The Couch, How It Ended

By Merritt Gade, January 26, 2010 3:22 pm

It’s taken me as long to finish writing about The Couch as it did to make it.  Not really, but it has been a few months.  Here’s how it all went down…

Stripping: 10.5 hours; Easy, messy, fun for the first few hours; Important to remove every nail and staple to insure solid stapling later; Found coins from as far back as the 1950s, Doritos, stickers, and this dirty, eyeless Santa eraser

His home is on my monitor stand now.

Spring Tying: 2.5 hours; Very important in order to make the shape of the seat back perfect and solid

Arm Shaping: 6 hours; Necessary for modernizing the overall look; Made it up as I went along

(Black walnut sawhorses handmade by Dad)

Shims, 2x4s, nails, screws, glue, probably a little bit of blood

Felt & Burlap Layers: 2.5 hours; Creates stability between frame and foam; Easy and fun

Foam, Cotton, & Muslin Layers: 7.5 hours; Foam and cotton create the real body of the couch and must be done with the exact results in mind; Muslin help smooths everything like a corset; Drew with chalk and sharpies to get the staple and piping lines symmetrical and in the right places

Against the far wall of a 2-car garage, zoomed all the way, and the couch still doesn't fit!

Sharpie Magic!

Fabric Cutting: 2 hours; This is only counting the actual cutting of each piece; Not counted are the hours where I laid the fabric out, measured, thought, planned, measured again before ever getting to the cutting

Welt Cord: 2 hours; Just sewing the yards and yards of piping to go around the yards and yards of sofa

Fabric Application: 15.5 hours; I sewed 3 pieces together with piping in between for the seat, 3 similar for the seat back, and another 3 for the outside back; Keeping the pieces as straight and pucker-free as possible was crucial because everything shows up in the finished product; These 3-piece panels weighed about two tons and were like wrestling an anaconda; Stuffing the fabric between the seat and the seat back made me cry once and fear the possibility of breaking bones due to the tight fit of all parts; Glue is used in two places; The arms are my proudest accomplishment; Fabric app was definitely the hardest part

Excellent color choice!

Excellent stapling skills!

The last of the hard stuff.

Finishing: 2.5 hours; Dust cover application met with a huge sigh of relief and disbelief that I was actually done; Scrubbed the brass of the feet to a shine; Stood the monster upright, climbed up on it for a rest, and then looked at it every day until delivery

And the final product in its new home.  So pretty, so cool, so glad I’m done.

Note the pillow made from The Couch's previous hide.

Now vs. Then

By Merritt Gade, January 20, 2010 2:37 pm

I started out on this full-time hand-making venture in early January 2009.  To say that I’ve learned a lot in the last year would be an understatement.  A sum-up seems appropriate.

What do I make? I still make jewelry, but have pared down my offerings a ton.  Earrings have become the line I make the most.  At the beginning, I thought it was important to experiment with a lot of varying styles and beads and attempt to mimic what I was seeing out there.  The experimentation was important, it’s just that some stuff came out looking pretty generic and I had a hard time getting excited about it.  I now really only make designs that I know for sure I’ve not seen anywhere else and that seem to get the best attention.  I also found colorful art wire and use it in so many ways I never would have thought of a year ago.  I continue with tiaras and hair picks, too, and have taken those in a pleasant, original direction I’m excited to explore in the months ahead.

Where do I sell? At the start of 2009, I had been in one show and made two Etsy sales.  I now have my goods in six stores, have sold a bit more on Etsy, and have had a long and thorough crash course in face-to-face selling.  Getting into stores is incredibly challenging and my natural shyness made me sick to my stomach for the first dozen or so tries.  I don’t walk right in with total confidence now, but I don’t have to circle the block so much either.  I remind myself that no one is ever mean to your face, even if they laugh when you leave.  Most of the places I sell are actually fun to visit now because the folks I meet with are supportive and always seem genuinely glad to get new inventory.

Etsy is also tough and, while I feel like I learn more each month, I think it’s just a hard nut to crack.  Doing everything every successful seller recommends may still result in nothing.  Or very little.  I’m always working on my shop, though, so I haven’t given up.  I can photograph and edit my own work now, too, which feels great.

Face-to-face shows were one notch below cold-calling a store in the realm of things that made me queasy, but this where I feel I’ve really grown the most.  I was incredibly nervous at the first couple of shows and didn’t really speak to anyone.  My display technique was to just lay everything out on the table.  Neatly, but still, not that great.  I continue to tweak my displays because people are funny when it comes to looking versus shopping, and I want to help them shop as much as I can.  Having a nice looking set-up helps with confidence immensely.  And I actually enjoy talking to customers now, which is definitely something Me of ’08 would have raised an eyebrow at, and I can do it without sounding like a schmucky used car salesman.

How do I keep track? I adore (yes, adore) spreadsheets and lists.  My spreadsheets have gotten more detailed and specific where needed, and have helped me be less afraid of taxes, better at pricing my work, able to see when a new show is too risky, etc.  Going over them for taxes last week was a trip down memory lane, for sure.  Anyone remember that show at the Hyatt?  Hottest day on a shadeless patio.  I keep track of everything on spreadsheets so well that my tax lady said I don’t need any sort of fancy software for businesses.  I am my own Quicken.

My lists have evolved a lot.  I have a weekly “do this on this day” schedule where I assign two main things that have to get done each day of the week.  I add tasks to a general list for the next week during the current week and then assign each task to a day on Sunday night.  It leaves room for surprises, moods, and external factors like weather and naughty dogs.  I almost always get everything done and I can sleep well each night knowing what I’m supposed to do the next day and over the few next weeks.

I also keep a long running “Brain/Hand” list.  “Brain” is one half of the page where I list business tracking, phone calls, blogging, and other non-making things.  “Hand” is where I make, photograph, tag, clean, and the like.  It’s always a couple pages, with most immediate needs on the first page, next urgent on the next page, and can-be-a-bit-later on the last.  It prioritizes itself, really.  At the end of every day, I’ve written everything I did, what times I started and stopped, how much money may have been collected, highlighted mileage driven, and even noted fun stuff like going to the movies, on my big desk calendar.  I can throw away my smaller, working lists when they’re complete knowing that I’m on top of it all.  Keeps my desk and psyche neater.

Who do I work with? Usually, it’s just me and the dog on weekdays.  Joe is “in the office” some days and most evenings, and we do a pretty good job of not distracting each other.  It took me a while to not go into his office every time I had a thought or was bored or stumped.  We still like each other, so that slight worry from a year ago is gone.

In addition to the shop owners and operators I’ve been working with, I have also joined a couple of groups of makers, sellers, and business owners.  I never thought I would even like this, but it turns out I LOVE it.  It really helpsto have so much experience, diversity, and support from people who are doing what I’m doing.  They get it.  I have met many really wonderful and talented people, all of whom want to share information and encouragement.

As always, I can count on certain family and friends for different feedback or advice when I need trustworthy facts from people who know me well.  They get me.

What else? My neck and right shoulder have pained me since about 9th grade, always worse during more stress or longer hours at a desk.  Delightedly, I have almost tamed the hurting, something I wasn’t totally sure would happen.  It was a theory and now it is proven, I’m not meant to work at a desk all day or under conditions that make me carry stress around.

Also, I tend to like more people more often these days, instead of wanting to crawl in a cave at the end of any social experience.  I had feared I might get weird being alone so much the time, but I have found I feel normal being by myself so much and can actually look forward to interacting with others.

Long post short, I’m sticking with hand-making fine things and am optimistic about learning and improving and moving forward into year two.

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