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

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Craft Fair Displays Part Four

More Ideas from Crafts at Lyndhurst and Others



Jill Chuckas of Crafty Baby has long experience as a small business woman and craft fair seller.  I enjoyed her use of old baby furniture in her display, and the loads of color and comfort in her wares.  There even a cot on the right showing off her blankets - the sort of cots daycare centers provide for their toddlers to take naps - along with a toy chest, old cradle, and room screens. 


The great modern fabrics she uses make me wish I still had little ones to buy for.



I've been a frequent attendee at the Lyndhurst Crafts Fair and this was the first time I'd seen Kristin's work, and I was blown away by her craft.  Kristin had come up all the way from Florida with this lovely and cohesive shop.



Kristin's husband has a love of ship salvage, and her industrial looking display is actually old rusted wrenches - you place the wrench on a giant bolt and poke an bar in the holes to turn it.  The rusty color goes with her orange color scheme and makes a great contrast with the finish and detail of her jewelry.  The rings here are actually her daughter's work.  A talented family.


I couldn't take pictures of her amazing work without reflections, and her shop was super busy!


That's it for the Lyndhurst displays.  Here is my own display, set up in Cape Cod during the summer.  It consists of two folding bookcases from Target, a raised folding plastic 6' table with white bead board panels screwed into the front.  I display some of my prints with stones that have a slot cut into them (stones ordered on Etsy.)  Though I get a lot of compliments on how my display looked, I think it's a complicated set up and am looking to simplify my shop for fairs.



Last but not least, a beautiful holiday display by Rosi Zingales last year in New York.



I hope everyone gets some new ideas on improving their displays!  Please let me know if you see something interesting and commendable, so we can share.

Jody

a Studio by the Sea
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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Craft Fair Displays Part III

Displays from the Lyndhurst Craft Fair


The Fall Crafts at Lyndhurst, Tarrytown, New York, is a well organized and well publicized high end craft fair put on by Artrider.  They have one in the spring as well, which is one of best selling fairs in the country, with entry fees to match.  I've been going to these fairs off and on, for over twenty years, and they really are top of the line and well worth attending as a buyer or spectator.  

I've only chosen a few displays from the hundreds there because I'm focusing on the unusual and the practical with regard to our readers and members.  There were many professional and elegant displays by full time craftspeople and artists that most of us could neither afford nor build ourselves.  The following displays show what some artists with a wonderful imagination can do with a modest budget and simple carpentry skills.





Jessica's clean modern jewelry is set off by her gleaming silver booth.  Sheets of metal give her booth the clean lines of industrial chic, echoed by etched grey plexiglass shelves and boards.  I forgot to ask where her metal sheets come from, but I know I picked up one for my lampworking table from the local Home Depot, and any drill with the proper bit can drill through the soft aluminum.  They're thin, light, and easy to clean, which make them great for the traveling craftsperson.  Bravo!


 The clever use of a perforated panel for her beautiful earrings, with even a mirror attached!   Jessica Weiss Jewelry Studio





Stavit and Nachshon are Israeli artists working in Brooklyn combining painting, resin, and crystals on laser cut stainless steel to make their one of kind judaica and jewelry.  I was entranced by their beautiful and delicately detailed work, but their display is very interesting as well.  Matching frames display their work but they are held in place by sturdy metal piping attached to the tables.  As our weather gets windier and more unpredictable, this looks like a splendid answer to that problem.


The white and pink was unusual and fun!  Seeka




Laura Cleminson of Hoist Away Bags, comes from Maine and makes some of the nicest recycled sail bags I've seen, adding more color and lively design than other makers.  A sailor herself, she knows how the sails were used, and how the bags will be used - they look really tough and well made.  She's also taken her sailing experience into her display, all of which easily fits into her car.  Everything is hung from ropes and wooden boards.


I completely love her tote bag display, which idea came from the cabin of a big boat she was sailing on.  The totes are right at the level for customers to look at, and with one hand you can pull the left knot up and out of the slot, freeing the bag for trying on or closer inspection.


And here is a rope and dowel ladder for her beautiful bookbags.  Her display is everything a craftsperson could want: windproof, rainproof, light, easy to transport, easy to set up, charming and clever.  Hoist Away Bags


I find the ingenuity of others inspiring, and I hope others can discover ways to improve their displays through these posts.

Jody Lee

a Studio by the Sea

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