Sunday, April 5, 2009

help with code necklaces

I’m looking for some advice.

For going on four years, I’ve been making necklaces, bracelets, and earrings with semi-precious stones, crystals, pearls, and sterling silver. They sell very well at the 12-15 craft shows my wife and I do each year, only so-so at the Kress Emporium, and very poorly on Etsy (two sales in three months).

Last December, my wife and I were supposed to bring small and hopefully cute or funny presents to exchange at a Christmas party for guardian ad litem volunteers. Seemingly out of the blue, I had this thought: I used 4 mm stone tubes as the “dashes,” 4 mm faceted crystals as the “dots,” and spelled out a message in Morse code that read, “Elvis has left the building.” It was a hit. I made up two more for my last craft show of the year, including a Cleopatra quote from Shakespeare’s “Antony and Cleopatra” that read: “O happy horse to bear the weight of Antony.” They sold out right away. A number of friends asked me to make up custom messages for them. I figured I was on to something and filed for copyright protection.

Last Saturday, my eldest daughter had a craft show at her boys’ school in Johnson City, N.Y. It seemed like a good chance to test the market, so I sent her 20 of the Morse code necklaces. Unfortunately, the school is only five miles from the immigrant assistance center where 13 people were murdered on Friday and only one mile from the killer’s home. Folks were hardly in the mood for a craft fair, and then a spring blizzard hit Saturday morning. No sales.

The only one I’ve sold from my Etsy store -- Sandymush -- was a Lennon quote: “I get by with a little help from my friends.” So if the Morse code necklaces turn out to be a dumb idea, I’ll go on to other things. If you think they have possibilities, what can I do?

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Obama is doing what he promised to do -- what an unusual thing for a politician. And in a city where timid half measures are the norm, he is going all in on the first two big issues he has faced: The financial meltdown, and the pending collapse of the auto industry. By making bold moves, he has, in effect, accepted ownership, with success or failure on his shoulders. That's more courage than we've seen in a very long time.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Agribusiness will kill us

There has been lots of publicity about how the overuse of antibiotics is creating antibiotic-resistant superbugs -- one of which alone already kills 18,000 Americans a year -- more than AIDS.

Seems that 70 percent of the antibiotics used in this country are fed to healthy cattle and that pigs in particular are reservoirs of new killer bugs.

Public health types are universally opposed to feeding antibiotics to healthy cattl -- the practice is outlawed in Europe --,but they keep getting beat back in Congress by the Ag industry lobbiests. Source -- Kristof's op ed colum in 3-1-09 NY Times

Oops, see the comment

Wrong bite of the apple

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Okay, this is the first very short, having created it, I now go on vacation