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Meet the Organizer: Grace Dobush

The organizers of Midwest Craft Con have been involved in the indie craft scene for years, and chances are you’ve seen them around Ohio! This week we meet organizer Grace Dobush.

So who are you?

I’m a 33-year-old cat mom in Cincinnati, Ohio. But for real, I’m a freelance writer and wholehearted creative entrepreneur. In addition to working on Midwest Craft Con, I co-organize Crafty Supermarket, an indie craft show that’s celebrating its sixth birthday this year, and I wrote the Crafty Superstar business guides that came out in 2009 and 2012. What you might not know is that my “day job” is completely unrelated to craft: I regularly write for publications including Wired and Quartz about tech, politics, history and culture.

How’d you get involved in the craft world?

I started making things to sell after taking a bookbinding class and a printmaking class my freshman year of college — around 2000 there was also this burgeoning craft community online. I was very into indie rock, and I wondered if anybody else was into “indie craft.” It turns out there were tons of people with the same idea! Those early 2000s message boards were like petri dishes for the indie craft community, and people were starting businesses that are now still going strong.

I started selling my linocut cards and handmade books online, and started selling at shows in Cleveland and Pittsburgh to make a little money on the side as I was finishing my journalism degree and working as a copy editor and later a magazine editor. I moved from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati in 2007 and really missed the creative scene that was there in PGH. In 2009, I went to the Summit of Awesome in DC, where I met a few other crafters from Cincinnati, and we were like, “Why don’t we know each other?” So me and my new friend Alisha Budkie started Crafty Supermarket — which initially was going to be a craft show combined with a book release party for Crafty Superstar, but turned into a much bigger thing! We had rented out the back room of a bar and had 15 vendors back there, and 1,000 shoppers showed up! So the next show we upgraded to 45 vendors and drew even more shoppers, and six years later, my friend Chris Salley Davis and I run the show, and we’re expecting 100 makers and 5,000+ shoppers at our show on Nov. 28 at the Music Hall Ballroom. (The picture below is from the aftermath of our last show.)

What’s the first crafty thing you ever remember selling?

If we go all the way back, the first thing I ever sold was a zine that I did in 9th and 10th grades called Music News. It had some collages and cartoons but mostly consisted of music reports I wrote based off of what I saw on MTV and read in Rolling Stone from my small town in north central Ohio. An issue cost 25 cents, and at its peak it had a circulation of 25! I had read about zine culture in Sassy or somewhere, and I had an idea of what zines looked like, but I don’t think I ever saw any other than my own in real life. (I only got access to the internet at the local library towards the end of Music News’ two-year run.) That was the first of many business ventures I’ve had!

Who in the craft business world would you love to get a drink with?

That’s such a hard question! Back in 2010 I had a dream dinner with some amazing fellow speakers at a creative conference in Seattle: Megan of Not Martha, Faythe Levine of Handmade Nation, Garth Johnson and Jenny Hart — we spent the evening eating, drinking and hanging out, and it was magical. So I’m not sure what could top that. Maybe Martha Stewart?

What books would you recommend most to creative businesspeople?

Back when I was starting out, a very wise crafter recommended Small Time Operator by Bernard Kamoroff, who’s an accountant. It spells out in very clear terms all the unfun business things that you have to learn to be successful. And I’d also highly recommend NOLO’s books by Richard Stim, who’s an attorney specializing in arts law. The Craft Artist’s Legal Guide is an essential read.

What are you looking forward to most about Midwest Craft Con?

Meeting so many makers who I’ve talked to online or emailed with but never met in person!

Join Grace and many other makers at Midwest Craft Con in Columbus, Ohio, in February 2016! Early bird tickets are on sale now.

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Meet the Organizer: Brit Charek

The organizers of Midwest Craft Con have been involved in the indie craft scene for years, and chances are you’ve seen them around Ohio! Last week we met Megan Green, and this week we meet organizer Brit Charek.

So who are you? 

I’m a person who wears many hats. I’m the Executive Director of Crafty Mart and I also serve as the Board President (#startuplife). I also teach High School English full time, and am mommy to a first grader. Before settling down, I checked a lot off my bucket list: I’ve lived on the West Coast and the Gold Coast, piloted single engine aircrafts, been that girl at every single punk rock show, traveled to Europe and South America, and had just about any job you can think of– from serving beers at 7am at a Chicago pub during the World Cup to teaching the deaf how to ride a snowboard.

How’d you get involved in the craft world?

Like Megan, I’m a mompreneur. I opened my Etsy shop in 2009, not too long after the birth of my son. I started out by selling vintage, which eventually led to craftier endeavors. I took over Crafty Mart, an Akron, Ohio bi-annual handmade market, in 2012, which makes me the newbie in the CraftCon organizer posse, but I’m always encouraged by the positive response I get from my partners as well as from veterans in the field when I reach out for advice.
FullSizeRender(My 6yo with his favorite Crafty Mart find from The Nerd Stitch Shop)

What’s the first crafty thing you ever remember selling?

I totally made hemp necklaces to trade and sell in junior high. Haha!

Who in the craft business world would you love to get a drink with? 

I’d love to kick it with those sisters from A Beautiful Mess. My punk rock teenage self would be disappointed that I’m a fan of something so cutesy, but what can I say? I adore them.

What book(s) would you recommend most to creative businesspeople?

For those in the business of writing and content creation, I’d highly recommend Bird by Bird by Ann Lamott. It made me laugh out loud meanwhile teaching me everything I didn’t know that I needed to know about the writing process.
I just started Duct Tape Marketing by John Jantsch. If the rest of the book is as realistic about the needs and limitations of small businesses as the first chapter is, it’s a must-read for all creative entrepreneurs.
When I think about books that actually inspired me to be creative, the first thing that comes to mind is Kim Cooper’s recounting of the creation of Neutral Milk Hotel’s In The Aeroplane Over The Sea for the 33 1/3 series originally published by Continuum and now by Blumsbury. The takeaway: all you really need to make great art is to make time to be with other creatives. If you’re at all a music nerd, I highly recommend browsing through this series of books inspired by some of the most influential albums of all time.

What are you looking forward to most about Midwest Craft Con?

I have a lot of crafty friends in other cities that I might have met once or twice when I was in town for a show, and now I feel pretty close to them from following them on social media. I’m looking forward to real life conversations with all of them!
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Meet the Organizer: Megan Green

The organizers of Midwest Craft Con have been involved in the indie craft scene for years, and chances are you’ve seen them around Ohio! This week we meet organizer Megan Green.

So who are you?

I am the owner of Stinkybomb Soap, now in its seventh year, and I am also the organizer of Craftin’ Outlaws. My production space is housed within Tacocat Co-Operative, where we house a gallery space. In my “free” time, I am a mom to a preschooler and a second grader. While I have many jobs, my task of mother always comes first, and everything I do is done around school schedules. The youngest starts kindergarten next year, and I am looking forward to doing all the things.

megan green photo
Photo by https://seebeephotography.wordpress.com/

How’d you get involved in the craft world?

I have always been a dabbler and had an interest in the arts. Being unable to draw or paint well, I found myself flocking towards photography, soap- and candle-making and fiber arts. In 2006 my husband and I hosted a Halloween party and for prizes we crafted creepy little dolls that we hand-stitched.

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It was so much fun and they were so well received that I started making more of them. Which turned into an Etsy store, which turned into my first craft show and then several shows. It was after the birth of our daughter that I stumbled onto the idea for Stinkybomb. My husband, also a creative entrepreneur,  crafts rubber bayonets and hand grenades which he sells to WWII re-enactors, collectors and prop makers. He left one of his grenade molds on our dining room table, and having made soaps as one of my tinkering hobbies back in the day, I knew the basics of what was needed. So after a quick trip to the craft store, I had made my first Stinkybomb Soap.

I started switching over from stuffed creatures to soap in 2009. My husband helps in mold production, while I handle all the manufacturing and everything else involved with running my stinky empire.

grenades
Stinkybomb hand grenade soaps. Molds crafted by us from a real WWII hand grenade. Explosive in scent only.

Around the same time, the founder of Craftin’ Outlaws, Liz Rosino, was leaving Columbus to head off to grad school in Seattle. She looked around for local crafters interested in taking over the reins. A few of stepped up to help, and I reached out for the leadership role. She was extremely gracious in handing everything over. I now organize it mostly on my own. I have an assistant who helps out with the big holiday show and a jury that helps with choosing vendors. Craftin’ Outlaws is now in its 10th year, with a spring show and holiday show. This year we joined forces with Independents’ Day by bringing our makers to their existing two-day outdoor festival.

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Awesome poster design by in-house Outlaws designer Mary Nguyen.

What’s the first crafty thing you ever remember selling?

One of my many creative ventures consisted of me preserving bridal bouquets. I worked at a picture framing shop and befriended a women in her 70s who dried bouquets. She taught me everything she knew, and I gave it a go for while. In the end I put it to bed because the fear of ruining someone’s bridal bouquet was too much to deal with.

Before that I remember discussing with my father buying a drive thru and turning it into a flower shop. I used to sketch the floor plan and create visual displays in my head.

Who in the craft business world would you love to get a drink with?

I am fortunate to grab monthly beers with the Columbus Crafty Cotillion. They are the coolest crafters I know. But I would love to meet Diane of Crafty Pod.

What books would you recommend most to creative business people?

Sadly, I do not read as much as I would like, and while I love podcasts I don’t have a great deal of free time for those, either. The last books that had staying power for me were the Tipping Point and Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. And the E-Myth series by Michael Gerber is always worth picking up. You can just read sections when you have a moment to remind you to get your ass back in gear.

One day there will be time to read again. I am currently re-reading all the Harry Potter books as bedtime stories for the kids. If there are any creative business books that make great nighttime stories that won’t bore a 5-year-old and 7-year-old, please pass them my way!

What are you looking forward to most about Midwest Craft Con?

Just getting to talk business and crafts and nonsense all weekend with so many like-minded people while having a drink in hand! I imagine I will lose my voice by the end of the weekend and will need a facial massage to loosen my muscles from smiling.

Join Megan and many other makers at Midwest Craft Con in Columbus, Ohio, in February 2016! Early bird tickets are on sale now.