Turning
Your Sewing Into Marketable Merchandise
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Make, buy and sell needlecraft products such as
pillows, crocheted or knitted items, quilts, sweaters and bedspreads.
There is a huge market for these items -- and even larger number
of people who make them. The trouble is that the qualifications
for creating these beautiful items (patience, TLC, close attention
and years of practice) are quite different from what it often
takes to successfully market them!
Many people have a great deal of difficulty selling
their needle handiwork. Even when they do, they often don't even
get back the cost of the materials. To make money in this area
you must FIND and then ASSAULT the market!
When you sell only to friends and neighbors, the
"market" quickly becomes saturated and only lowering
your prices even more seems to stimulate sales. Unfortunately,
human nature is such that most people will pay a decent price
only for something made across town by someone they don't know.
Some people view an item made by someone they
know (other than family) as "home made" -- a substitute
for the real "store bought" thing. But when they buy
an item that was crafted by a total stranger, it is "handmade"
-- something exquisite (Ah, human nature!).
This explanation does not make much sense, but
it unfortunately rings true in too many situations. Even so, it
does NOT mean there isn't a good market for YOUR hand made products.
With a little imagination, your items can be marketed
tastefully, or better still, SHOWCASED. Compare a homemade quilt
hanging on a clothesline beside Grandma Brown's house to a HANDMADE
QUILT (same quality) featured in a store window with a pleasing
background and a couple of spotlights to show off the beautiful
color patterns and intricate stitching!
Think of a clever name; have your own labels made;
take some good color pictures of your product, then prepare a
brochure or "flyer" (one sheet ad) showing it in its
most favorable light.
Draw attention to its detail, fine work, durability
and describe how it will become a HANDED DOWN HEIRLOOM in the
buyer's family.
Put light colors on dark backgrounds (and vice
versa) for contrast in your ads; print (calligraphy would be even
better) little cards to "announce" the product in its
setting. Tell about the fine materials used and the meticulous
work involved -- show your products as the valuable, hand made
treasures they are!
Show only a few products (even one) at a time
to avoid a clustered or oversupplied appearance, which tends to
cheapen the effect, whether the medium is a store window or a
brochure.
Use as much skill and planning to present your
products as do to create them! How about little tags or folders
with something like Aunt Martha's Hand Crafted Pillow Covers,
"each one created with loving patience and care?" Doesn't
that sound more interesting than "Do you want to buy some
pillow covers I made?"
You can advertise your products in the newspaper,
magazines, or through bulletin boards and clubs. You can offer
finished goods, or take orders for them to be made in a choice
of sizes and colors.
One way to advertise inexpensively is to offer
a sample of your work as a prize in a community drawing or contest,
or for a charity auction (just make sure there are not several
other similar items -- too much competition ruins the effect for
everyone).
Another technique is to rent a window in a vacant
store or one that will lease space or accept a commission on sales
made as a result of the display.
Check on fairs and shows on subjects where renting
a booth might be an excellent way of meeting potential customers.
The "trick" here is to have a "free drawing."
People that stop by your booth can register by filling out a small
form and keeping the numbered stub. The "price" you
realize for whatever you give away is a list of names and addresses
of people who were interested in your products.
Now, you can send them brochures and "special
offers"! A stall at a flea market may or may not be advisable,
depending on the clientele (some are great for auto parts, but
no good at all for hand made tablecloths).
Call on stores in your area that might handle
products like yours -- ask them to buy yours, or at least take
them on consignment (if they do and they sell, switch them to
outright purchases later).
If you have or can produce a good quantity of
your products, contact a mail order house to see about selling
to them, or paying them a commission on sales they make for you.
Regardless of which sales system works out best
for you, once you have established a satisfactory "outlet",
immediately start making plans to buy other (non-competitive)
products of equal quality (or take them on consignment), attach
your label and add them to your "line."
You can specify exact products, color combinations
quality -- what it takes to qualify for your label -- which is
necessary to maintain your reputation and enables other products
to be sold through you.
If you are considering mail order sales, place
a few "test ads" in smaller publications to learn which
type of ad works best for your product.
You need to learn the best wording as well as the best potential
market, so keep careful track of which ads are answered by whom
(use a box number suffix, suite or department number).
Spend a little time in the library to find magazines
that would be a good place for your advertisements, and in others
that advertise supplies you need (trade magazines).
When writing to any commercial supplier, always
use letterhead paper. The easiest way to do this is to name yourself
(use the same name on your product labels).
Order at least a minimum set of letterhead paper
and matching envelopes for contacting suppliers.
In this business, as well as any other, records
are extremely important. A person who can create quality handmade
items is one who should have no trouble keeping neat and accurate
records! In the beginning, a simple single entry ledger might
be best (unless you are experienced in this area) -- because it
will serve as a sort of "diary" as well as business
record.
BUSINESS SOURCES
GOODFELLOW, Box 4520, Berkeley, CA 94704. Catalog
of toys and handmade home merchandise. Good place to advertise
your products. Write for details.
ANNIE'S KNITTING PATTERNS. Box 398, Chestertown,
NY 12817. Knitting pattern book, design graphs. Buys and sells.
JAN KNITS Box 315, Ingamar, MT 59039. Knitted
sweater kits; garment kits. Buys and sells.
SHELBURNE SPINNERS, North Avenue Extension, Burlington,
VT 05401. Knitting kits, Hanspun yarn. Buys and sells.
KITS, Box 182, Madison Lake, MN 56063. Knitting
kits. Buys and sells.
DAN NEWMAN CO. 57 Lakeview Ave.,Clifton, NJ 07011.
Logos and name tags.
ENJOY MACRAME NEWSLETTER, 3817 N Vermillion, Danville,
IL 61832. Newsletter for macrame enthusiasts.
HAND DANCER NEEDLEPOINT DESIGN, Box 480, Northville,
NY 12123. Needlepoint kits, buys and sells.
HOOK AND NEEDLE. 31 Broadway, Rockport, MA 01966.
Needlepoint kits, buys and sells.
HANDWORKS, Box 545, Smithtown, NY 11787. Needlepoint
canvasses. Buys and sells.
JAN'S NEEDLEWORKS, Box 689, Old Bethpage, NY 11804.
Needle mug kits; needlework footstool kit; buys and sells.
NEEDLEWORK PORTRAITS, Box 9, Green Farms, CT 06436.
Needlepoint portrait kits - from photographs. Buys and sells.
NEEDLEWORK TIMES, Box 87263, Chicago, IL 60680.
Newspaper for needlework enthusiasts.
NATIONAL QUILTING ASSN, Box 62, Greenbelt, MD
20770. Publishes PATCHWORK PATTER, magazine for quilting enthusiasts.
THE TREADLE WORKS, 118 Westridge Drive, Portola
Valley, CA 94205. Amish design quilting kits.
HARRIS PUBLICATIONS, INC. 79 Madison Ave.,NY 10016.
Publishes QUILT magazine.
COVERED BRIDGE FABRIC WORKS, Box 884, Flagstaff,
AZ 88022. Good Feelings quilting kits. Buys and sells.
HOMECRAFT SERVICES, 1441 Atlantic, Kansas City,
MO 64116. Embroidered quilt designs. Buys and sells.
QUILTS AND OTHER COMFORTS, Box 394, Wheatridge,
CO 80033. Quilt kits, pillow kits, quilt patterns and supplies.
Buys and sells.
WORK DESIGN, 8916 York Rd.,Charlotte, NC 28224.
Latch hook rug kits. Buys and sell.
CRAFTSMAN STUDIO. North Street, Kennebunkport,
ME 04046. Rug hooking equipment, hooked rug designs. Buys and
sells.
SEW BUSINESS 2100 N Central Rd.,Ft lee, NJ 07024.
Monthly publications: ART NEEDLEWORK and QUILT QUARTERLY $15 yr.
each.
JANA ASSOCIATES, 49 Longview Rd.,Staten Island,
NY 10304. Closeouts: beads, doll eyes, felt pieces, etc.
CREATIVE PRODUCTS, Box 584, Lake Forest, IL 60046.
Free subscription to businesses (write on letterhead). Good place
to look for sewing product information.
NEEDLE & THREAD MAGAZINE, 4949 Byers, Ft Worth,
TX 76107. Also publishes NEEDLECRAFT FOR TODAY.
HOUSE OF WHITE BIRCHES, Box 337, Seabrook, NH
03874. Publishes STITCH N' SEW and WOMEN'S CIRCLE - as the National
Friendly Homemakers Club. Both quarterly -$6 yr.
C.M. ALMY & SON, INC. 37 Purchase St.,Rye,
NY 10580. Yarns, even weave cloth, ecclesiastical supplies. Buys
and sells.
LAURA'S CREATIVE STITCHERY, Box 291, Bountiful,
UT 84014. Pillow kits, quilting kits, patterns. Buys and sells.
ROMNI WOOLS & FIBERS, LTD., 3779 W. 10th Ave.,Vancouver,
BC, Canada. V6R 2G5. Spinning wheels, carding equipment, weaving
looms; Buys and sells.
DOVER PUBLICATIONS, INC. 31 East 2nd St.,Mineola,
NY 11051. Discount books, clip art, stencils, etc.
QUILL CORPORATION, 100 Schelter Rd.,Lincolinshire,
IL 60917-4700, 312/634-4800. Office supplies.
NEBS, 500 Main St.,Groton, MA 04171, 800/225-6380.
Office supplies.
SWEDCO, Box 29, Mooresville, NC 28115. 3 line
rubber stamps - $3; business cards - $13 per thousand.
ZPS, Box 581, Libertyville, IL 60048-2556. Business
cards (raised print - $11.50 per K) and letterhead stationery.
Will print your copy ready logo or design, even whole card.
WALTER DRAKE, 4119 Drake Bldg.,Colorado Springs,
CO 80940. Short run business cards, stationery, etc. Good quality
but no choice of style or color.

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