Monday, October 31, 2011

october art spark end of month winner -


harvest moon earrings by

deborah lee taylor of e5jewelry!


look for deborah again in november - she is going to be one of our guest bloggers - 

thanks to everyone for their submissions to 'color and movement'... november's challenge is upcoming... 

happy halloween!

Sunday, October 30, 2011

An LMAJ Giveaway

Good Morning..... 

It has been awhile since our last giveaway.  Today we have earrings donated by our own Kelli Pope.  She created these using components from Shannon LeVart (missficklemedia). 

Today I am going to ask that you leave a comment letting us know what kinds of things you find appealing when reading blogs.  Are you looking to learn new techniques with tutorials?  Do you like to hear about selling online and shows, etc?  Do you read blogs for the human interest stories....  getting to know the writers more personally?  Do you read  __________ (fill-in-the-blank)?  If you would like to be entered more than the one time, which will be your answer to one of the questions, then....

Here are some ideas to choose from. Pick one or two depending on how many more times you would like your name thrown into the hat.

1.  Share this giveaway on your own blog with a link back.
2.  Tweet this on your twitter and on a twitter page of someone who follows you.
3.  Check out one of our member's shops and come back to let us know something that you liked and why.
4.  Check out our current Art Spark entries and leave a comment regarding that visit.
5.  Check out our "Strut Your Stuff" on flickr and leave a comment regarding that visit.
6.  Share our blog link with us of someone who creates handmade with handmade and leave our link with them.
7.  Share this on your facebook page with a link back to our blog.
8.  Follow one of our member's blogs that you might not already follow and let us know you did.

Well......  that's LOTS to choose from.  Remember, you can choose up to two for a total of three entries.

If you read further.... and I hope you do, please remember to join us for Art Spark.  Today is the last day to include your entry.  It must be one that involves movement.  A winner will be chosen at random tomorrow, Monday, October 31st.

And..... if you would like to get one month on our blog with a link to your shop, blog, facebook page, etc. we are always open to donations.  We offer jewelry (typically earrings- mostly all handmade please) and beads/components for our challenges.  Those must be handmade.  Please read more about these by clicking the "sponsors" page in the navigation bar above.

Finally, as always.......

~thank-you for supporting those who create handmade with handmade~

MaryAnn Carroll





Saturday, October 29, 2011

leaving the nest

mary jane dodd


this is not about kids getting older and leaving home... 


this is about you - and the wonderful nest of your work area... 


we make incredible connections online with people and groups, don't we? and i am not asking you to leave them behind - 


but do you get out to meet people in your area with similar interests? 


i have started doing just that - i am a member of the nj metal arts guild and through them i have been afforded all kinds of opportunities... our guild happens to have free workshops - good ones... they hold shows, support each other... 


then there are more local groups... for example, we have an arts council in belmar (a nearby beach town)... today was the intake for a show called 'wearable, usable, functional'... so jewelry is in it... and it happens to not be juried... 


i strongly encourage you to see what is available in your area... you can take classes or teach classes... put yourself out there... make some friends... i know what a hermit i can be - working at my bench comes second only to being with the kids... but i won't lie and tell you that some days, if they are off at a friend's house, i am not ecstatic... 


i started teaching classes at a nice bead shop about 30 min from my home... and have met some really nice people... 


here is a list of some guilds... but i encourage you to look and see what else you can come up with... 


think of what you have to gain!

Friday, October 28, 2011

Color and movement


by Kelli Pope


Calm, cool shades of turquoise against antiqued copper..........






dangle and swing from antiqued, hammered brass pendulums







Thanks Mary Jane for this wonderful Art Spark!! It has truly had the creative juices flowing for me all month!

Thursday, October 27, 2011

The Ancient Art of Barter

by Staci L. Smith

Once upon a time, people exchanged goods for goods.  If you raised chickens, you’d trade chickens to the man who had cows, in return for milk.  Now you have milk and chicken, and he has milk and chicken……..Win- win!  How I wish we could barter like that these days.

Well, who says we can’t?

Now, trading is not new to me.  I often trade with fellow artists.  But let me tell you how it all started, how my eyes were opened to the world of barter and trade.   I was at an Art and Craft Show, when a friend of mine who also made jewelry, walked by wearing a VERY expensive handmade shawl.  I had been drooling over those shawls all day (thin loom woven with bead work…awesomeness).  She says, “look what I traded for”.  Hold on………..What?  Traded?  She traded with you, jewelry for that?  Really?  So my friend says, “yeah, I trade all the time”.  And that is how the door was opened. Wow!  It was so wonderful to think, my work for your work.   All you have to do is ask.  I went for it.  Now, not everyone wants what you make, or is able to trade, but most artists are pretty willing to trade.  So, each year I get lots of organic soaps, and Christmas presents by trading.  I have another friend who makes hand dyed and block printed kids clothes, who has probably completely clothed my kids for 5 years!  LOL! 
It can be as simple as this………………………….


A little while ago, I guess it was after the bead soup blog hop, I got the best email.  I mean, how could this not make you feel good about your work?  It said,

Hey Staci!

I just HAD to stop by your shop and tell you how INCREDIBLE your work is! I totally remember seeing your partner's piece with the wings! WOW!

I loved what you did with your soup and the way you patinaed your metal and pieced everything together !

You are SO talented!

xo Genea”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
So, of course, I hop over to see what Genea makes on etsy, and wow, what doesn’t she make?  One of the things she makes is glass beads.  And then I remembered seeing them in the hop….Oh yeah, they were drool worthy.  She even had hearts with wings, and you know I love hearts with wings.

So I emailed her back- told her I love her work………………..and……………………..I would be willing to trade if she wanted to….beads for beads. 

I am so happy I took that step. We chose things we liked from each others shops, exchanged lots of emails, and really got to know each other bit through the whole process.  I told her a style I liked and she ran with it.  I want to share what she made for me!  Get ready to drool………………………….

I am so happy to have met such a talented artist, to have made a friend in this process of trade, and to know these are in the mail to me............(insert big grin here).

So- I didn't write this to brag (though I do love those beads), I want to encourage you to get out there and barter.  Even if things don't work out, it brings back something we have lost this day in age, and thats communication.  You make friends, you chat, ask each other questions, and get to know a fellow artist through the process.  And it feels good, its like giving gifts at Christmas time- and everyone is happy.

I am doing one last trade of the season with our very own Mary Ann Carroll.  We thought it would be a fun way to cross promote one another.  I don't think she trades much, but its for business, sooooo....................you will be seeing some Staci Louise jewelry including her beads in the future too!

I will say this again- don't be discouraged if someone can't trade.  I know I can't always do it.  A lot of times I need my inventory in the shop, or for my shows.........so don't take it personal.  Thank the person and keep in touch.  Perhaps in the future they will be able to.

So how about you?  Do you trade?  What was your favorite trade?  Have you met any new friends through the bartering process?



Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Simple Ceramic Button Clasp

by Summers Studio


I learned how to make this style of clasp from Lorelei Eurto. It's a simple way to make a focal out of a large ceramic button.


                                     

It's essentially a variation on an S style clasp. I used quite heavy gauge wire in this one, 16 gauge, so that I'd get a nice sturdy clasp that wouldn't warp under the stress of being worn. One of the problems I had with it though was that the button wobbled on the wire. But I had one of those eureka moments, which really do not happen often enough.


I used a smaller gauge wire and wound it back through the button holes to sturdy up the clasp. Now it looks a bit like the button is sewn on.

Want more details on how to make this type of clasp? Click here to go see Lorelei's excellent video of her technique.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Are you a cluttered creative?

by Patty Lakinsmith


My name is Patty and I am a cluttered creative.  There, I admit it.  It's gotten to the point where I need to have a few grown up words with this demon.  My creative space, my office, my bedroom closet, my garage - where to start?  There are so many targets of opportunity.  Don't get me wrong - you won't be seeing me on an episode of "Hoarders" any time soon (probably never), but the ratio of stuff to space has just become a little overwhelming in our small space.  My ability to create is hampered by my inability to find things on my crowded workbench, and there is no free space to start new projects.  I have purchased special storage containers, and have even started using some of them, but I fall down in the regular upkeep.  I am weighed down by a feeling of overwhelm.

The key, I'm told, is that once you purge your life of clutter, you make room for new things, new joy, and new experiences.  Since my mantra for this year is "Release", I plan to interpret it literally and make some hard decisions.  Release materials I know deep inside that I'll never use.  Release clothing I should have never bought, or no longer wear.  Release my mind from old ways of thinking to embrace the new.  Right.  Easier said than done.

And then I found Jennifer Hofmann over at the inspiredhomeoffice.com blog, and I am hopeful.  Her site is aimed at creative people, and she has a ton of great, gentle advice.  I clicked on the cloud tag "clutter", and found this great set of posts.  I was hooked the minute I read this "Manifesto for Cluttered Creatives", and it starts like this...
I have the right to express myself 
(c) Jennifer Hofmann, Inspired Home Office.com

to live my life as I see fit
to say no and mean it
to say yes with my whole being to what I love

I have the right to my own creative space
to draw a real or imaginary line around my domain and claim it for myself
to a door that closes
to absolute silence when I need it

I have the right to spread out
to interact with my ideas
to see them
to touch them
and doodle in the margins
until the ideas seep into my bones and become mine

I have a right to a sacred space
that is free from intrusions
that is free from guilt
that completely supports my spirit
that is truly sacred space
powerful as an ancient circle of standing stones...

for the rest of this wonderfully inspiring manifesto visit the inspiredhomeoffice website.

Invigorated by what I read, I attacked my closet last weekend, and I won.  A small closet, and as such, a small victory, but a monumental boost for my morale.  Does anyone need any hangers?  Not the wire ones from the dry cleaners - those are all bundled up ready to return.  I actually have free plastic, metal, and wooden hangars, and free cubby space in the closet.  And floor space.  And room to move hangers about on the rod.  Hot damn.  I've got a carload of items for Goodwill and a small pile of decent things that can actually go to the wonderful Career Closet.  Yay.  Baby steps, right?

My attention next turned to the guest room I use as a temporary office, and I made some headway.  Two bags of shredded paper, and dwindling piles. I can see the light at the end of the tunnel.

Now I need to go face the hydra in my studio...

and this is only one fraction of the space...

Are you like me, or have you already found the secret to avoiding this kind of disaster?  Do tell...I'm with you either way in this never ending quest for simplicity, harmony, and opportunity. 

art spark designer of the week

mary jane dodd


fire necklace - by juliette

i love juliette's beautiful leaf and the soft variety of color she integrates into the design... 

congratulations are also in order for our own staci louise - she is the art bead scene's designer of the week:


we here at lmaj have been rethinking one of the limitations we placed on your art spark submissions - that is, holding you to one... 

why should you be limited? you aren't, not anymore... but here is where there is a limit... no matter how many pieces you submit, you will be entered for the final giveaway once... that's fair, right? and to give as many people a chance to shine as we can, you can only be chosen for the designer of the week once (ok, unless no one else has entered... but we are hoping that won't happen... let's make sure that doesn't happen - we love to see what you are making...)

so off you go - thank you for uploading to our flickr group and for participating... you still have until the 30th to submit in order to be in the running for the great giveaway... 





Sunday, October 23, 2011

Get to Know Carol...


by MaryAnn Carroll

Welcome to our Sunday morning interview.  I'm going to start by saying that I got a little discombobulated in recent months, so if I discussed an interview with you, please let me know.  Thank-you for understanding.  I also want to give some kudos to blogger for this new interface.  I'm not sure if this is just new to me, but WOW, it is sooooo much easier to work with.
Now, that I've gotten those off of my to-do list, I'd like to introduce you to my new online friend Carol Dekle-Foss.  I asked Carol to share a little about herself, so my introduction will be left to her.

Meet Carol~

For starters I am a wife to a great man who not only puts up with my crazy ideas but supports me, and a mom to a full grown son who is currently in the Air force in Afghanistan.

I have always been passionate about art and design and when my son turned two I went to college and got my AA degree in Interior Design.  I have worked for many different design studios and my last employer was Thomasville furniture where I worked for 8 years as a senior design consultant. I began to feel unchallenged and started working on my own consulting business that focused on environmental interior design.  Then my life was turned upside down when I was diagnosed with breast cancer. I faced my mortality and in doing so realized what is important in life my and threw out all the rest. I changed my life completely. I quit my job, started a home-based jewelry business and now work part-time with my father as an electrician’s assistant. (Yes, I wear an electrician’s tool belt) I love my life and smile everyday just knowing that I am free to do whatever I want. I now live in the moment and am grateful for each and every day. Ok, minus the braces.


 


What I found very interesting is that you have a wide range of interests.  One that stood out to me was your interest in chickens and gardening.  Please tell us a little about that.



What I like most about having chickens and a garden is saving money on my grocery bill! Everything I do is organic and I grow lots of heirloom varieties. There are so many advantages to raising chickens and having a garden. Even if you have two or three hens and a little garden plot, you can save money, eat healthier and get exercise. I get so much more out of having a little farm than just veggies and eggs. Next is a goat!





What you design is very unique.  How were you first introduced to sand carving?  Please summarize a little about what sand carving is.

I am an intuitive type of person and try to listen to all the signs that are put before me. I love the earth’s elements. Water, fire, air, earth. So sand carving designs onto semi-precious gemstones seemed like the natural thing for me to do. I am self-taught sand carver, and my husband and I built most of my equipment from scratch. I go through a lot of steps before I get to the finished product. I am working on a tutorial for my blog that is going to give detailed step by step instructions with pictures but for now I will give you a brief summary: I start with a design, either hand- drawn or manipulated royalty-free graphics. I then expose onto photo-resist paper and wash it out with hot water. After the film is dry I place it on the stone and sandblast!  I mix and match acrylic paints to get the effect for each stone I am working with and then airbrush the stone.






 You are fairly new to selling on Etsy.  What has that experience been like?


 Etsy is perfect for an itty bitty biz like mine. The fees are reasonable, and the platform is easy to work with. I have had only a few sales so far, but I am working on building a clientele base and that just takes time.  I love the fact that I can reach people all over the world. So far I have clients in Italy and Sweden. That rocks!








Another interest I noticed was photography.  Do you have any tips to offer our readers when it comes to taking pictures of beads/components or jewelry?


Photography has been a challenge for me because I am a perfectionist and I could never get the shots I wanted.  My son loves his mama very much and bought me a Canon Rebel. I studied all I could online about photography and now can shoot in manual. We built a light box but I ended up using natural light for all my shots.  I use a 50mm lens most of the time so I can get real good close ups and set my aperture so I can get a shallow depth of field. I am still learning about photography, but what has worked for me is a good camera and learning how light influences the shot.





How has your background with interior design carried over to jewelry design if it does?  If it doesn't, what are the differences and difficulties when you have been trained on a large scale to transfer to a small scale?

As an interior designer I try to get an intuitive sense about what the customer wants with their designs and I utilize as many different elements as I can to create variety. With jewelry, it’s very similar, just on a smaller scale. I also have a passion for environmental interior design and will possibly pursue this in the near future.


What are any words of wisdom that you might have to share with our readers regarding selling jewelry based on your own experience?

First, I think you have to really like and believe in what you are doing to be successful at selling your handmade goods. Second, what I have learned from Love My Art Jewelry and other blogs is that you have to sell in many different venues such as boutiques, craft fairs, Etsy, home parties etc. I am still trying to figure out what is going to work for me, but for now, I am enjoying the creative process of making my jewelry.





 






Do you participate in shows?  If yes, please tell us about that.  If no, is that something that you see in your future?

I have done one show, it was a local parade and I sold 4 necklaces. I have signed up for two craft fairs in November and I am very excited to see how they go. Wish me luck!



What is your favorite part about creating handmade with handmade?

There are so many reasons to purchase handmade. It affects us all on a global level. The handmade market place has seen a huge increase over the last few years and I am happy to be a part of that movement. It is very healing for me to create handmade wearable art, and when someone purchases my jewelry I feel like I have given them a little piece of my heart.


Carol, Thank-you for sharing so much about yourself. 


The following picture, I thought, went along with Staci's post about home shows and displays.  Carol offers a tutorial walking you through the necklace displays that you see here.





I also thought I would share Carol's impressive packaging.  I'm always amazed by those of you out there that make an art in the packaging alone!  Me.....  well......  My grandson's latest gift came wrapped in the Babies R Us bags...  It was a big gift......  but.....   Nonnie, please........

To learn more about Carol, please go to her blog~

Terra Rustica Design



And for items offered in her shop~

Terra Rustica Design



Saturday, October 22, 2011

every person, every moment ~

mary jane dodd

'never underestimate the power of dreams 
and the influence of the human spirit.
we are all the same in this notion:
the potential for greatness lives within each of us.'
~ wilma rudolph

nascent - coming into being...

view each day, each moment as an opportunity to nurture that within you and around you...

do that which you fear, pursue your dreams, be authentic... 






Friday, October 21, 2011

Falling for the season......................

by Staci L. Smith

Living in the Eastern US, we get a colorful, cool and crisp fall (though its always too short for my liking).  The air is still warm in the day, and chilly at night.  Some days, the clouds block the sun, and you need to wear a sweatshirt with your shorts.  Its the time of year to layer clothes, smell wood stoves firing up for the season, sit around campfires with friends, jump in leaf piles, smell crisp fresh air, hear leaves crunch as you walk, and indulge all five senses in the wonder of Fall!

So, I would like to honor this season with some etsy favorites.  I threw some cool "color" beads in there to keep with the color portion of this months Art Spark- but mostly, its all the things I love about fall, like pumpkins and Halloween.  Halloween has always been a time when I could dress up and be anyone I wanted to!  And if you lived inside my head (be glad you don't) you'd see there are a millions things I dream of being!  I have also been a fan of the Grateful Dead since my young teen years, and so, the sugar skulls remind me of all the fun I had learning about life in that scene, as well as bringing a little Macabre to this month.  OH- and lets not forget babies in pumkin hats- all my kids were fall babies, so, I just melt over these little cuties.  So without further ado, a little trip through my brain in this most favorite season of mine~ handmade style.  (click the pics to go to the listing)

Enjoy!

Enjoy!!!!
















I am curious what fall is like where you live?  Do you have any favorite fall traditions????

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Selling Your Handmade Jewelry at Shows Part 1: Home Shows

I started out selling my jewelry at home shows.  It was a big leap for me (you know, from just my mom and friends buying it), but it was the only way I knew to sell it at the time (the whole online thing was just beginning to boom, and I had dial up!)  When I first decided to do a home show, I didn’t even have enough inventory to sell (I made gemstone jewelry back then).  So I made samples of things I could recreate, and made a catalog, so you could pick your gemstone, color, clasp and lengths…………….and I made jewelry to order.  I had some items they could purchase that day, but most of my sales were pre-ordered, and then I used the money from that day to buy the materials and make the jewelry.  It was a lot of work, and I don’t recommend it.  The artist in me was crying “I don’t want to make the same thing again in a new color!!!!”  However, I needed money to grow my business, and I muddled through it.  What I did like about those shows, was making something custom for each person.  I enjoyed knowing they would be getting a piece that they picked and customized, and that they would love.  I found my old catalog over the winter, when I finally set up my studio, and it was a riot!  I will share some of it with you.....................don't laugh!!!

Well, that all seems like forever ago (10 years).  I still do home shows, but my jewelry and my philosophy have changed.  My work is really one of a kind now, although, I can do similar styles, but none will be identical.  And let me tell you, that feels better!  The inventory at the show is entirely available for purchase on the spot.  What hasn't changed, is the fun of getting up close and personal with your buyers.  Home shows can be pure fun!

Here are some tips I'd like to share with you for creating a successful home show:

1.      Have enough inventory and if not have samples with “made to order” forms.  Make sure the inventory you have is a variety of shapes and sizes: for example, triple strand necklaces to simple pendants…….long ones, short ones, you get it, right?  Keep it your style, but have something for everyone too.  And never forget EARRINGS!  Ladies love their earrings! (and they make great gifts)
2.    Make sure your hostess sends out invitations that have all your information on them (web site, blog, shop), a sample of your work they can see and what forms of payment you accept so they can come prepared.  Have your hostess send out a lot, in hopes a fraction of the people can make it.  I get mine made at vista print when they have their free offers for postcards.
3.    Have a show special today only- like earrings $18 each or 2 / $15  or buy a necklace at full price and get earrings $5 off- you want to encourage people to buy today (and not just take a card for later), since you went through the work of being there. 
4.    Incentive for the hostess- make it worth her while.  This is going to vary for each business....I can't tell you what to give.  I gave a certain percentage off for every couple hundred $$ the show made, and if it was above $500, they got the special hostess bracelet or pendant free (usually something I was promoting at the time) or a half price item, ect…..figure out what works for you, write it up and stick to it.
5.    Do a door prize- two entries if you bring a friend- always a hit!  Encourages more people to come.
6.    Try to sell within your market- if you have modern jewelry you may not want to do a show for the elderly

7.    Don’t do a big ol’ speech about handmade jewelry, or the history of metal, ect…just be yourself and talk about the jewelry as people look at it.  For example: "oh, that bead was etched by me, or that’s a lampwork bead made by so and so, or that is made from recycled materials"…people like it when you are just yourself and natural.
8.    Bring your TOOLS and some beads so you can do adjustments and or make matching earrings:  I have a couple general bead containers that have a little bit of everything in them, and it has saved my butt many times.  I often end up changing the little bead at the end of the necklace, or making matching earrings for something.  (side note: my  opinion on matching earrings is that it’s a waste of time to make them for every necklace.  You may have many people who want them to match, but when you have even have half of the sales that don’t, you wind up with lots of odd earrings.  I like to offer to make them as needed, and just have more universal earrings for sale, like mixed metals and beads I use in a lot of designs….just how I do it due to overwhelming amounts of earrings that were never purchased to match)

pictures of what I bring to shows with me- plus wire and tools!!!!

9. Have signs and prices to make it easier for people, you can’t be everywhere at once.  I also highly reccomend making them on the computer, use the same font for all of them, print them on cardstock, and laminate them (so when you move onto outdoor shows, they don't get ruined).  I have a running file saved so I can add signs as needed and print new ones, and for laminate, I just use the self stick kind for pictures.

10.  Be organized at your “checkout” spot, give them a receipt, and bag the item nicely , include your card and make sure the area has room for them to set down their things and write a check
11. Credit card option- you WILL sell more if you take credit cards.  It’s just a fact.  Besides, not everyone carries cash.  I use Square and recommend it if you are just starting out in shows.  First of all, you don't need to sign a contract and apply for a merchant account.  There are no monthly fees or per transaction fees.  They only charge 2.75% of each transaction AND they send you the card reader for free!!!!  The only downside is you need a smart phone with internet.  I LOVE Square- I don't miss the paperwork, I get my approvals immediatley, and the money is in my account the next day, already minus the fees.  I think Intiut also has a similar plan, but they do charge a monthly fee if you go over $1,000 per month...... and I haven't used them personally, so I can't give them a personal reccomend.
     If you don't have a smart phone, I would reccomend a company that you can open and close seasonally, so you don't pay for months you are not using it.  Plus, you need to sign a contract that will have penalties if you cancel early, so be careful.  Many of my friends like Propay, though I have never used them myself, they get high reviews from friends.  They have many different plans so you can find one that suits your needs, and its all laid out for you on their website, no hidden fees.
12.  Displays:  last but not least.....I could probably do a whole post on them, but I will try to sum it up.
a.  Make sure it represents your style
b. Use floor length table cloths in a neutral color  / pattern (so it doesn't distract) and I prefer a material that doesn't wrinkle, like a thick polyester- because I don't fold well or iron!
c. Use objects, crates and shelves to create multi-level display area- this accomplishes two things, it gives you more surface area to work with, and it creates good flow (just like in design- you want to eye to carry through seemlessly without disruption)  I like to use crates, because they can also double as storage to transport items to and from your show
d. Try to display some or most of your jewelry so they can see it, and how it lays (too many necklaces hanging side by side will be hard for them to visualize).  You can use picture frames, pads with u-pins, or bust displays.  I like Nile Corp. for bust displays.  They have great prices and reasonable shipping.  I also started using these (they are on sale- kinda cheap, but I stained them and now they look amazing)


so that I can just stack them back up at the end of the show.  (I will have more on set up, tear down and your display in the Juried and Outdoor Shows: Part 2 of this series)  I use U-pins to hold their shape (you can get them here on etsy) and I like how those boxes frame my work.  They also double for taking my jewelry to shops (which I haven't done yet, I am such a wuss!)
   You can use dishes filled with lentils or rice, picture frames with mesh, driftwood, pretty boxes stacked up......possibilities are endless.  Just remember, your jewelry should be the star, not the display.  The display should compliment, but not overpower your jewelry.  Here are some ideas..........

I love how Sandra Miller of Beaded by Sandra used lentils and beans in her display, to bring some color and contrast................


AND she use baskets and serving trays to create that multi-tiered apprearance on her table.
She also used household items for displays- a great idea if you don't have the money to invest, or if you just like to be creative and different with your display.  Below is a picture frame she used to display bracelets....................
 and a decorative candle cover to hang earrings from!
 
Below is a display Shannon C. of For my Sweet Daughter did for a shop she sells in.............I really like the little bust displays she used to showcase each necklace, and her creative frame for earrings as well!  Very nice set up in a small space, just like you may be challenged with in a home.

 
Below are a few displays for purchse on etsy.............just love the unique finds on there!
 Found on etsy here
found on etsy here

And these driftwood displays were the best I've seen around, and Miss Fickle Media used to carry them, but it looks like she's all out right now.................love these...................

What else can I say???  Have fun.  Meet your customers and talk with them, relax.  Not everyone will think you are awesome, and thats just their loss, so don't let a couple disinterested folks get you down.  Everyone's style is different.  I know for me, my style is different, and not everyone is bold enough to wear it.  I can't let that make me shy about putting it out there.  So talk to your friends, and book a home show.  I promise, it will be fun.  Good luck! 
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