TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List

Showing posts with label TAFA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TAFA. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Ad Special on TAFA: 50% off for one year!



Have you visited TAFA's new site?  www.tafalist.com

We have over 400 members and half of them have finally gotten their profiles up on the site!  Every day a couple more get up there, adding their unique contribution to the mix.  Our members are spread out around the world, representing more than 30 countries!  It's truly a wonderful selection of the best in traditional and contemporary textiles and fiber arts.

The new site is still not finished.  We went over budget by $2,500 and have many other features we want to add to the site.  We need to raise some money to do that so TAFA is offering a one-year ad to non-members for half of the price ($500 for the year instead of $1,000).  If you have an online business, you can help us reach our goal!

Our audience is mostly women over 35 who, of course, love all things fiber!  They tend to be educated, well-traveled and creative.  Ads that would interest our people:  anything to do with art, textiles, fiber art, workshops, cultural tours, travel, health, gardening, literature, yoga, green businesses,
craft supplies, and so on.

Specs are on TAFA's sponsor ad page.  For more info, contact Rachel.



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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Face It!


Just some of TAFA's members who have done some pretty cool faces!  Come visit!


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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

TAFA Team: Old Blog, New Look!



I just spent the last few days revising our Team Blog for TAFA members who sell on Etsy.  On the old one, we had all of the members broken down into categories with tabs at the top where their Etsy minis were visible.  But, it didn't seem like people were exploring the shops, so I felt like the blog needed a new look.  

As I was working on it, I tested out Blogger's dynamic view.  It gives you several image rich ways to look at the posts.  I had thought of using it before, but it does not support widgets, like the etsy mini, which is so important to drive people to the shops.  Here is our mini for our TAFA Team:  



The mini can be controlled to feature different members and when you click on an image, it takes you right to that listing on Etsy, an excellent tool!

There are other disadvantages to this template, too.  You can't personalize it with a banner and although it does support a few sidebar links, you can't install all of the other tools many blogs use today (mail list form, widgets for facebook, any videos, etc.).

Mosaic view of the Dynamic Template

In weighing the pros and cons, I went with the dynamic template because it seems like most social media platforms are going for the wow factor with images.  Pinterest's success points in that direction.  So, maybe having minimal information with the link to the member profile will be the way to go.  Members who want to promote themselves further on the blog are welcome to submit posts which means more of their images would be there.  

So, what do you think of the new look?  I am very interested in feedback on this.  If any of you have experience with using the the dynamic template, I would like to know if there is a way to enable codes so that they show up on the posts.  

And, feel free to leave comments over there, ask the members questions, and read their member profiles.  Of course, shopping from TAFA members is proven to make your day a better one.  You will feel good doing it!  



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Thursday, March 15, 2012

Pinterest- To pin or not to pin? THAT is the question!

We launched TAFA's new site mid-January, then I was gone for a month.  When I got back, I jumped into working on the site again.  Members have been slowly adding their profiles, but so far, not even half of them are up yet.  I have the site on Google Analytics and absolutely LOVE the Real Time view, where you can watch who is there, what pages they are looking at and from what country.  I started to notice a lot of views coming from Pinterest.  We have a closed group on facebook for members, so I asked if anybody had been pinning us on pinterest.  Virtual hands waved, "Me!  I am!  I am!"

Well....  that sure opened a can of worms!  Pinterest has been generating heated discussions all over the web due to its user policies.  I'm not sure that I understand all of it, but there are weird contradictions like, "all content belongs to Pinterest", then, "Make sure you only pin your copyrighted material", then, "Don't post just your images."  Huh?  How can you pin only your copyrighted stuff, but then not make your boards all of your own products?  More sinister, "If there is a lawsuit, the pinner pays ALL legal fees" and "Pinterest may sell any image on the site".........  I'm not quoting here, just interpreting phrases that I have seen over and over in articles posted around the web.  And, there's more, much more.  Serious stuff!

For those of who don't know what Pinterest is, it's what we call a "curating" site.  You can create boards of things you are interested in: travel, hobbies, health, fashion, etc.  The layout is beautiful, visually entrancing.  You can go on any website and instead of bookmarking something that you like, you pin it and it links back to that page (supposedly).  So, it's a handy way of keeping track of things you see and want to re-visit in the future.  Everything you pin gets sent to the front page and other people see it.  If they like it, they can re-pin it to their boards.  What that means for those of us who have something to sell is that the viral potential is immense.

To give you an idea, I made some boards on my page for TAFA products:


If someone likes the content of your board, they can follow the whole theme and see new items in their feed.

Well!  Sounds good, right?  Fun!?  Pinterest has been around for awhile now and is still by invitation only.  You can request one....  But, it's taken off like wild cakes in the last few months.  Millions are using it and if I remember correctly, it has passed Google+ in users.  Wowzers!

Not so quick.  Not all is well in Pinterland...  Those issues that I mentioned above have made artists really angry.  Why?  Because Pinterest can strip their images of copyrights, other users are taking the images and setting up sites inspired by Pinterest but not giving credit to the person who owns the image, and money is being made without consent and without compensation to that owner.  We had a wild flurry of articles being posted on our group with many, many arguments against using Pinterest.

The problem is that many of us long for that traffic.  Although we may not like the notion of our images being stolen, some of us would rather have a potential sale and the visibility than to be left out of the loop.  So, I struggled with this and decided that we needed to have a strategy.

TAFA has made use of social media from day one.  We have hubs on facebook, linkedin, google+, flickr and Etsy.  My approach has always been that if a large number of the members are there, we should have a presence there, too.  I went and checked my account that I had created months ago and poked around.  There was a significant number of  TAFA members on the site who were active AND I had almost 600 followers for my almost empty boards.  Well!  That told me that we needed to be there.

I sent out an email and told the members that if they wanted to be there, I would create a SAFE Board with one pin from each member who wants to be pinned.  From there, members and TAFA supporters can start with that board and know that it is OK to pin that person's stuff.  The pins link to the member profile and users can go from there to the blogs, shops, websites, etc.  The member does not have to have a pinterest account, although many do.  Here is our SAFE Board:


If you are an avid pinner and you love TAFA, this is where you start.  Do NOT pin any members who are not on this list!  We must all be respectful of the complex issues that surround this site.  

From there, I created several theme boards of TAFA products (pictured above) with other items from these members.  I will continue to build those boards and they are all SAFE to re-pin.  We really appreciate your support with this!

I also had an idea which I thought was pretty cool.  Why not do a board with TAFA members who have been supporting the site with ads?  This could potentially give more bang for their buck and serve as an inspiration for people who want to advertise on TAFA.  I set that board up, too, and really like how it looks:


The ads all link to their member profiles, but these are not necessarily sanctioned for pinning.  As the images have their business names on them, it is unlikely that anyone would steal them.  But, you are welcome to explore these profiles and visit their sites.

I also created a board for the TAFA members who sell on Etsy.  I made this one into a group one so that members can pin their own product.  It's an iffy proposition as already one of the members pinned other people's stuff.....  But, intentions are good and there is a learning curve with everything.


As you can see, there are many creative things that can be done with these boards to promote a business or feed an interest.  But, do not underestimate how serious the concerns are around Pinterest's policies.  I received an email this morning saying that the word was out on the web that the owner was meeting with lawyers to change the policies.  I don't know whether this is true or not, or even if the changes would be significant enough to put out the fire.  But, it was a piece of hopeful news.  The concept is wonderful, but when you build your business on underhanded practices, it will fall.

Interested in learning more about this issue?  
Here are some of the articles our members posted:
That is probably enough to educate anyone on the issues behind the uproar.  

What should you do?

Each person has to decide what is best for him or her.  But, if you are a pinner, educate yourself and respect people's wishes on this.  Do not pin anything that does not link back to the owner of the image.  Have a doubt about it?  Ask them.  In fact, this is good practice for anything done on the web.  Do you see an image you would like to use on your blog?  Ask the owner.  

My belief is that if you have a web presence you automatically put your images at risk with anything you post.  If it's out there, even if you have code on your site protecting downloads, anybody can copy it.  All they need to do is do a screen print and they have it.  It's unfortunate, but it does not mean that we need to condone this behavior.  Do the best YOU can to be a good web citizen.

The one solution I see is to use discreet watermarks embedded into the images.  That is probably what I will do with mine in the future (IF I can figure out how to do it quickly...).  And, I believe that for every scoundrel that is out there, 99% of the others are good people who would like to do the right thing.

Pin Responsibly!

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Friday, March 9, 2012

Win a Free Ad on TAFA! $1,000 Value!



TAFA launched its new site in January and the members have been busy getting their member profiles loaded.  Each day it gets more and more beautiful!  Now, we need your help to get people to come and see them!  In the process, we will also help you grow your audience.

Here is how it works:

  1. Post the image above on your blog, facebook page, or email your list with the link to our Sponsors page:  http://www.tafalist.com/sponsor-ads  (Your email needs to have a web version so that we can see it and link to it.)
  2. Say something nice about TAFA.  Why do you think people should visit?
  3. Go to our facebook fan page and leave a comment here with the link of what you posted.  (If you do not have a facebook account, get a friend to do it for you.  We need to have these links in one place...)
  4. We will post that link on our sites giving you a public thank you: facebook, google+ and linkedin.
  5. On March 31st, we will do a drawing of the people who posted their and the winner will get a free ad on TAFA for a year.  This is a $1,000 value!  (We will use a random number generator to pick the winner.)

Added Bonus

Get half off on TAFA Ads through March 20th!  (Non-members only)  Ads are $100 a month or $1000 a year.  This will give you a chance to test TAFA at a reduced rate so that you can see if it is a good place for your future ads.  We need to raise some cash to finish our site and your ads will help us with that.

TAFA's audience tends to be educated, well traveled women over 40.  If you have a an online business, our people might just like what you have to offer.  Businesses that would probably do well on TAFA:  Etsy shops, anything art or craft related, anything to do with travel, the environment, literature, decor, pets, and so on.  

If you don't know what to say, feel free to use the above text as is or in your own words.  Let's get some buzz happening!  I happen to be passionate about anything to do with textiles and fiber art and I love the diversity of our group.  They are each doing something very special in their own corner of the world and each brings in their own special talent that makes this place a better one for all of us.


Be a Winner!
Support TAFA!


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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Tour TAFA's New Site!


Yesterday was my 50th birthday and I could not have asked for a better present than to have TAFA go live with its new site on www.tafalist.com.  Two years ago, I had come to the realization that many of my peers and I were swimming in a new madness called social media.  We were all bumping into each other in different places, but didn't really have a way to connect in an orderly manner.  There was also so much to learn.  Selling online had become extremely competitive and if we were going to make headway in this ocean of information, my thought was that we needed to do it as a group.  "Together we can do great things!"  So, I put the idea out there, started TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List using a blog format and began navigating the web to bring in potential members who were professionals and who worked with handmade textiles and fiber art.

A year later there were almost 200 members and it was clear that we needed a new website.  A bunch of us held a brainstorming session on facebook, identifying member needs and how we would use the website.  In the summer we had a fundraiser on IndieGoGo and raised $5,000 towards the new site.  In August, work on the site began and it took five months of hard work to reach yesterday's launch.  Oh, and we are $2,500 over the budget plus there is a Phase Two in the works where the site will be completed with the original bones we envisioned.  In the end, this will be a $10K site and we believe that it will become a major hub for the textile and fiber art community.

Take a Tour

Navigation is not self-evident at this stage, although we believe we have some really cool tools to explore the site.  An in-depth drop-down site map is planned for Phase Two, but we want to live with what we have for awhile as we tweak the site.  Here is a map of the front page:


  1. Logo:  Click to return home.
  2. The List:  Our member list.
  3. Fresh Profiles:  Members who have made recent changes to their member profile.
  4. Banners:  They flash and are linked to member profiles.  Click to visit.
  5. Member Stories:  Features on members.
  6. Product Talk:  Features on products.
  7. Events:  List of member events.
  8. Member Blogs:  Not ready yet, but will have a stream of member blogs.
  9. Member Map:  A Google map with members pinned to their locations.  Click on the pin to see the member, linked to member profiles.
The core value of the site is in finding the members and their products.  The members each have a member profile page.  They can each list four products (which link to their sites), one video and one event.  All of these can be shared on social media sites and show up in search.  They are color-coded by type of result (profiles, products, videos, etc each have a different color).  Users can bookmark these in their private bookmark page for future reference.  Here are some examples:

Profile Page

This page will be re-worked in Phase Two as it still seems a little awkward in how it displays, but all of the member's basic info is there: where they are in the web, on the google map, and a slideshow if they have one.  In Phase Two, the member's blog will stream to the sidebar.



Search

The search bar at the top of the site needs a keyword in order to operate.  Type it in and either hit enter/return on the keyboard or click on the magnifying lens.  We currently have 400 members, so with 4 products each we may have an initial 1,600 products to look at.  The results can be narrowed down by clicking on the drop down menu.  Here is an example of a search result:


This was for a search on "shibori".  Note that some of the boxes are brown and others are golden.  The brown ones are products and the golden ones are member profiles.  Click on the product and you get a full page description of the item with a link to the member site.  Click on the member profile ones and you will go to that profile.

Product Pages

You will see an image, a description (if the member entered any), a visit link (takes you the member's site), and a comment box where visitors can ask questions or say something about what they think about the product (hopefully, something nice!).  The page can be shared on social media sites and saved as a bookmark.  We also have a green flag on product pages.  This is to be used to alert us when an inappropriate image is loaded (blurry, bad photo, or culturally insensitive).  We will take a look at flags and work with the members on their presentation.  

Here is an example of a Product Page;



Bookmarks:

You have to log in if you want to bookmark something.  Yes, non-members can have mini accounts where they can bookmark pages, leave comments and buy ads.  When you are logged in you will see a red ribbon at the top right hand corner of the site.  That is our dandy bookmark.  Here is a video that I liked:


The orange arrow is pointing to the bookmark.  I clicked on it and then checked my bookmark page:


Sure enough, there it is:  the third to the right on the first row.  Notice the color coding again.  Don't want to keep something anymore?  Click on the red bookmark on the item and it goes away.

Events:

Many of our members make their living by teaching workshops or participating in competitive shows or gallery exhibits.  We felt that having an event page was a huge service we could provide for them.  This page still needs some tweaking and in Phase Two it will be searchable by type of event, location, and dates.  For now, we have a basic list:


Click on the event and it has its own page which links to the member profile.  The event also posts on the member's profile page, on the left sidebar.


The event has a full description along with a location map.  Each member gets one free listing which can be renewed when the current event expires.

Member Map

This is one of my favorite site features!  We are now over 400 members from over 30 countries.  We are using a Google map to pin our members:



Click on the pin and you will see the member's logo and a link to their profile page.  If there is a congested cluster, just zoom in to see them more closely.  This is a great way for members to find each other and for buyers and students to support their local artists and businesses.   I also love imagining a road trip, thinking, I can stop here and here and here and here along the way, meeting wonderful TAFA members at every step of the way!

The List

As our name implies, we do have a list of members.  There is button next to the search bar that says exactly that, "The List".  Click on it and you will see our members, 100 to a page in alphabetical order:


The first two images link to the member profile:  People photo and logo.  The other four are products and link to their product pages.  The name also links to the member profile.  Below that is a one-liner that the member uses to describe themselves in a nutshell:  We are all very cool!

If you love handmade textiles and fiber art, then you will love TAFA.  And, many of our members also make or sell supplies and tools, so be sure to look for them as well.  We have gorgeous hand-spun yarns, home-grown fleece, natural dye suppliers, hand-made spinning wheels, vintage textile stamps and much more.  

Come and explore and if you like what you see, spread the word!  So far, only a third of our members are up and we know that we will continue to grow and become better and better.  We have come a long way in two years!  It makes me excited to think of where we will be next year, the year after or when I turn 60!  You can be a part of it.  Sign into the site and start interacting with an incredibly talented group of people who have a world to offer!  And, support them with your buying power, too.

Enjoy!


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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Affecting Change in Your Corner of the World

"Gandhi" by Diana Bracy



You must be the change 
you want to see in the world.
-Mahatma Gandhi


I just watched an inspiring video by Jeff Skoll, one of the founders of eBay, at a TED conference.  The video is several years old, yet still current in its message:





Jeff's path is one example of one person who succeeded in harnessing his talents and ideas into successful businesses that could then allow him to give back to society.  We have several leaders today, who like him, are working on the big issues that threaten our world's future: the environment, economic inequality, human rights, war, etc.  Any one of those issues seems daunting enough on its own.  Together, the state of world affairs seems depressing indeed.  How do we move forward and hope for a future in the face of this mess?


My answer is that we have to believe that each person can truly make a difference.  Diana's quilt above is made by tiny pieces of fabric, each a different shade.  On its own, the piece might not seem significant.  As a part of the whole, it is essential.


Many pieces make the whole.



Two years ago, at right about this time, I had an idea and put it out there:  I felt that those of us who have an online presence and are trying to get an audience for our work as fiber artists or textile businesses needed a better way of getting the word out.  Most of my peers were starting to use social media sites, opening shops on Etsy and spending a lot of time networking and doing what we thought we needed to do get business to come to us.  Swimming alone in an ocean of information.....  We needed to band together and be so beautiful that the right people would come to us.  TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List was born.  Two years later, we are almost ready with our state of the art new website.  You can preview it here.  We are now at 402 members from over 30 countries.


Yes, I have worked hard to make this happen, but it could not have happened on my own.  Many of TAFA's members have stepped forward with their time and money to help this dream come true.  I've had to learn a lot along the way and have some tips on what has worked for me:




  1. Be passionate.  Love what you do with your whole heart and be willing to take risks for it.  Expect that it will take time and endless hours of unrewarded effort.
  2. Define your Vision.  Don't replicate what is already being done out there.  Most of the textile and fiber art organizations that are out there serve their specific niche.  TAFA embraces all of the textile and fiber art traditions, but members are vetted in based on the maturity of both their product and their presentation.  Members came together in a think tank to help write the mission:   TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List is a membership organization of fiber artists and textile businesses on the web.  TAFA showcases member portfolios through its website, provides access to larger markets, offers business resources and fosters community.
  3. Establish a Home Base on the web.  I used Blogger as it is easy to set up, free, and integrates with other platforms.  
  4. Set up your social media hubs.  TAFA now has active hubs on facebook, google+, flickr, LinkedIn and a team on Etsy.  
  5. Build your community.  I started with my peers and several signed on.  Then, I visited thousands of websites over the past two years, inviting the cream of the crop to join.  Of every 100 that I visited, 10 were invited and of those, 1 accepted.  It took persistence, but as the list of members grew, it became more legitimate and interesting as a group.
  6. Make the financial risk minimal:  For the first year, membership in TAFA was $25.  This was an affordable amount to risk in a new enterprise.  In the second year, the membership fee went up to $48.  Now, in the beginning of the 3rd year, it is up to $75.  Members have also supported TAFA financially with inexpensive ads.
  7. Reward your supporters:  As TAFA grows and establishes itself, my main priority is, "How will this benefit the whole membership?"  I have tried to build systems that benefit everyone equally.  
  8. Ask for help.  There have been times where I was stuck or against the wall.  The members stepped up to the plate and helped me center my energies in a productive way.  (Don't do this too often as it can get annoying....  )
  9. Build your financial support.  Once you have your project seasoned and can show something for what you have done, take it to the next level and get the financial support you need to fund your tools.  We identified the need for a "real" website with a robust search engine and estimated that it would cost $5,000.  We raised exactly that through the members in a fundraiser using Indiegogo.  By the time the site is finished and does everything I want it to do, it will end up costing closer to $10,000 (Spring 2012).  But, I expect the site to raise the rest of the money on its own through new memberships and advertising.
  10. Set it free.  Let your dream take root and become bigger than yourself.
After two years of hard work, TAFA has established a name and identity within the textile and fiber art community.  The next steps will include separating it from my personal business and making it an S-Corporation, getting it to become financially stable so that it can hire staff, and ultimately selling shares back to the members so that it can become member owned.  I predict that it will take another two years before we get to that point, but when it happens, TAFA will be something beyond my own vision.

Jeff Skoll's speech confirmed much of my own process.  Some of us, creative entrepreneurs, have a gift at seeing a need and of imagining a way in which that need can be addressed.  When TAFA can fly on its own, I will probably start something else as I have always been an idea person.  Change does not have to happen by creating a new project like eBay, or on a much smaller scale, TAFA.  It happens by each of us being conscious about everything we do.  If you are an artist, think about the materials that you use.  Are they toxic?  Can you recycle garbage into your work?  Can you involve your local community into an activity that helps them understand art in a new way?  Are there local organizations that need your time or financial support?  Each person's talents, resources and visions all contribute to change the world, a bit at a time, to make it a better place.


FACES of EARTH - 1972 NASA Blue Marble image of Earth as a Twitter Mosaic.



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Sunday, January 1, 2012

Happy 2012!


2011 is history!  Another year come and gone.  How time flies...  I remember when I was a kid and I thought about the year 2000.  I was going to be 38 years old.  Soooo  oooold!  Well, in a couple of weeks, I turn 50.  Not so old, eh?  Heh, heh....  It's all a matter of perspective.

The end of the year and the beginning of a new is always a time of reflection for me.  If you follow this blog, you know that I have spent a great deal of time and energy in building TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List, an organization that helps textile businesses and fiber artists market their businesses.  I launched it at about this time two years ago on a Blogger platform, wondering if there would be interest out there.  At this time last year, we had grown to over 200 members and it was clear that we needed a new website.  Most of the year was spent focusing on that.  Several members volunteered their time and energy in a think tank that we set up on Facebook, discussing what we needed.  Then we had a fundraiser on IndieGoGo and successfully raised $5,000, again from the members, to pay for the site.  A local design team, Horizon Media Group has been working on the site since August, with me actively in the thick of things.  One week ago, we had members volunteer as guinea pigs to test the process of loading their info and using the site.  There are still many glitches and we need to change servers, but you can preview it at www.tafalist.net.

TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List's new site.

Hopefully, we will be able to move to the www.tafalist.com url by the end of this week.  This has been an incredibly exhausting process, but one that has also been energizing, wonderfully democratic, and it goes to show that things can happen with no money.  My motto with TAFA has been, "Together we can do great things!" and the website is the first proof of that.

It's hard to explain to people outside of the textile community what I do.  I used to say I was an artist, but since I started TAFA I have poured all of my creative energy into building it, so have not done much of my own sewing or art work.  Hopefully, the website will free up some of my time so that I can do that again this year.  I also hope that I can travel more and actually meet some of the members who have become virtual friends.  We'll see how it all pans out.

We also had our first live event last year during the Quilt Show in April here in Paducah.  We suffered serious flooding in the area and it was a scary time.  I don't know if we will do it again this year.  I was also able to visit family and friends in Wisconsin and in Chicago during the Fall, a wonderful highlight.

What is ahead for 2012?  I haven't thought much beyond getting the new site finished.  Who knows what doors will open or close?  I pretty much try to live each day fully and take things as they come.  Many friends  have been ill in the past year, having major surgeries or having to go through chemo.  As we get older, nothing can be taken for granted, so I just hope that 2012 will be a healthy one and a creative one, with no big, rude surprises.

Let's start out the year with that old favorite Gaelic blessing:

May the road rise to meet you,
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
The rains fall soft upon your fields.
And until we meet again,
May God hold you in the palm of his hand.

May God be with you and bless you:
May you see your children's children.
May you be poor in misfortune,
Rich in blessings.
May you know nothing but happiness
From this day forward.

May the road rise up to meet you
May the wind be always at your back
May the warm rays of sun fall upon your home
And may the hand of a friend always be near.

May green be the grass you walk on,
May blue be the skies above you,
May pure be the joys that surround you,
May true be the hearts that love you.




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Wednesday, November 30, 2011

A Package from Costa Rica

Costa Rican coffe:  a gift from Silvia of Galeria Octagono

Yesterday I got a nice package in the mail:  a gift from one of our TAFA members, Silvia of Galeria Octagono in Costa Rica.  (See her member profile on TAFA). 

coffee.  macadamia candy.  brochures.  ornaments made by her kids workshop.
FUN   FUN   FUN

Silvia joined a couple of months ago and has been a joy!  She participates actively in several of our forums and we share many common interests with Latin America, nature, and of course, how things are made.  As the SDA representative for Latin America and the Caribbean, Silvia has a broad range in her role as an artist, educator and member of the world textile community.

As I was thinking of her and where she lives, I thought I would check it out on Google Earth:


Sil had sent a marker, which made it easier:  "If you look up "Bosque de la Hoja, Heredia, Costa Rica" you'll get Galería Octágono campus. We're at the intersection: the road continues north to the Divide, and we're outside a huge fancy residencial development (Residencial Ave del Paraíso)."

They have a small B&B with a cabin and in my imagination, I am there, hiking around in the local hills and mountains.  Here is one of the photos from her husband's, Rick's, blog:


Paradise, eh?

From there, I killed a couple more hours looking at Google Earth.  I went to Kabul and ran away.  What an awful place!  Down to where I grew up in Brazil.  Now everyone in my old neighborhood has a swimming pool in their back yard!  Puh-leeze....  I don't want to hear any griping from my Brazilian friends about hard times!  Went and took a look at Chicago, came down to Paducah and then the bird got tired and went to bed.

Woke up this morning....  and yes...  I had a wonderful cup of that Costa Rican coffee.  Thought of Silvia again.  She had told me she was sending me a bag of coffee, but I had no idea it was going to be so big!  Looks like I will be thinking about her for weeks ahead!


The Musician, available at Galeria Octagono

Galeria Octagono is a lively place with many community programs and projects.  Silvia is now a radio celebrity, with a weekly program aimed at getting regular people to think about art, nature, and other topics.  It's all about education, meaningfulness, creating community, making life rich with color, texture and collaboration.  I think about how each of us has the potential to impact our local communities.  How we live in such faraway places, but in a click of the button, we can get a bird's eye view of our neighborhoods.  How we can never meet yet still be friends.  

Want to share a cup of coffee with Silvia?  I doubt she can send bags all over the world, but she is there, interacting with our online communities.  Visit her website, her blog, and if you can, go down and spend some time at their B&B.  And, I bet that if you have some craft supplies that need a new home, Galeria Octagono would be a good place to send them.  Buy their art, send donations, and make new friends.  It's a beautiful world and it warms my heart that Silvia is down there, doing her piece to make it so.

Thank you, Silvia!

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Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Following the Bison Trail Part II by Doris Florig

"Gros Ventre", Bison Fiber Sculpture by Doris Florig



Part II.  Gros Ventre


Read Part I
It took all summer to complete but it was worth every minute. While working on him, he got moved around quite a bit from studio to studio. Everywhere he went he created quite a stir. Unlike other art work, there was never a hesitation in the response of the observer.   Some jumped because he seemed so real, others thought he was scary and others laughed showing great pleasure.  The reactions changed as he took shape, but there was always an uninhibited reaction. He has been fun from start to finish.
He was constructed from nothing but wire, a raw fleece, felted wool, yarn, real bison hair and real horns. Once completed, he sold immediately. I am happy to say that he went to a good home. He was purchased by Marie-Eve and Harvey Locke.  Harvey is the founder of the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative, commonly known as Y2Y. One of their projects is to reintroduce the Bison to Banff National Park.
With my approval Harvey and Marie-Eve named their new sculpture after the location where he was conceived, “Gross Ventre”.  Headed for Canada, they left my studio grinning and smiling. ”Gros Ventre” become the first bison to migrate to Banff National Park as part of the BISON BELONG project.
Should I do a big horn sheep next?

______________


Doris Florig is currently teaching in the fiber department at Jackson Hole, WY at the Center for the Arts. To learn more about workshops and classes offered contact Doris: email.

Doris is a TAFA member although her member profile is still not posted. Visit her website.
 

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Thursday, August 11, 2011

Vote for us on Idea Cafe!

We are finalists for a $1,000 small business grant from Idea Cafe!  I applied on behalf of TAFA, hoping that we could use this money to help market the new website.  The grant is given to the finalist who has the most votes, so go over there and help us give a great showing!



And, if you also have a small business, check out Idea Cafe and see if they have anything that can help you, too!
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Sunday, July 24, 2011

TAFA's New Website: The Prototype is Here!


TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List was launched in January of 2010 using Blogger as a temporary platform.  All along, I have known that eventually we would have to invest in a new site that could accommodate our needs.  By January of 2011, we had clearly outgrown the blog format and began investing time and energy in getting a new site.  For the last two months we have been fundraising on IndieGoGo.  With two days to go, we have raised enough to launch the core part of our site, but still need another $1,400 to develop all of the bells and whistles we would like to have on the site.

Our designer, Nathan Brown of Horizon Media Group, finished the prototypes for the new site's look yesterday.  I almost cried with relief when I got the emails from him.  Although we still have a lot of work to do, I knew that our members would like this design.  It was so much more beautiful than I imagined!  It spells happiness and joy, a welcoming to the beauty that is so much what TAFA is all about!

The landing page has several versions, showing how the largest image will flash to different scenes:






Nathan basically plugged in different things he found from our links.  The Home Page will be the portal to the different hubs and features of the site.  We are working on much of that through a think tank group of TAFA members.  All along, as TAFA has developed and grown as an organization, members have had input and helped shape the direction.  It has truly been a great experiment in democracy!  Of course, I have to make many of the decisions, but I feel that I can do so from an informed place.  Our members are mature and have an extraordinary amount of knowledge, business savvy, and experience in the field.  I certainly could not have come this far on my own and every day I am grateful, humbled and honored by having this experience with TAFA and its members.


TAFA Member Profile Prototype


Right now, our members have their profiles on the site as a post, listing their background and internet sites.  At full functionality, each member will have their own landing page, highlighting their products and other online presence.  Member profiles will be like mini-websites.  All users will be able to register, sign in, save profiles and product that they like for further reference, leave comments and connect to each other.  We want to be able to integrate some of the best social media functions into the site.  That is what we still need to raise some money for...  and that is what will benefit the whole fiber art and textile community the most.  We hope that you will see how wonderful TAFA will be as a community hub.


Product search template for TAFA

Developing a smooth search system for TAFA products is the most challenging part of the site for us.  We have a think tank on facebook, a group of TAFA members, which has been discussing how to best set this up.  Language is important.  There will be two product areas on TAFA, the main search database that links back to member profiles and a market, much like the one we have set up temporarily, TAFA Market, which links to member shopping carts outside of the site.  One is basically to introduce member products and the other is for shopping.  The main search will also include books authored by members, videos, and so on.

Do you like what you see?  YOU can help us make TAFA the best it can be.  Donate to our campaign.


We only have a couple of days left.  Here is what you get with your donation:

  • All donors will be listed permanently on a page on our new website.  You can see who has contributed so far by going here.
  • $10 Donation: Name on the site
  • $20 Donation: Name and link of choice on the site.
  • $50 Donation:  Name, link and image on site.
  • $100 Donation: Name, link, image and gift.  (See gifts listed.)
  • $215 Donation: Name, link, image and 18 months of advertising.  (Less than $12 a month).
We still need to raise over $1,300, so any amount you can give will help us get closer to our goal.

The new site will still take a couple of months of work before we can launch it.  Meanwhile, visit our member profiles at TAFA List and shop from our TAFA Market.  You can also visit our Etsy member shops on our Team Blog.

Many thanks to all of you who have contributed and are making a wild and beautiful dream come true!



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Saturday, July 16, 2011

TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List now has an online market!



We have been fundraising on IndieGoGo for the last 50 days to raise money for TAFA's new website.  The goal is to create a site that can serve as a hub for our members (now at almost 300 from 23 countries), that is interactive, that showcases our products, announces workshops, and that has all kinds of bells and whistles which will serve the whole textile and fiber art community.  Such a site costs money.  We have been working with a local design group in Paducah who has quoted the cost at around $5,000, a low price for what we are getting ('cuz they like me and they like TAFA).

We have 11 days left to the fundraiser and are only halfway at our goal.  We need all of you who can donate to jump in and do so now.  Oh, and the TAFA Market?  What's THAT about?  Well, my feeling was that people needed a visual to see what our products would look like on an image-based search engine.  So, Aynex Designs, a TAFA member, offered to set something up on Wordpress.  She and I worked hard at it for two weeks and we ended up with something truly stunning!  

Art Quilts on the TAFA Market


This is a temporary site intended to help give our fundraiser momentum, but also a great exercise in looking at categories, language and other design elements we will incorporate into the new site.  We hope to have a prototype of the new landing page in the next few days.  (The new site will look nothing like this one.)  A group of TAFA members is meeting on facebook in a "think-tank" capacity, discussing the many ways we can set up categories, how they can break down, what they should be called, etc.  When we talk about "textiles and fiber art", we are including ancient traditions and all kinds of experimental niches within the contemporary arena- how do we make sense of it all?


Accessories and Jewelry on the TAFA Market

For this temporary site, I tried to keep it simple.  We have some of the major type categories (art quilts, weaving, felting, embroidery) and then a few function categories (accessories and jewelry, home interiors, tools and supplies, etc.).  We were also able to create other groupings by using tags, such as "nature" or "jewelry-necklace", so that the images would show up in different ways.


Felting on the TAFA Market

Who is on the TAFA Market?  I chose to reward members who have contributed time and or money to TAFA, both in the fundraiser and through this past year.  We have come a long way and I am so grateful to all of the members who have supported this vision and me.  It is easy for me to work on behalf of TAFA- just look at these products!  They truly are the cream of the crop!  Our growth process has been extremely democratic with member input and ideas shaping the vision all along.  I did have this larger idea of TAFA's potential from the beginning, but there has been a core group of members who have dedicated time and energy to help me make it happen.  (We're not there yet, so we do need YOU to jump in, too!)  The products you see on the TAFA Market are a small percentage of what will be on the new site.  We seriously aim to become THE destination for the textile and fiber art community.

Weaving on the TAFA Market

One of the things I am most proud of TAFA is its international representation.  I have been on a crusade for a long time, insisting that "ethnic" and "contemporary" products need to share the same platform.  My dream is finally coming true!  On almost every page of the TAFA Market, you will see examples of work made by studio artists along side of work made by traditional communities from around the world.  Why should the San Francisco weaver and the one in Laos be separated withing the Handmade Revolution?  This is a huge beef I have with Etsy.  They have aggressively barred fair trade groups and non-profits from having a collective presence on the site.  I find this injurious and damaging on so many levels!  The TAFA Market proves that co-existence is the right approach.  We are in this world together.  We learn from each other, we grow because of what the other does, and we have similar needs.


Supplies and Tools on the TAFA Market

Building the Supplies and Tools page was a fascinating process!  We have so many member who are selling gorgeous yarns, fabrics, dyes and tools....  I think this in itself will be a huge contribution to the fiber arts/textile community.  Access to so many small businesses who are harvesting their own materials, many with a commitment to environmental and humane practices.  Absolutely wonderful!

Workshops on the TAFA Market

Finally, I added a page of workshops and it makes your jaw drop...  TAFA's membership consists of mostly women in their 50's and 60's.  This means that they are seasoned experts.  Many, many are teachers and authors, leaders in our community.  The new site will be able to showcase all of these talents and opportunities in wonderful ways.  There will be a community calendar where you will be able to see all of the workshops being offered around the world.  Members will be able to load their video tutorials, books, and other educational tools on the site.  The collective knowledge represented here is endless!

I hope that this post motivates you to contribute financially to our vision.  Donate whatever you can to our fundraiser on IndieGoGo.   Donors are thanked on facebook, indiegogo and will have a permanent link on our site.  For now, you can see who has donated and what gifts are available on this page.  We are offering a great advertising deal, too.  Donate $215 to the fundraiser and get an 18 month ad on TAFA.  This will transfer over to the new site when it launches.  You do not need to have a business to do this.  You can advertise your favorite charity or site and you will know that you are supporting a great cause.

What will happen to this TAFA Market?  The new site will still take a few months to build.  Meanwhile, we can use this one to showcase our members.  Click on an image on the market and it takes you to the member's shopping cart.  Buy from them!  Support these wonderful people who work so hard to excel at what they do!  Share the link with others who may also like it.  Spread the word about TAFA!

I am deeply appreciative of all the time Aynex spent in helping us set this up.  Do you need a new website or graphic design services?  Please contact her for any work you need done.  She has a broad range of experience, her prices are reasonable, and she is just a great person.  Aynex Designs


Together we can do great things!


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