Showing posts with label jewelry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jewelry. Show all posts

Monday, June 16, 2014

Treading Lightly Through the Friend Zone



I’m a jeweler.  I have friends that like my jewelry. Every once in a while, I’ll have one who wants me to create something special for them. I love that my friends like my jewelry and want me to make something special for them!  I don’t, however, like to use their stones to create that special item. This is why…

When you create jewelry using stones, you always take a risk that the stone will get cracked, scratched or otherwise ruined.  Setting a stone takes pressure with metal tools.  Metal tools can damage a stone in a split second.  One slip and you’ve just scratched it.  One push just a little too hard on the bezel has just cracked the stone.  If it’s my stone, it’s my loss.  I won’t say it’s no big deal, because it usually is.  Chances are the setting was made specifically for that stone and another stone just won’t fit in it.  So now I have to find another stone and remake the setting.   But if it’s someone else’s stone, I’ve just destroyed something that a friend was attached to enough to want me to create something special with it.  Now I have to find another, and it needs to be a perfect match.  Maybe you’re not even 100% sure of what kind of stone it was, or what replacing it will cost.  What a headache!

Second, there’s pricing the item. I think that most people think that if they go to a friend to do something for them, you’re going to give them the “friend” price.  So you’re expected to cut them a deal on something that you’re already agonizing over.  Great!  Plus, they supplied the stone, so that should knock quite a bit off the price, right?  Wrong!!!  Those of us who create with our hands sometimes do a little fudging.  Sometimes we used the perceived value of our materials to recoup some of the losses we’ve made time-wise.  Most people think we can just wave our magic wand (torch) over the metal to create a beautiful piece.  In reality, we may have had problem after problem crop up, making the piece take twice as long as it should’ve.  We need to make that money up somewhere.  That’s where we hope the beautiful stone looks worth that price, or the amount of metal in a piece makes that piece worth every cent.

Finally, there’s the fact that we really do want our friend to like the piece we’ve just created for them.  What if they don’t like it?  Do they admit they don’t like it?  Or do they just suck it up and pay for it, only to stick it in a drawer, never to be seen again?  If they don’t like it and tell you they don’t like it, will that damage your friendship?  Do they want their stone pulled back out, damaging the setting and destroying the whole piece?  Do you have to buy their stone from them?  But maybe they do like what you’ve done with it.  Great!  That’s excellent news!  But they don’t like the price. Great… now what?  Cut them that deal and get mad at them and yourself for letting them talk you down?  Hold firm to your price and run the risk of them getting mad at you? 

It’s all so hard!  I love when friends see one of my pieces and just have to have it.  The price is right there, the design is already done, and they can take it or leave it.  It’s up to them, and I love it that way!  Please, buy from me, but please don’t ask me to do something with one of your stones.  It’s too much pressure!  I want everyone to be happy with my jewelry, and I certainly don’t want to lose a friend over it!  Sadly, I think maybe it's already happened.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Win Me! Winnie's Heart Pendant


Well, it's the dead of winter. There are no craft shows to speak of. It's not a great time of year to get jewelry sales. Let's have a contest!


I'm giving away this gorgeous pink druzy heart pendant! I first designed this shape for my friend, Winnie, who wanted me to make a ring for her out of a druzy. My excitement over druzies has evidentally rubbed off on her. She picked a gorgeous blue druzy out of my stash of druzies that I purchased from beadsaddict, one of my fellow Etsy sellers; she has some GORGEOUS stones! Anyway, Winnie picked out a stone, and had me design a ring just for her. We were both very happy with the way it turned out. It looks gorgeous on her hand, too!

With Valentine's Day coming up, I wanted to do something special for my Facebook Fans. I do LOVE my Facebook fans! Therefore, I designed a pendant that I'm going to give away. It's made up of a gorgeous pink and white druzy, bezel set and embellished to form a heart. It's my Win Me! Winnie's Heart Pendant. It's going to be given away to one of my Facebook Fans. It could be you!

Here's how it works:


2. Suggest my page to your friends. You can hit the "share" button under any posts I do on my page, or there's also a "share" button at the bottom on the left of my Facebook fan page. There used to be a "suggest to friends" button, but evidently Facebook has done away with that, so you're going to have to use your imagination. Sorry!

3. On Sunday, February 6th, see how many of your friends also "like" my page. That will also be on the left side under the profile picture, but above the total number of people who "like" my page.

4. E-mail me at lisa@sandytoesjewelry.com to tell me how many of your friends "like" my page. I need proof, though. To prove how many, please go to my page, highlight the "6 of so-and-so-many friends like this", showing the 6 friends it will show you, copy it, and paste that in your e-mail to me. I need to receive this by Sunday, February 6th, midnight (EST), though! Make sure you put "Win Me! Winnie's Heart Pendant Contest" in the Subject line.

5. Whomever has the most friends that "like" my page will win the pendant! I will determine the winner on Monday, February 7th and get it shipped off so that the winner will receive it before Valentine's Day.

I will warn you, however. One of my friends has been promoting my fan page for a really long time, so she probably already has lots of friends that "like" my page. She's going to be stiff competition! (Thanks, Michelle!)


Good luck!

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Bubbles- An Etsy Treasury East

Etsy has designed a new way to do Treasuries, and they call it Treasury East. They say they'll never expire, which is WONDERFUL!!! Thank you so much for including me in your treasuries!

And now, for your viewing pleasure, Bubbles by VeronicaRStudio!

And this one, Selections from the Aspiring Metalsmiths Team by PrairieMoonJewelry.

I hope you'll click on some of the wonderful, hand-crafted items!

Friday, March 12, 2010

A Learning Experience


I have been working on a jewelry project that has been making me CRAZY! I'm not even really sure why things are going so badly with it. I've been making jewelry for about 23 years now, but this one project has me feeling like a newbie!

I love working with wire, so that was the basis for this project. I've gotten kind of low on metal, so I started digging through my sterling drawer to see what prizes I could come up with. I found a piece of 6 gauge sterling silver wire that has already been cut to a fairly short piece. It had started it's life as another piece of jewelry, but was in great shape, so I thought it would be great for repurposing. I pulled the metal that had been soldered onto it back off and went to work.

I took out my hammer and beat the ends thinner. Then I pulled out my 18 gauge wire and started making swirls that I could attach to it. The swirls were more difficult to attach than I thought they'd be because they were so thin and the back was so thick. It was hard to get all of that metal to the same temperature so that the solder would flow. I nuked a wire. I repaired the wire. I had everything soldered, so I went to polish it.

It fell apart! I was heart broken! So I got a new piece of wire, swirled it, and soldered it back on. I wanted the solder to flow just a little more smoothly in one spot, so just a little longer on the piece with the flame, and... I nuked another wire!

So now I've put it away. It needed to go away before I decide to turn it into a pile of molten metal. Someday, I might finish it. For now, it will be a nice little bench sculpture sitting on my bench MOCKING ME!!! I hope to get it finished someday and make a mold of it. That way I can cast a copy of it AND NEVER HAVE TO MAKE ANOTHER FROM SCRATCH!!!

It's been a wonderful learning experience, though. I feel like I'm back in college! But not in a good way...

Sunday, February 7, 2010

The Internet

I KNOW I'm not the only one who's noticed this. The internet is a GIANT TIME SUCKER!!! I sit down to look at one thing and two hours later, I look up at the clock and realize how much of my time has disappeared! Where on earth does the time go?

I have spent the last few days trying to get my jewelry onto a new website to sell it. First off, NOBODY does their sites the same way, so just figuring out the way this new site works takes some time. Then there's all the tedious work that goes into each aspect of it. I have to come up with a title. How do you title jewelry, especially when it's all abstract? Then there's the description. It's very hard to describe your own work without sounding like you think the world of yourself. Then there are tags, which help buyers find what they're looking for. The more the better. Another problem with jewelry. It's made of three things, usually: the kind of metal, the kind of stone, and what form the metal comes in. So you have to be inventive. You throw in color, type of stone, the kind of setting. Okay. Now for the metal. Sterling silver, gold-filled, or 14K. Wire or sheet. All of this is too much work. It takes just selling jewelry to a lot more work than I bargained for. I like shows, where people pick up the piece, maybe ask a few questions, and either buy it or don't. Then I can see their reaction to my pieces.
I think the internet is a great tool, don't get me wrong. I feel like I can do more one-of-a-kind pieces, and that they might actually sell, if they're seen on the internet. At craft shows, people are always asking me if I have "this" design in a different stone. So, obviously, people don't have a problem with having items that aren't one of a kind when they're standing there in front of me. I think the internet does open the door for more unique items. Plus, I'm really hoping that it ends up being just what I need to really start rolling on my jewelry business. But I really hope it doesn't take all of the personalization out of the buying process. I hope that when people see my work on the internet that they remember that I'm a real, live person. I guess that's the artist in me. I want to be unique!
Originally posted on September 16, 2009