
Since the annual UFO Fair this past June, I’ve turned myself into a mad monster merchant selling all measure of cryptid ilk. Yup, I designed prints, magnets, stickers, cards with mugs and totes waiting beneath Mothman’s wings. As a participating vendor at the Alien Fair, I’d passed up several opportunities to sell original artwork which I’d been using expressly as background decor (I’ve always had a difficult time parting with my original art). For this harvest festival, I turned some of my original paintings into 11 x 14 prints. Well, weeks of spending money to make money finally arrived on October 16 and it did not disappoint.
My monetary goal at these events has been, at the very least, to make the vendor fee back. I’ve been pleasantly surprised to have leapt a few monsterish bounds beyond my goal each time. More importantly, I’ve overcome my trepidation of being on the other side of the vendor experience. I remember well the feeling of ‘shame’ when passing by merchants, some alone beneath their canopies, all those years ago at the flea markets and fairs when I wasn’t interested in shopping their wares.
No matter how many calendars or daily planners we mark off, we never cease learning about ourselves. I never imagined that after all those visits to outdoor flea markets, festivals and fairs with my husband and children, that I’d become a seasonal vendor who can handle getting sheepishly or brazenly passed by when my creative work isn’t appreciated or wanted. Though I’ll never understand why some people refuse to find a soft spot for critters with massive fangs, killer claws and bloodlust in their veins;), I’ll continue merrily along my quest of meeting festival folks and chatting up creatures or the weather or the strange light fair-goers might have seen that disappeared into an inky night sky.
When the world gets cold, our experiences and memories are often the things that warm us with their Bigfoot feet and Yeti breath.
I hope you are all doing well.
xo
am
P.S. I must thank my husband, Keith, who sacrifices his only day off during the week for these events. He is also kind (and wise enough) to buy his insane wife morning ‘pre-vending’ bloody marys:)
I admit to feeling guilty when walking by the vendors too, Ann. Your husband is a good man! 🍻
LikeLiked by 1 person
hi there, John
the vendor life is not one I’ll ever leap into headfirst:)
yes, Keith is supportive and talented in his own right:) whatever contraption I need for displaying my work, he creates then builds by hand:)
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wonderful! 😊
LikeLiked by 1 person
Lovely post, writing AM. Great photos, too! (Nice to see Keith with his t-shirt — what a great guy!)
“We never cease learning about ourselves” … so poetic and true!
DS 😊
LikeLiked by 2 people
hi there, DS
the day was a beautiful one:)
Keith is quite wonderful (except I still can’t get him to cook;))
onward and upward, my friend:)
LikeLike