enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

  • IMG_1871 IMG_1875 I am about to bop myself onto a vacation. I have a suitcase packed with j.crew shorts, a few tees, and oodles of paper supplies. I really hope they do not randomly screen my bag because OH MAN, they will never get it closed again. I am bringing this dress (recommendation by Stephanie Howell via tweet-astic) home with me. Paul and I are taking our engagement photos while we are back in Sac and I am quite sure this orange + gray number was made for us. Or at least me (though P did give it a quite encouraging, "Sure babe. looks great!")

    I am also taking home the above pile of paper + rolls of cloth. I have a mixed book 2.0 plan. It is set to launch on Wednesday 7/22 for the update. I am crazy excited about these books and I hope you will be too. Happy Saturday! Yay west coast! See you in a few!

  • IMG_1866 I have this theory that the better the invitation, the better the party.
    The invite sets the tone. A good, well thought out, appealing
    paper invitation is a BIG DEAL. Which is why I nearly called the Paper
    Source
    buyers and kissed them over the phone yesterday when orange and gray Snow & Graham paper arrived in the store. HOW DID THEY KNOW? How did Snow & Graham know? What a mystery. This is the paper I will use to line my invitation envelopes. Gray envelopes, orange POM POM paper. BRIGHT orange RSVP
    envelopes
    . I might not even have invites. Just send out envelopes.
    People will be like, "Wow, I don't know what this is all about, but I
    most definitely want to get on a plane to California and celebrate some
    sort of orange and gray LOVE FEST." And by LOVE FEST they will mean
    wedding.

    *not to be confused with the neglected but soon-to-be-back-with-a-vengeance Wedding Wednesdays.

  • IMG_1766 I am getting all set for a two week trip home to California. This means great debates like, "Do I take my paper cutter?" "Should I check my hole punch?" You would think for a two week trip, I could hang up my scrap supplies and return to them when I got home. But thing about me, is that the crafting part is what helps make a trip fun. Even Hawaii can be enhanced by some paper and glue.

    PLUS this is just the first of many trips back to California. Over the next eight months, Paul will be gone for three month long out-of-state medical rotations. I have decided to take (slightly shorter) trips of my own while he is gone. For one thing, I do not want to rattle around the apartment by myself and for another, I can do fun things like wedding obsess plan with my parents. (PLUS I get to fly to LA and visit the girls/see USC play football.) Either way, the point is, I have to start getting good at taking this show job on the road.

    I am planning to get the website mini book section at least halfway done while I am home. This means you will be able to page through every book. I am also going to spend some time developing the workshop I will run in September. And LAST, I am hoping to make some TO DO list mini books to sell in my shop. These will look similar to my 24 TO DO book (I think they will have 30 pages) and will be a great blank canvas for you to fill in your achievements if you are working on a birthday list.

    I am also planning to go to a wedding in the bay area, spend a few days in Tahoe, taste cakes, GO TO YOGA, cook dinner for the parents, list a bunch of mixed paper books for a shop update, and design and order letterpress plates for our save the dates and wedding invites. Can't wait, can't wait.

  • Harry6 We saw it. It was a little hairy for a minute when a preview cut in the middle, but fortunately, it came right back on. The quote above did not make the movie. Many good parts did not make the movie. But that is not why I see the movies. I see the movies to watch my very favorite stories come to life. This was a good re-telling. I imagine JK Rowling was pleased.

    Regard non-Harry Potter related posts return tomorrow. Probably.

  • We failed miserably at Harry Potter last night. Actually, that's a lie. WE were there. WE got to the theater 2 hours early. WE were mid theater center of the row. WE were ready for a GOOD FILM. Regal Theaters failed to provide it. Our preview reel was cut three times. After each one, they promised it would be 2 minutes to show time. Forty-five minutes later we stopped listening and left.

    Take two starts today at 10:40AM.

  • Tips
    Stay organized
    : Sort your email into folders to keep track of shop orders. Have a system for marking things as paid and shipped. Keep your inventory sorted as well so you don't run into the problem I have dealt with twice where you re-sell something that you have already sold.

    Keep a spreadsheet : Spreadsheets are not for everyone. I get
    that. But it is important to track what is coming in and what is going
    out. Not only so you know if your little venture is succeeding but so
    you know what you made for tax purposes down the line. I have a
    spreadsheet with two columns – INS and OUTS. Every etsy order, workshop
    seat, custom journal, gets entered in the INS column. Every etsy
    payment, supply purchase, studio rental, postage charge goes into the
    OUTS. I have worked out all sorts of calculations to tell me how much I
    have made vs. how much I have spent and what percentage of my gross
    income (how much I took in) is net income (how much I took in minus
    expenses). I am careful to track my spending so I know where my OUTS
    are going : fees, shipping, supplies, packaging, letterpress rental, or publicity.

    Check shipping costs : Unless your are shipping Priority Mail only, postage is not a one size fits all and treating it that way is a very easy way to lose money. Take packaged samples to the post office and write down what rates will be. Do not guess. You could under price and come up short OR over price and your item will lose some value in the eye of consumers. In your shipping cost, consider the price of your mailing envelopes or boxes. Consider your etsy and paypal fees. Consider the amount of effort it will take you to get larger items delivered to the post office. Be sure to charge accordingly.

    Pay yourself : When calculating how much to charge for something, do not just consider what you paid for the raw materials and then add a few bucks. You have to add your time. Did the item take you an hour to make? How much do you deserve to be paid per hour? How much are you losing by NOT working an hourly wage job? Also consider that not only did you pay for the materials, but you paid for the tools that you worked with and the desk that you worked on.

    Publicize : Consider reaching out to blogs that
    frequently feature products similar to yours. Here is a great post
    from Design*Sponge about contacting design bloggers. Non paid editorial
    features can work wonders. It may also be a good idea to advertise on blogs or
    purchasing a table in curated marketplaces like Poppytalk Handmade. Many blogs may offer unique opportunities to their sponsors, like editorial content or the chance to host giveaways. (Giveaways mean links, links mean clicks to your stuff. Clicks mean eyes. The more eyes, the more opportunities for purchase.)

    Consider your small venture a job : Again, this is not something that is for everyone. I think a lot of small shops work perfectly as a hobby and that is how they were intended. If, however, you would eventually like your shop to be your career, start calling it that. Think of it as a real job with consistent hours. Set realistic goals and work towards them. Do not push them to the side just because you can. If this was your real job, and a boss was standing over you, you would need be expected to deliver results. Same goes for this – only you are your own boss.

    *These are my thoughts. Just some tips I have mulled over while in the process of building my own little shop. They may differ in opinion from yours and that's good news. It means there are many ways to succeed. I also recommend the book Craft, Inc. There is so much good stuff in that book about starting a business from scratch, pricing your product, advertising, ETC. Great read and reference.

  • Ideabook Oh man. I will be shaking the sleep out of my eyes until at least 3pm.

    I re-read Harry Potter 6 this weekend in preparation for the MIDNIGHT SHOWING of the movie late this coming Tuesday night. What a winner of a story. Good news is, I am not one of those people who gets upset when the movie is not like the book. Let's be honest – nothing can keep up with the magic of those books. Bad news is, I dumped about half a cup of milk into the silverware drawer this morning. It was an accident. Something to do with my eyes not opening.

    REGARDLESS –

    Today is a leave the house for work day, so leave it I shall. Look for the shop update at 1PM. Mixed paper books, handbound journals like the one shown above and song + dance prints.

  • Orkposter Ork Posters! Famous for their city neighborhood posters, this new heart one was an insta fave. I love that it works for Paul because on his journey to become a doctor, he has developed a crush on organs. I love that it works for me because it is graphically delightful. I love that it's a heart which means love. And I love that it is just a tad bit out of left field. (found via Design Crush).

    It's nearly the weekend – but I have a strange schedule so that doesn't mean too much. I am anxious to get through the next eight days and then get home to California. I have several long chats with Mom and Dad plus wine scheduled.

    THANK YOU for the kind words about the NYC book. I promise – mini books are ADDICTING. Do one and you're hooked for life. Or at least until the next big thing comes along.

    Have a good one.

  • IMG_1714
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    Done + done. I brought the base of a book to New York last weekend, filled it with polaroids, tickets and business cards while we were there and then added 4×6 photos and parts of our map yesterday.

    A travel album is a concise way to get travel photos + travel thoughts together in one place. My advice is to give yourself a lot of space in your book for writing. Each day, sit down in the afternoon and journal what you did that morning. Sit down in the morning and journal what you did the previous afternoon and night. It's surprising how quickly the little things fade if you don't get pen to paper.

    I put blank transparencies into this book and they were the perfect way to "suspend" business cards within the pages. I took my polaroid photos sideways so I could punch through the white space and they would still be right side up in the book. After we got home, I cut up the map we used and "labeled" the locations of spots we visited.

    Supplies : white cardstock, book rings, staples, Hambly Studios paper and transparencies, hole punch, white booktape, chipboard, American Crafts black slick writer pen, white Sharpie. ++ PS : the album on the road concept is totally something I got from Ali Edwards. Her travel albums are fantastic.

  • IMG_1704 These little guys will be in the shop on Monday. They are quite excited to meet their new owners.