Archive for March, 2009

Some upcoming shows that look amazing.

Posted in NYC, events, music, shows on March 31st, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment


show listings via other music.


Bowery Ballroom :
6 Delancey St. (at Bowery)
New York, NY

Apr-02-09 Asobi Seksu $14
Apr-30-09 Bat for Lashes $16
May-03-09 Vetiver $16


Highline Ballroom :

Apr-23-09 Simian Mobile Disco $16


Le Poisson Rouge:
158 Bleeker Street
New York, NY

Apr-28-09 Windy & Carl/Benoit Pioulard $13



Music Hall of Williamsburg:
66 N. 6th St.
Brooklyn, NY

May-02-09 Bat for Lashes $16


Webster Hall :
125 East 11th St. (btwn. 3rd and 4th Avenues)
New York, NY

Apr-03-09 The Presets $19
Apr-06-09 Mates of State/Black Kids $23
Apr-10-09 The Faint/Ladytron $19
May-07-09 Junior Boys $19

john phillips for LIFE magazine

Posted in inspired by, one can dream, photography on March 29th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment


Young woman being dumped from her bed as part of a game offered during the World's Fair.
Location: New York, NY, US
Date taken: 1940
Photographer: John Phillips

inspired by: Joanna Kustra

Posted in inspired by, photography, photoshop on March 29th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment




Loving the big bird's nest pretty hair, lace, and painterly facade on these photos by Joanna Kustra, just in time for Easter.


via: foto decadent.

jersey city drawing club – session 2 notes

Posted in art drawings, drawing club, jersey city on March 27th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment
drawing club week 2
View large.



In attendance: Allison, Emily, Caitlin, Frank, Kate, James, Lizzy
On the menu this week: chips and salsa, ginger cookies, Stella Artois, japanese rice snacks, roasted pistachios, almonds from Subia's, yellow peeps and PBR.
This week's winner: no winners or losers here, though I was chided for my lack of planning regarding the concept of still life. Rightfully so.
JP offered to have the next session at his place, in Liberty Harbour. Stay tuned.




Anyone who was at drawing club last night at our place will appreciate this Serious Drawings book coming out by Marc Johns. Found via Drawn! blog.

Also of note:
NYC lego blocks, and Maira Kalman via Frank.
The Happy Lion via Kate.
Lone Wolf and Cub, beloved by James.

the other living room

Posted in apartment therapy, home life, jersey city, photography on March 27th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment
photo by Rory

I love when Rory makes panoramic images, especially of home life things.

sewing for craft dollars

Posted in craft, craft fairs, embroidery, emilyaugust, etsy, jersey city craft mafia, pillows, sewing on March 24th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment
sewing


Preparing for the LITM craft show this weekend. I've made a few feathery hair things, stapled a pile of zines, and ordered lots of copies of my CD-r from Monotone Records, but I am proudest of these vintage linen pillows sewn from rescued flea market remnants in fantastic shape. They are luxurious and took a lot of pressing and detail work.

sewing


I'm also pretty stoked on my banner, even if I DID get epoxy on it this weekend. Argh.

Anyway, wishing I didn't have to do my real job for the rest of this week because I'm so excited for the craft fair! I can't wait to stamp out some tags for pricing, and figure out how I'm going to bag my wares! See you at the show (pretend I just sang that at you like I am the lead singer in a pop punk band)!

recent photo cred thanks

Posted in emilyaugust, links, photography on March 24th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment
pompadours


Thanks to Lina Haskel for featuring my photos of the World of Style rockabilly opening on her web site, and to James for reposting them on Draw and Quarter!

jersey city drawing club – session 1 notes

Posted in art drawings, drawing club, jersey city on March 20th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment
drawing club
view large


In attendance: JP, Katie, Allison, Rory, Emily
Decided: weekly meetings, still life setup next time
Handshake: undecided
On the menu this week: maker's mark impromptu punch, salted pistachios, fresh baked chocolate chip cookies, green tea, red wine
Number of drawings: we didn't count
This week's winner: Ruby / none

disappearing polaroid

Posted in Uncategorized on March 19th, 2009 by emily august – 1 Comment

personal branding for craft scene kids: part four

Posted in authenticity, etsy, givewaways, inspired by, personal branding on March 19th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment


Last Thoughts

Brand yourself. You are your own brand. Even if you hate the idea of it, you are presenting an image that others are responding to on first glance. Work it to your advantage and to the entertainment of your new audience.

There are millions of people who do what you do and unfortunately you are probably not special. Disagree? Prove it: Show me why your shop is special. The more creatively you present yourself, the more points I will give you.

Don't sell yourself before you're valuable by flooding your blog with advertising. The blogs that are successful advertising revenues have real content and are not just there to garner comment counts. This is a trust issue for your potential customers.

Build support by sharing your success with others in a non-competitive, generous way. That's how the DIY world has always worked. On a related note, Reviews and giveaways are most effective when you are genuinely excited and invested in the giveaway. Don't use them as your sole comment-getting attention scheme. Yet, think about your favorite blog. Every so often when a giveaway is posted, you see hundreds of comments flooding in with love and genuine praise for the author. That should be your goal: Quality not Quantity. Develop a following on authenticity.

Trade in your camera phone for a digital camera and get good photos. Lots of good tips online of how to do this. Get a tripod to avoid blurry shots and learn about lighting. More on this in another post.

Have fun but also realize that your products are in a market where they will be taken into someone else's home and used or handled. How are your products going to hold up? If not well, then, please reconsider.

Here are some further resources on getting a great image:

Lifehack:
5 Things to Do Before You Build Your Personal Brand

Freelance Advisor:
Marketing yourself: 7 steps to creating the right impression


Shop 101
Seller Handbook
The Art of Pricing


The Brand Called You | Fast Company




Web 2.0 Expo NY: Gary Vaynerchuk (Wine Library)
Building Personal Brand Within the Social Media Landscape

(Note: This presentation contains adult language.)
"You need to build brand equity in yourself."
"If you love it, you will win."
"The only way to succeed now is to be completely transparent."




via ThinkSimpleNow:
How to Design Your Ideal Life
The Popularity Factor

personal branding for craft scene kids: part four

Posted in etsy, inspired by, personal branding on March 19th, 2009 by emily august – Be the first to comment

Last Thoughts

Brand yourself. You are your own brand. Even if you hate the idea of it, you are presenting an image that others are responding to on first glance. Work it to your advantage and to the entertainment of your new audience.

There are millions of people who do what you do and unfortunately you are probably not special. Disagree? Prove it: Show me why your shop is special. The more creatively you present yourself, the more points I will give you.

Don’t sell yourself before you’re valuable by flooding your blog with advertising. The blogs that are successful advertising revenues have real content and are not just there to garner comment counts. This is a trust issue for your potential customers.

Build support by sharing your success with others in a non-competitive, generous way. That’s how the DIY world has always worked. On a related note, Reviews and giveaways are most effective when you are genuinely excited and invested in the giveaway. Don’t use them as your sole comment-getting attention scheme. Yet, think about your favorite blog. Every so often when a giveaway is posted, you see hundreds of comments flooding in with love and genuine praise for the author. That should be your goal: Quality not Quantity. Develop a following on authenticity.

Trade in your camera phone for a digital camera and get good photos. Lots of good tips online of how to do this. Get a tripod to avoid blurry shots and learn about lighting. More on this in another post.

Have fun but also realize that your products are in a market where they will be taken into someone else’s home and used or handled. How are your products going to hold up? If not well, then, please reconsider.

Here are some further resources on getting a great image:

Lifehack:
5 Things to Do Before You Build Your Personal Brand

Freelance Advisor:
Marketing yourself: 7 steps to creating the right impression


Shop 101
Seller Handbook
The Art of Pricing


The Brand Called You | Fast Company



Web 2.0 Expo NY: Gary Vaynerchuk (Wine Library)
Building Personal Brand Within the Social Media Landscape

(Note: This presentation contains adult language.)
“You need to build brand equity in yourself.”
“If you love it, you will win.”
“The only way to succeed now is to be completely transparent.”


via ThinkSimpleNow:
How to Design Your Ideal Life
The Popularity Factor

I have had this song stuck in my head since like 1989.

Posted in music on March 18th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment



I just now thought to google it and see what it was.

Now Allison is playing me tracks off the new Royksopp album. Umm. Summer 2009, kids. Oh, that girl from the Knife kills me.

personal branding for craft scene kids: part three

Posted in authenticity, craft, etsy, marketing, personal branding, promotions, self on March 18th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment


The Influx of Things We Can Do Without



Typically when I tell friends that I sell on ETSY, presuming they know what ETSY is, they have one of two reactions:


They say:

1. Oh, that's great! What do you sell?

-or-

2. Oh. Yeah, I've been on that site. There's a lot of... interesting... stuff...



Stuff. Meaning junk so offensively poorly made and/or poorly presented that you wouldn't buy it from your own grandmother if she was having a yard sale to raise funds for her prescription meds. Inwardly I always cringe at that second response. I hope you don't think I'm being mean by saying so but it is really easy to spot those trying to make a quick buck from something that they've put no time or effort into perfecting. Try to think of your art as something requiring discipline and attention. Take the time to craft an image and a story behind what you're doing. Pick your schtick and stick to it until you are proud of it, then ask yourself if you would want to buy what you are uploading. But, like, seriously. Would you really?

Now, please don't take that last sentiment as discouragement. I want you to challenge yourself to actually create, authentically create! Learn your craft and do it well. Seek some help from a friend with great photos to figure out how they do it (I owe this to one friend who is asking me and I can't wait to go help as soon as I can). Become a cleaner knitter. Learn to finish the raw edges in your garments. Take the time to do something other than the easy way out.


BE AUTHENTIC

Another trend is blogging for advertising dollars, instead of putting a real love and attention to detail into content. It sounds like a fundamental truth of keeping a blog, to be yourself, but I'm sure we've all gotten the comments on blogs from those just fishing for comments on their own posts.

Instead, stand out and Be Authentic. It is so important to your personal brand and establishes a level of trust with your audience immediately. I favor authenticity and new perspectives, and Hikaru's shop was the perfect example for me to express that.




Now, I say this as I know I have work to do on my own shop! How about you?

personal branding for craft scene kids: part two

Posted in advanced style, art, art drawings, authenticity, marketing, personal branding, promotions, writing on March 18th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment


You and I and even your little brother knows that CRAFTS, SEWING, KNITTING, and PRINTING are all extremely trendy and we are glad for this fact. It means that manufacturers are paying attention to us and giving us products we want and need, and that were not available a few years ago. My post-high-school post-college self is silently kicking me in the shins for not living through this before I had rent and bills to pay because believe me I would be spending all of my income on supplies. Brand new sewing machines in trendy designs and quarterly magazines for every niche hobby are popping up every month. Advertisers are picking up on more and more of the topics of concern to the DIY scene which has recently translated to "crafters" and gained popularity: do it yourself aesthetic, recycled materials, sustainable packaging, web presence in lieu of wasting paper, neat technological features and customized settings. They love that we love what we do and all of those advertising dollars can't be wrong.

Defining Your Market

What do you think your market is?
Who do you think makes up your market?

Your answer could be a couple of things:


    The market is: your blog readers.
    The market is: potential etsy or craft show customers.
    The market is: your competitors.
    The market is: publishing companies who might pay you to write a book.
    The market is: a potential amazing dream publication of the future.


--OR--

    The market is: my mom in Tuscaloosa who likes to keep up on my kids. Okay, cool. You can stop reading because you are probably doing everything just right.


But the rest of you, read on.

What is the goal you have in reaching out to the world with your art? Why not just do it for fun and keep it to yourself? What is it about your personal drive that makes you want to put it out on the Internet for consumption? Do you want feedback on your work? Do you want recognition? Are you jealous of someone who is doing fantastic work and wish you could do the same? (Jealousy is a fantastic motivator, but be careful there.) Who are you modeling yourself after? If you thought about it, who would you rather be modeling yourself after? Is your stuff scalable to manufacturers or is it totally unique (OOAK: one of a kind, as the kids say)? Is it beautiful? Is it ugly on purpose? Who would you want to share it with if you could dream someone up? What does it say about you as a person and what kind of story can you craft to share this with the world?

Create vs. Consume

Now here is where I want to make my point. Please chime in if you feel prompted. Its easy and annoying to be shopping on ETSY or some other online market and see a sea of (let's not mince words here) junk. The products and advertising I mentioned above could easily lead you to believe that because you go to Micheal's and consume all of what they're selling, you are somehow a more creative person for your effort. You can buy every new book that comes out on the subject you adore. (For me it is home sewing books- I am ob. sessed.) However, I am here to tell you that you need to change your thinking. Stop consuming and start creating quality work.

Stop consuming books and magazines, and make your own. Stop assuming you need to ingest someone else's work and spit it back out in a generic way. The longer this trend continues, the more saturated the market becomes, and the less special you are for doing the same old thing. Sorry to get all Fight Club on you, but its true.

Instead, we need to realize that its about balance, and I want you to try and tilt your own balance more toward Create than Consume. Isn't that what we all struggle with? I've been obsessed with this concept for several years now. I used the idea of Create vs. Consume to help me get myself out of debt by learning not to buy things I don't need and to make do with what I had before looking for more. I used the concept to start to lose weight by realizing the number of calories I consume vs. the amount of energy I'm burning off. I even used this as a lens to look at all of my material things and cull out the unnecessary things, leading to a much simpler way of living that is ever-evolving for me.

Well, this happens in online communities, too, and in my next segment I'll talk about the influx of junk that's out there and what you can do to combat it.

JCCM advert true

Posted in Uncategorized on March 14th, 2009 by emily august – Be the first to comment

personal branding for craft scene kids: part one

Posted in authenticity, blogs, craft, craft fairs, marketing, microcelebrity, personal branding, promotions, writing on March 14th, 2009 by emily – Be the first to comment


Branding Yourself for Crafty Reasons

What do you mean? What is the point of "branding myself"?

I would argue that paying attention to how others perceive you is a necessity if you care the least bit about your art, your craft, or putting your own aesthetic stamp on the world whether it be through music, photos, colors, or ideas. I happen to be the kind of girl who can be heard saying, vehemently, "Oh, I don't care what anybody thinks of me," and I mean it when I say so, but I am starting to realize that this becomes part of how people perceive me. Consciously or not, as soon as you make this claim, people keep an imperceptible eye on you to see if you really mean what you say. Preamble over with, let's get on with it.

In my previous post I pointed to the Etsy shop of internet pal Hikaru. Her shop is heads and tales above shops that seem to be satisfied with poor quality: shops with grainy photos, and a lack of creativity that sadly permeates the world of crafts, home sewing, and personal blogging. In an environment where we are over saturated with mediocrity, I want to say to the craft community, "If you don't care, why bother?" and, conversely, "If you care enough to do it, do it well, and present yourself well." And there you have my thesis: tell the story of who you are or what you want to be. Craft the world where you want your products to live and breathe.

As soon as you land on Hikaru's page, you want click on her products and have a closer look. That should be your goal as a crafty person: do not saturate the market with mediocrity. Do something bold and fun, and do it WELL.

inspired by: hikaru

Posted in craft, etsy, inspired by, personal branding, photography on March 14th, 2009 by emily august – 3 Comments

I met Hikaru Furuhashi virtually through Rory’s friend Aichen. Hikaru’s shop is so promising and cute.

I can’t get over the Rope Necklace, which has been featured on Etsy Front Pages, and is photographed in a super fun style. Check her out by clicking on one of her photos, below!




I think this is a great example of marketing yourself and your personal brand with great graphics, high quality items, super photos and visual play. I am working on a post on personal branding to tell you more so stay tuned!

PS: find Hikaru’s blog feed here! And if you still haven’t done it, add my blog to your feed reader as well!!

visual diary one

Posted in craft on March 14th, 2009 by emily august – Be the first to comment

draft version of an advertisement

Posted in Uncategorized on March 11th, 2009 by emily august – Be the first to comment

Please note the charity is not yet confirmed at this time.

Art Attack / Jersey City — help needed!

Posted in craft, jersey city on March 10th, 2009 by emily august – Be the first to comment


April 26th in downtown Jersey City

I think we are full up on vendors already for this event, though applications close this Monday, but what we are really in need of is some craftily-minded volunteers for the day. Read below for my repost of the Craft Mafia’s request (penned by Luca) and let me know if you want to help out and meet some amazing folks!

Hey there! The Jersey City Craft Mafia is seeking a few good girls and guys to assist our vendors and patrons with various set-up and event coordination tasks, including checking customers in, helping artists get their goods into the building, temporary table-sitting for solo vendors, and the like.

In return, you will be recognized in our event program and receive a free ad, get a free tote bag filled with swag, and have lunch on us.

If you or someone you know is available Sunday, April 26 from 11am until 7pm and wants to participate, please have them contact artattack@jerseycitycraftmafia.com for more details. This opportunity is only available to non-vendors, as running a table and trying to run the show may get a bit hectic