Hi,
The subject of Craft Fairs comes up on here many times and as i used to do craft fairs for a long time in the 90's and sold sod all while a woman on the stall next to mine usually sold most of her own bars of soap, One day i had a brainwave and went home and made a plastic mould (I had my own machines from my old career) and the following week gave it to her....the following week she arrived with loads of new fancy soap bars and sold out because they were designed to look like the Greenman and women which are always popular at craft fairs and she ordered another 50 moulds so from that day on i never hired a table/stand at the craft fairs and concentrated on making custom moulds for here and other soap makers I did that for 6 years before my hands got too bad but i made enough money from them to have my workshop built.
The thing you should be doing is, 1: don't try and sell your work on Ebay or personally don't sell any of it online.....because you will sell very few but they are ideal for others to check out and copy your designs and basically letting you do the hard work designing and developing techniques and they jumping on the bandwagon usually for less than 12 months until they get bored and do the same thing with someone else's work. 2: Don't tell everyone how you make them or your trade secrets and where you get materials etc....I know we like to try and help others and i do the same but again there will be people who rather than do their homework and design their own stuff and you will see your orders dry up... My mate was doing garden ornaments for 30 years and then after explaining online all of his trade secrets his business lasted 12 months and he stopped doing them as he couldn't compete with the others doing copies of his own work and went back to being a landscape gardener. 3: Don't do a craft fair and sit there waiting for the punters to come to you, instead you target your customers away from Craft Fairs, do your homework and find a local business/attraction tourist venue and visit to see first if they are selling anything in their shop and then go home and design something that will fit in with the venue.....don't go over the top on time/expense but make something a punter would buy from there as a souvenir. Don't make anything that can be mass produced either just something that is exclusive to that single place. Once you have created something then if you can send them an email displaying your work and ask them is it something they would like to sell at their venue, this is a great idea because if you go into the venue armed with your work the chances are is the owner won't have time to spare to discuss your work plus you will find it much easier to tell them the prices....believe me i once went into a shop in Haworth and made a total **** of myself when i couldn't remember my salesman that i had spent days rehearsing and looked very unprofessional fortunately i did manage to sell them my work and made quite a bit by selling them 3d plaques with Haworth mainstreet on with the cobbles ect the hard bit was actually carving the design and then after making a slicone mould all i had to do was cast them in resin.
4: Once your selling at one venue look for others that are local again with their own unique theme, and then create another item to suite them and do as above, yes you will find them who don't want to buy your work but 9 out of 10 of them will love your work.
5: As far as costing this is a complicated thing to do and you will never earn enough weekly to live on BUT you can easily make a few grand to pay for new kit or holidays etc its all money you wouldn't have if you sat on your arse watching TV. With my own stuff I sold sod all on Ebay etc but once people see your handywork you will get commissions for custom work and that's where the big money is, and you will soon realise what things are good sellers so concentrate on those but also keep coming up with new designs for example if its a wooden dog of a certain breed, pick a rare breed and then contact the Breeders websites again once one of them sees your work they will all want one. I spend more time thinking up new ideas and designing than i actually do cutting wood up and that's where you will earn your big money. Last year I did a life sized head of a Shetland Pony for a local Horse breeders daughter, i ended up getting orders for 6 more all at £500+ but as i am fully booked up until next July they don't mind waiting and i will never post them online to keep them exclusive.
Right my apologies for the long winded post and hopefully I didn't come across like I am preaching to ya as I'm not its just I hope it gets some of you more motivated so you can earn so good money without the need to copy others work etc, I almost forgot the reason for targeting your local venues/shops/museums etc is simple no postage costs you can deliver them yourself.
Hope this helps ya and sorry for not being very active on here at the moment but still playing catch up with my orders from last year.
Cheers
Brian
Ps forgot to say, one of the best things to sell your work is if you can design your own patterns and also do custom patterns, Phill on here taught me how to use Adobe Illustrator and instead of tracing designs i can make a pattern from any picture/photo. I wouldn't say its easy software to learn but you only need to learn the bits that enable you to make your own patterns plus you don't need the very latest software the older versions work just as good providing its compatible with your own computers software and I bought my Illustrator software used on Ebay for £12.00 new it would have been hundreds. Right best stop waffling lol
Cheers