Warren Feld Jewelry

Taking Jewelry Making Beyond Craft

Posts Tagged ‘self-improvement’

FLUENCY IN JEWELRY DESIGN: Doubt and Self-Doubt

Posted by learntobead on June 2, 2025

For the novice, all that excitement at the beginning, when thinking about making jewelry and making some pieces, sometimes collides with a wall of developing self-doubt. It’s not easy to quiet a doubt.

The jewelry artist organizes their life around an inspiration. There is some fuzziness here. That inspiration has some elements of ideas, but not necessarily crystal clear ones. That inspiration has some elements of emotions — it makes you feel something — but not necessarily something you can put into words or images or fully explain. You then need to translate this fuzzy inspiration into materials, into techniques, into color, into arrangements, into a coherent whole.

You start to make something, but realize you don’t know how to do it. But you want to do it, and do it now. However, to pick up the needed skills, you realize you can’t learn things all at once. You can’t do everything you want to do all at once. That initial excitement often hits a wall. Things take time to learn. There are a lot of trial and error moments, with a lot of errors. Pieces break. Combining colors and other design elements feels very awkward. Picking the right clasps and rings and connectors and stringing materials is fraught with implications. Silhouettes are confusing. You might get the right shape for your piece, but it is difficult to get the right movement, drape and flow, without compromising that shape.

To add to this stress and strain, you need to show your jewelry off. You might want someone to like it. To want it. To need it. To desire it. To buy it. To wear it. To wear it more than once. To wear it often. To exhibit it. To collect it. To show and talk about it with others. And how will all these other people recognize your creative spark, and your abilities to translate that spark into a wonderful, beautiful, functional piece of jewelry, appropriate for the wearer and appropriate for the situation?

Frequently, because of all this, the designer experiences some sense of doubt and self-doubt. Some paralysis. Can’t get started. Can’t finish something. Wondering why they became a jewelry designer in the first place.

Doubt holds you back from seizing your opportunities.

It makes getting started or finishing things harder than they need to be.

It adds uncertainty.

It makes you question yourself.

It blocks your excitement, perhaps diminishing it.

While sometimes doubt and self-doubt can be useful in forcing you to think about and question your choices, it mostly holds you back.

Having doubt and self-doubt is common among all artistic types. What becomes important is how to manage and overcome it, hence, my idea of Channeling Your Excitement, so that doubts do not get in the way of your creative process and disciplinary development, but rather, inform them.

There are 8 major ways in which jewelry designers get caught beginning to fall into that abyss we call self-doubt: …

… CONTINUE READING THIS ARTICLE ON THE JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB

Posted in architecture, art, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, fashion, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

CONQUERING THE CREATIVE MARKETPLACE: Why Designers Fail In Business

Posted by learntobead on May 22, 2025

Why Designers Fail In Business:
Some Key Reasons

Over and over again, I have seen one jewelry designer after another fail as a business. The reasons may seem predictable, and they repeat themselves over and over again, as well.

1. Has not defined a clear set of goals from the start

2. Going for roofs before setting foundations

3. A reluctance to learn how to conduct yourself as a business

4. Gets bored or lonely

5. A fear of marketing your own things

6. Tries to do too many projects at the same time

7. Trying to please all audiences

8. Doesn’t do homework on the competition

9. Trying to do everything by yourself

10. A fear that someone will steal your designs

11. Failure to plan for balances in the use of your time

12. Hasn’t planned for the ups and downs of cash flow at different times of the year

13. Cannot describe your competitive advantage(s)

14. Failure to understand marketing and merchandising requirements

15. Not photographing all your pieces, or, making notes about their construction

16. Lacks understanding about how to leverage your work

17. Doesn’t have plans and procedures for generating follow-up sales and re-orders

18. Failure to innovate

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FIRST RULE OF HOLES

When you are in one,

stop digging!

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1. Has not defined a clear set of goals from the start

OK, you’ve made a decision that you want to make some money through your craft. Before you start buying a lot of inventory and equipment and tools and furniture and other supplies, sit down and reflect. Write down 3 or 4 achievable goals about what you want to have accomplished within 1 year. Write down another 3 or 4 to achieve within 3–5 years.

For each goal, list what specific tangible and intangible things you need to have or need to happen, in order to achieve that goal within your timeframe.

At the end of each year, you should be able to ask a friend: Did I achieve my goal or not? And the goals should be clear enough that your friend can immediately weigh the evidence and let you know their thoughts.

2. Going for roofs before setting foundations

At the point you are getting started, I know you are very excited about all the prospects. Your brain is racing in many different directions all at once. As a creative person, you are probably generating an inordinate amount of things you want to do.

Rein yourself in.

You need to be very deliberate here. Get control over all that excitement and all those ideas.

Create the foundations for your business. These are made up of the different systems of activity which have to be in place so that everything will work smoothly, and continue to work smoothly, down the road.

Systems include things like:

· Administrative

· Financial Management

· Product Design and Development

· Inventory

· Marketing, Promotion and Selling

· Evaluation and feedback

For each system, you specify required policies, procedures, and materials.

You set up some pretesting and reality-testing of each system and its policies and procedures.

Yes, this is a lot of work up front, but it will all pay off in your success.

3. A reluctance to learn how to conduct yourself as a business.

Many jewelry designers get so excited after selling their first piece, that they think they don’t have to get too involved with business principles. …

… CONTINUE READING ON THE JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB

Posted in architecture, art, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, fashion, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »