• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
    • About Jessika Hepburn
      • Press/Publications
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Branding
    • Ethics
    • Health
    • Legal
    • Marketing
    • Planning
  • Fellow Makers
    • Community
    • Interviews
    • Resources
  • For the Hands
    • DIY
    • Handmade Goodness
  • For the Head
  • For the Heart
    • 365 Days of Presence
Oh My! Handmade

Oh My! Handmade

Making a good life since 2010

Building A Local Handmade Network

Wednesday, February 2, 2011 by Sara Tams

by Sara Tams of sarah + abraham

The items pictured above are offered by six talented women living in the Chicago area who I’m very lucky to be able to get together with in person a few times a year.

1. Meg Bartholomy, olliegraphic

2. Stacy Amoo-Mensa, Name Your Design

3. Debbie Lee, Penelope’s Press

4. Julie Chen, Life Verse Design

5. Megan Nutley, Silhouette Blue

6. Dacia Gravlin, Lima Bean Kids

Since launching sarah + abraham in 2007 I’ve made a lot of online friends who are amazingly willing to answer questions and offer feedback, but nothing compares to getting together with fellow designers/artisans/entrepreneurs in person.

The first time I got together with a local entrepreneur who I had met online, we were both a little hesitant and unsure of what to expect. She had gotten to know a little about me through my blog, and we exchanged several emails before deciding to meet at a library with our kids. It was amazing how much we had in common and how much we had to talk about. Since then it’s gotten easier and easier to suggest getting together in person after meeting local entrepreneurs online, and every single time I get together with someone new I’m so glad I did.

Every few months I get together with the group of women that I mentioned above. We all work from home and spend most of our workdays in front of a computer, so it’s really nice to get away from our computers and talk with each other in person. We’re able to bounce ideas off of each other, vent our  frustrations, offer encouragement, and share resources and contacts. We all speak the same language of Etsy, PayPal, blogging, etc. so we’re able to have conversations with each other that we sometimes can’t have with our friends and families who aren’t a part of this online community. Every time we get together I leave feeling energized and full of new ideas.

If you don’t already know any local women who share your business interests, I can’t say enough about what a valuable resource it is. An easy way to find local Etsy sellers is through Etsy :: Shop Local. If there are any sellers who you’re interested in meeting, a great way to get to know a little bit about them first (or for them to get to know a little about you) is through blogs and Facebook fan pages. And then don’t be shy – send an email introducing yourself, get to know them a little through email, and then suggest getting together.

Do you have a local group that you meet up with? Have you met up with any local Etsy sellers in person? Please leave a comment and let us know about your experiences!

Filed Under: Entrepreneurship, For the Head

Primary Sidebar

Articles

Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’

Mine-Mill organizers claimed that the first of four concerts, held at the Peace Arch in Blaine, WA, in 1952, attracted 40,000 admirers, mostly from the Canadian side of the border near Vancouver. Source: Pacific Tribune Archive.

On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance

New Year's Revolution, illustration of hands breaking free from shackles

A New Year’s Revolution

Go Do Some Great Thing, Lawrence Hill

Go Do Some Great Thing

Dr. Pauli Murray, "I intend to destroy segregation by positive and embracing methods. When my brothers try to draw a circle to exclude me, I shall draw a larger circle to include them." An American Credo

Draw a Larger Circle

Fellow Makers, young Italian immigrant garment worker in Brooklyn

#FellowMakers History & the Triangle Factory Fire

Seventy Ways to Build Community, Save Your Sanity, and Change the World

70 Ways to Build Community

Stop the Hustle | Oh My! Handmade

Stop the Hustle: On Slowing Down, Stepping Up & Paying Attention

Community Is Not Clubs: How We’re Segregating the Internet & What We Can Do

Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike

Categories

Read More

  • On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance
  • Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’
  • Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike
  • The #EtsyStrike begins today July 16, 2018. Learn Why!
  • Des préoccupations liées aux changements aux valeurs Etsy mènent à l’appel à une grève Etsy (#GreveEtsy)
  • Press Release: Concern over Changes to Etsy Values Leads to #EtsyStrike
  • Community Statements on Changes to Values at Etsy #etsystrike
  • CALL FOR COMMUNITY STATEMENTS: Do changes to values at Etsy matter to you?
  • Et Tu, Etsy? A call for fellow makers to strike.
  • A Thousand and One Reasons to Hope

Footer

Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’

In June of 2016 I supported my love Chris as we dealt with the death of both his parents and a co-worker over a three week period. This essay written the summer of those deaths is my attempt to make sense of grief and the struggle to carry all that I care for. Originally published […]

Archives

  • On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance
  • Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’
  • Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike
  • The #EtsyStrike begins today July 16, 2018. Learn Why!
  • Des préoccupations liées aux changements aux valeurs Etsy mènent à l’appel à une grève Etsy (#GreveEtsy)

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Log in