At one point, I was doing ten to twelve shows a year. Yep, that's a lot. Since I moved, I've gone pretty much back to ground zero, discovering and applying for new shows and learning what works for me.
All that said, earlier this month was my first show of four (five, if I get off the wait list for one more) between now and September. And boy, howdy, was it an adventure!
The Saturday forecast called for rain late in the afternoon. Except that the rain started right after noon. This was my view for four hours.
First day = not so great due to crappy weather. Okay, Day Two was supposed to be sunny.
And it was sunny. But it was also windy. Chicago windy.
Holy crap, y'all.
Necklace busts were flying all over the place -- this one finally gave up the ghost and broke in two.
The clamp solution wasn't pretty, but it was effective.
The show organizer required 40 pounds of weight on each leg of the tent. I thought that seemed a tad excessive, but I dutifully strapped two 20-pound hand weights to each tent leg.
And thank goodness I did -- by the end of the day, the tent had stayed on the ground, but even with that much weight, it had shifted several inches from its original location. When the day started, the front edge of the table was inside the tent leg, not two inches in front of it. Astonishingly, none of the frames suspended from the tent fell, and no jewelry broke. That, my friends, was a minor miracle.
If you've ever eaten at Waffle House, you know they call the various preparations of their hash browns "scattered, smothered, covered and chunked." I'll forever think of this show as "busted, blown, weighted and moved." And just like Waffle House hash browns, it's not a bad thing -- just not something you should experience too often!
So what did we learn this weekend? That an investment in a good tent is worth the money if you don't like leaky tent roofs. That when the show organizer says you need 160 pounds of weight on your tent, you respect their wisdom and experience. That necklace busts will bust apart after five or six impacts with the pavement. And, despite the soggy shoes from rainstorms and achy legs from chasing down flying necklace busts, I love doing shows. Next one in three weeks!
And it was sunny. But it was also windy. Chicago windy.
Holy crap, y'all.
Necklace busts were flying all over the place -- this one finally gave up the ghost and broke in two.
The clamp solution wasn't pretty, but it was effective.
The show organizer required 40 pounds of weight on each leg of the tent. I thought that seemed a tad excessive, but I dutifully strapped two 20-pound hand weights to each tent leg.
I can only imagine what the guy at Dick's Sporting Goods thought when I bought eight 20-pound hand weights |
And thank goodness I did -- by the end of the day, the tent had stayed on the ground, but even with that much weight, it had shifted several inches from its original location. When the day started, the front edge of the table was inside the tent leg, not two inches in front of it. Astonishingly, none of the frames suspended from the tent fell, and no jewelry broke. That, my friends, was a minor miracle.
If you've ever eaten at Waffle House, you know they call the various preparations of their hash browns "scattered, smothered, covered and chunked." I'll forever think of this show as "busted, blown, weighted and moved." And just like Waffle House hash browns, it's not a bad thing -- just not something you should experience too often!
So what did we learn this weekend? That an investment in a good tent is worth the money if you don't like leaky tent roofs. That when the show organizer says you need 160 pounds of weight on your tent, you respect their wisdom and experience. That necklace busts will bust apart after five or six impacts with the pavement. And, despite the soggy shoes from rainstorms and achy legs from chasing down flying necklace busts, I love doing shows. Next one in three weeks!
4 comments:
Sounds like an incredible experience, but I have to admit I would be one of those hardy souls and venture out - maybe not to set up a tent but definetly to shop! Good on you!
I have only ever done 4 outdoor shows - one was cold, the other was so windy with my earrings boards flying all over the place and after the third all my beads were coated in sand. The fourth was thankfully fine but I have not done outdoor shows since then.
wow that is some welcome to your show season! you are a seasoned pro!!
You are so brave! I really admire your positive attitude! Hope your next shows have wonderful weather!
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