's baby, she stated, "Knitting this made my ovaries hurt."

A couple of youngsters from Heidelberg, Germany call themselves Weird and Twisted. They spin, knit and crochet because they can't keep their hands still. Has any research ever been done on how crafting keeps people out of jail? Or, maybe from doing hard drugs? They share a blog in which they seem to be perfectly normal. And, look a sample of their weird and twisted beauty!

This lustrous Art Yarn has been hand spun from hand-dyed, poisonous green and yellow merino/silk blend and then plied with a metallic thread. There are lots of tiny green glass beads and many, many coils.

We are so fortunate to live in time when fiber materials have become so innovative and interesting. The above spinners have used alpaca, sheep's wool, silk and other materials to create their gorgeous textures. Now, bamboo has become a resource increasingly available in many forms to fiber artists. As a quilter, I am excited about the bamboo batting that is hitting the market. Traditions Fiber Arts of Linden, Texas has a nice selection of bamboo yarn and roving. They also carry spinning wheels and other accessories. Judy left her newspaper editor job to pursue a passion for all things fiber.

Y0139 hand dyed Hand spun Bamboo Yarn Silver Fern and Lemon Drops

Farmhouse Weavers has a set up similar to the post I mentioned where Etsy sales saved the farm. They have their own sheep and sell raw fleece, spun yarns and finished woven products.

Working the land and animal husbandry are labor intensive occupations with little social recognition. We've lost many of the mentors that would have been around a hundred years ago who knew the tricks of the trade. I think it is interesting how many of these sellers started out with a hobby like knitting or crocheting, got interested in the source, and worked backwards until they finally landed on a plot of land with feet firmly planted where many had walked so long ago. It takes guts and it also takes a supportive community of buyers to keep them in business.

We started with a sheep and ended with another, but I must say a bit more about the opening photo. Nature Mandela's photos caught my eye when I first started selling on Etsy. I have coveted those singing sheep for a long time now and someday hope to own a copy for myself. Allison Trentelman also makes stunning mandalas out of photoshopped nature images. All of these artists contribute towards careful preservation of our land, our heritage, our creativity and our relationship towards the animals and people around us. Visit their shops, support them with your purchases, and spread the word. (While you're at it, come visit my shop, too... heh, heh)


"Mandalas are a beautiful way to bring harmony to a room and the beauty of nature indoors. All of my mandala prints are created from digital photographs of the Maine natural landscape, and manipulated in Photoshop into the mandala shape. I have created over one thousand mandalas over the last several years. Each mandala is constructed with perfect geometry and presented with high quality archival materials." -Allison Trentelman

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Saturday, July 5, 2008

Guest Artist: Rachel Koniar of Secret Snowbird

Detail, The Wedding

Fibers were not my first love. They were in the peripheral, embroidery on a backpack, sewing a Halloween costume, dabbling there and there. The focus of all my mentors and teachers had been painting, drawing, painting.

Eve


The Battle

The joy of fibers was a backhanded thing; outside of the classroom. It didn’t become a means of expression until I moved to the shores of Lake Superior.

Pea Pod Sculpture

I was studying art education in Duluth which at the time, had enacted a smoking ban. After many previous attempts to snub the habit, it was the combination of smoke free buildings and cold Duluth winters (-20ºF not uncommon) that did it. Cigaretteless and left with the need to fidget, I turned to my knitting needles in earnest. I began knitting a pair of socks between a drawing and a ceramics class.

Rag Rug

This became the first fiber sculpture. The sock was knit down from cuff to toe on a set of five double pointed needles. As the ribbed cuff slowly emerged I was absolutely enamored with its shape. The knit tube would stand on its own when set down: a perfect ribbed cone rising from size two wooden needles. The finished product as a sock was a disappointment. It was a more satisfying form before it had a heal and toe.

Pear Cone Sculptures

My knit sculptures have all since been a variation on the sock cuff form. While I have experimented with different shapes, I always felt it was important to create works in fibers. Mostly I want to add my voice to the craft vs. art debate. Why was it that color added with paint to cloth (canvas) was Art, but color added by thread to cloth was just a quilt? Shouldn’t more embroidery be in art museums? My sculptures are to be a reminder that fibers in one’s home are Art too: the hand stitched sampler, the knit scarf, the hardanger lace, or the hand pieced quilt.

For me, the medium is never far from the message. A sculpture made from a worn out, hand made, rag rug stands as a testament to the beauty of home. To paint with stitches and not a brush is to honor the creative tradition in my maternal line. A soft felted form, is tactile and inviting not unlike a warm blanket.

Sunny Cone Sculptures

While I still paint, knitting is a daily companion. Fibers easily create the most satisfying tactile textures and forms. Who can resist the rhythmic, soothing click of knitting needles? Skeins of wool and wooden needles find their way into every room. Unfinished knit sculptures peak out from baskets and coffee tables, completed felted ones sit atop bookshelves huddled in groups, peering over the ledge. When my work surrounds me- I am home.

Wee Pods

Rachel Koniar is an artist and educator living in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She graduated from the University of Minnesota Duluth in 2005 with a Bachelor’s of Fine Arts in Art Education. Her work has been shown at The Tweed Museum of Art, Nutty Meg’s, Altered Esthetics, and The Beat. While she has taught students ages kindergarten through twelfth through out Minnesota, she is currently teaching 8th graders in Wayzata and a Textiles & Fibers class at Watershed High School in Minneapolis. She has also taught summer classes through the Minneapolis Institute of Art.


You can find Rachel's work and contact her both at her store on Etsy, Secret Snowbird or on her website, Rachel Koniar. She also has PDF patterns for some of her cone sculptures available in her Etsy store.

The Flood

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Thursday, July 3, 2008

KUSIKUY Slow Fashion Pulling Ahead

by Tamara Stenn
KUSIKUY is Slow Fashion.
"Slow Fashion exists in a thoughtful, sustainable apparel market."
- Treehugger Blogger

Slow Fashion garments are carefully hand made of locally sourced, natural materials. There is minimum (if any) processing of these materials. Materials are natural, intact, just as nature intended them to be. This leads to garments that are made with premium fibers, ones that are not weakened through chemical processes and ones that will wear well and last longer.

Kusikuy sells yarn and hand-carved buttons on their website.


KUSIKUY's Andean alpaca is the perfect example of a slow fiber. Our free range, indigenous herds produce the finest alpaca in the world. KUSIKUY sweaters last an average of 10 years and can be machine washed hundreds of time. Slow fashion labor practices are fair. Tailors and knitters are careful experts in garment construction and are paid well for their expertise.

Slow Fashion is also sustainable. Being locally sourced and hand made, cuts down on transportation and helps to grow and support communities. KUSIKUY's indigenous knitters are also organic farmers. Today they are more dependent on sweater production now that the tropical glaciers are melting and drying up. These glaciers once provided water for Andean crops. Now the underground, glacial-fed aquifers are gone. Crops can no longer be grown and a life sustaining income is lost. Knitting has helped to replace some of this lost income through knitting work. Buying fibers direct from local herdsman also extends the earnings made by the community.

Kusikuy Knitters in Bolivia

"Slow Fashion also rejects the trend-focused planned obsolescence that has driven the fashion industry for decades," explains Elaine Lipson, writer, artist and sustainable textile expert. Lispon also explains, "Slow Fashion emphasizes lasting design and craftsmanship, so you can buy fewer clothes with a longer life. Design and color palettes are compatible from season to season, so you can build a wardrobe instead of replacing everything in an increasingly rapid and wasteful cycle. Brand loyalty and quality replace quantity." More information (and books) on slow fashion, organics, and fashion can be found at Lipson's website http://lainie.typepad.com/redthread/2008/01/slow-cloth-fash.html

Slow fashion saves you, the consumer, time and money. No longer you have to spend time and gas traveling to stores constantly shopping for clothes. Slow Fashion clothes last longer, look nicer, and in the long run cost less. Plus you now have favorite clothes you look forward to wearing, have a relationship with, and remember. (Note: How many items do we forget are even in our closets because we never wear them? They are too hard to clean, the color is off, we are waiting for the style to come back in fashion, etc.).

Here's an example: Lets say an average factory made wool sweater costs $35 and lasts a season. Then stitches come apart, it pills, stretches, shrinks, and in general is no longer is in style. So another sweater is purchased the following year at the same throw-away price of $35. In six years $210 and countless hours and gas have been spent on buying and replacing "cheap fashion" sweaters. The average KUSIKUY hand knit, luxury quality, alpaca sweater costs $185 and lasts not six but 10 years! So KUSIKUY sweaters are actually much "cheaper" than the un-sustainable throw-away fashions that we may normally buy.

And the savings is not just in your own purse, but in your world too. By buying a KUSIKUY (or any) Slow Fashion garment, you are saving your world from throw away garments entering landfills, the carbon contamination from overseas shipping, and the use of slave-like labor practices often associated with cheap, factory, "throw away fashion" manufacturing.

Slow fashion is mindful, careful, consumerism that fosters positive relationships with the world and its people, of which we all are a part.


Founded in Bolivia in 1997, KUSIKUY was developed by US Peace Corps volunteer, Tamara Stenn. Upon finishing her work with the Peace Corps she returned to the United States to earn a Masters in Intercultural Management from the School for International Training. Inspired by fellow Fair Trade counterparts, KUSIKUY has grown from a small home based business to become an international internet retailer and wholesaler.

In 2004 KUSIKUY became a proud member of the Organic Trade Association and expanded its line of hand made natural clothing to include EKO certified organic pima cotton. Tamara saw a need for more support for the development of organic clothing cooperatives. In 2001, AYLLU, Inc. a 501c3 non profit, was created to help with grass roots development in the Andes and the education of consumers about of benefits of using Fair Trade and organic products. In June 2007 KUSIKUY's headquarters town, Brattleboro, Vermont, became the 2nd Fair Trade Town in the USA. This initiatve was created and backed by KUSIKUY and AYLLU.


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