Selling art
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Well good luck with creating and selling (if you decide to set one up). I hope it can work for you!
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@joyce_carmo I have had a Society6 account for a few years now - I have had some sales (pretty much all from friends/family) and lately only have a few items on there at request. The products are nice and folks are satisfied with them. But I do find you do not make very much money - since the company is doing all of the work and has all of the costs involved.
And just like with anything else - you do not immediately get sales when you post as your are one of millions of pieces online. Folks can like your piece and it will build in popularity but it takes a while to build up the reputation or lots of existing followers to go get your stuff on there.
So I would personally recommend doing both your own shop as well as one or a few of these sites and see what happens. If it is going to take time to build up a following - your own website/shop would be ideal in the long run!
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Hey, @Rich-Green. I really thought these things you pointed out would be pointed sooner or later. I have that in mind, and hearing from people who already have experienced these platforms can keep me a little more realistic about my expectations on them. So thanks for adding your experience. I'll keep in mind all you said.
And @Dulcie, thanks again. I think I'll give it a try, as I have nothing to lose.
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I had a shop on Etsy a few years back where I sold giclee prints of my watercolors. I got the most sales from small trading card sized prints. They were priced low and people like to collect them (including myself). There was the cost of ordering prints from a separate website though. My biggest problem was the illusion of promotion within Etsy. The community would "favorite" the heck out of my page but they were all other sellers who weren't looking to buy. Promotion outside the site is a big deal.
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@joyce_carmo not sure if you're into it, but my wife and son are very successful stock artists. It's HARD work, more than just creating, you have to do A LOT of research, and keep current with trends, styles, and seasonal work. You also have to extensively key word your files so people can find them. It does NOT pay well the first year, a large portfolio is required to pay for itself after a year's time of fattening it.
But if you're style is marketable, and some sites do except raster work, though primarily you would have to learn Adobe Illustrator, Corel Draw or the much more affordable Affinity Designer, as 99% of it is Vector Art. But again if you work hard, it is a career that affords a certain amount of laying back, after the first year. The trick is to keep feeding your portfolio week after week... and if you're lucky, get an inspector's job from one of these companies after showing your diligence. THAT is slightly more tedious but a kind of parallel career created by the stock art industry as well. My family does both.
Stock art comes in short videos, in photography of course, in raster and vector. Even in music files. It's an industry from the fall out of the small to midlevel advertising agency that can no longer afford to keep a design team paid full time in house. We've been at it 10 years, and have done fairly well for ourselves. But make no mistake, it won't pay off immediately, and it is very hard competitive work.
There is a lot of horrible schlock out there... you have no idea why people pay for that stuff, but they do.
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@gimmehummus! I knew about Etsy, but I thought it was based more on a seller-customer direct relationship. Didn't knew that they handled printing and stuff. I'll take a look, thanks a lot!
@Bobby-Aquitania that's yet another way to make a living thru art that I didn't knew. Thanks for sharing about your experience. I'll have to make a little research on that area to see it can be my thing, though.
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Etsy doesn't handle printing. I had to get my stuff printed myself so I used a site called iprintfromhome.com. They had really good selection and quality though.
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@gimmehummus Oh, I see! Thanks for making it clearer
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@joyce_carmo great topic!! my advice is try one, see if you like it. then try another. find some of your favorite artists and see what shops they use then trust in what you already know then take action: http://www.artbizblog.com/2013/05/decision.html
a lot of times we as artists can be stuck indefinitely in the information-gathering mode. Here's a great article for those of us who are stuck: http://www.artbizblog.com/2014/05/imperfect-action.html
cheers!! I'm on a similar journey.
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Hey, @carlossketches! Thank you very much for the links and the support!
The second link was especially nice, I really liked it!Good luck for both of us in this project!