tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3006034685013171954.post2026110913951028746..comments2024-01-18T10:50:27.995-08:00Comments on Greeting Card Designer: An Artist's Thought's on Surtex: Jane Sarah StaffierKate Harperhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14126334539791135961noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3006034685013171954.post-85337576244338994422010-05-28T09:16:00.903-07:002010-05-28T09:16:00.903-07:00I forgot, I should have also said a huge thank you...I forgot, I should have also said a huge thank you to Kate for giving us all the opportunity to share our opinions and viewpoints. You are so gracious, Kate, and it is much appreciated.Sharyn Sowellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09916723626684709031noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3006034685013171954.post-12201053845723719402010-05-28T06:59:09.968-07:002010-05-28T06:59:09.968-07:00Sarah, I'm an artist who has done the show for...Sarah, I'm an artist who has done the show for nine years now. For a single artist buying a booth, it's a major commitment. I hope I don't offend anyone but my perspective is different than yours. I loved meeting artists walking the show but if I'm completely honest, it can be an awkward problem for us. We pay GLM for a booth with the goal of having meetings with manufacturers. I do everything I can to reach that goal and the success or failure of my business depends on that. So when other artists come by my booth I want to be friendly and cringe at the idea of offending them, but I have to wonder if they don't understand that they are hurting me. Show etiquette is that if someone is in a booth, nobody else will come look. If I am talking to another artist having a lovely visit, the manufacturers i need to meet with will walk right by. I have a dilemma; do I be polite and chat with artist friends or do I ask them to leave me free for manufacturers. This year I bet I offended at least a dozen artists. In some cases they were actually paging through my portfolio (a serious breach of etiquette though I know they didn't realize they should have asked first.) I missed a couple of manufacturers before deciding I had no choice but ask artists to only visit when it was slow. A couple actually yelled at me. My perspective as a booth occupant was different than yours as far as the show's vibe, too. Almost all exhibitors were just thrilled. Most of us had great meetings, thought it was the best show in a long time. I hope I don't sound ungracious, but when we pay the big $$ to fund the show, it doesn't seem right that artists would ride our financial coat tails. Paying $150 to get in and be able to have meetings seems fair to me. I paid thousands, and I was not unhappy about it at all. Please forgive if i sound ungracious, I don't mean to hurt anyone but thought a different perspective might be valuable.Sharyn Sowellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09916723626684709031noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3006034685013171954.post-49008670853086747392010-05-27T19:34:09.980-07:002010-05-27T19:34:09.980-07:00Kate thanks for sharing different points of view f...Kate thanks for sharing different points of view from artists and exhibitors. I thought I would answer Jane's question. <br /> <br /> "I would like to know why the 3x price? Do they want only the merchants?"<br /> <br />Well YES if you mean manufacturers walking the show, but they also encourage artists to walk the show who might purchase a booth in the future.<br />Myself and some others artists think Surtex should create a program that if the artist pays the $150 and comes back the next year and rents a booth they could put the money towards that.<br /> <br /> The Surtex trade show is designed for those who decide to pay for the booth, and the attendees who license and buy art from them. <br /> <br />In general all of the artists who I spoke to were delighted with the traffic from the manufacturers, they are who we are paying to see when we decide to exhibit.sue zhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02684324904673765842noreply@blogger.com