Categories
Editorial

Etsy Loses its Magic

Etsy appears to be on a literal witch hunt, prohibiting the sale of magic items and shutting down stores that are in violation of this policy. At first it appeared to be just an attempt to eliminate the sale of services. This makes sense since Etsy is supposed to be all about the sale of hand crafted and vintage goods. However, Etsy has gone beyond this:

“Any metaphysical service that promises or suggests it will effect a physical change (e.g., weight loss) or other outcome (e.g., love, revenge) is not allowed, even if it delivers a tangible item.”

This is obviously problematic. What is a metaphysical object? There’s an incredible number of embroidered Christian prayers that promise blessings. Are these now banned? If these are permitted but a love spell is prohibited, does Etsy really want to be in the business of promoting religious intolerance? What of things that are clearly for entertainment purposes, like a kit of garlic and holy water to protect against vampires? By their terms, such a thing should not be allowed. The use of the word “suggests” is especially troublesome. It means that Etsy has grounds to remove an item even if you use the disclaimer, “for entertainment purposes only.” Of course everyone is going to put that on their items now, because of that rule, therefore you’re still “suggesting” that the product will effect a physical change.

Is there really a clear boundary between what is metaphysical and what isn’t? Richard Prince recently sold prints that he’d made by blatantly stealing work from other’s Instagram feeds for $90,000 a pop. These were prints that anyone could have made, but the Touch of Richard Prince endowed them with metaphysical properties that gave them value in the eyes of the art establishment. The cosmetic industry is based on the idea that it is possible to make yourself look more beautiful. However, beauty is a social construct, a metaphysical concept, so are all cosmetics now prohibited on Etsy as well?

Full disclosure: our Adventure Awaits store sells magic items on Etsy. They are based on fairy tales and folklore. We have magic beans that you can trade for a cow, or plant to climb a beanstalk to the giant’s castle in the clouds, inspired obviously by the fairy tale Jack and the Beanstalk. We have protection spells and love potions that are from American folklore collected by Harry Middleton Hayatt in the 1930s. To me these are less about metaphysics and more about connecting with our cultural heritage. A fan art homage to our creative past. We’re just starting to grow our business and were planning on investing a lot of energy into making that happen on Etsy. However, I’m now wondering if pretty much everything we create isn’t in violation of Etsy’s policy. That’s a HUGE problem, Etsy! A rule needs to be clear and easy to follow. This one creates doubt and uncertainty and leads me to believe that Etsy isn’t really worth investing any time and effort into as a creator. If creators aren’t investing in Etsy, investors will follow suit now that Etsy is a publicly traded company.

Meanwhile, Etsy has much bigger problems than metaphysics. There’s a huge flood of mass produced goods from China being passed off as handmade items. Flagrant copyright violations are going unpunished. These things are devaluing the Etsy brand far more than metaphysical objects are. Deal with your real problems, Etsy, before taking on your metaphysical ones!

Share
Categories
Editorial

Screenprinters: Let’s Fix This

totoro
Olly Moss’ wonderful Totoro screen print

Recently, Olly Moss created a new poster for the movie Totoro. Totoro is one of my all-time favorite movies and is certainly one of the best children’s movies ever made. I wanted this poster. I would have hung it in the room that will one day belong to our child, so that Totoro will be there right from their earliest memories. If you’re a fan of this movie, you’ll agree that there’s no better location for such a poster.  Unfortunately, the poster wasn’t to be mine. Within minutes of the poster dropping, it had sold out. Shortly after that, this had happened:

Screenprint Speculation

It appears that a huge chunk of posters were bought not by people who love Totoro or Olly Moss’ work, but by speculators. That’s a real shame because speculators tend to ruin good things. It’s going to happen to screen printing unless we do something to stop it.

The screen printed poster is having a golden age right now. There’s an astonishing level of variety and quality out there. Scroll through OMG Posters for just a minute and you’ll get an idea. What makes this moment especially golden is how affordable these posters are. Often for under $50, it’s possible to own a piece of original, hand-made artwork. This gets trickier once something gets “discovered.” It appears that this has happened to Mondo, publisher of the Totoro poster and many other fine posters. While Mondo has kept its posters affordable, they have limited runs that are released at unspecified times on specified days. This makes them difficult for ordinary people who have lives to actually buy them. If you don’t have time to sit around all day, refreshing your browser window to find out if the print has been released, you’re not going to get that poster. These posters are so popular, if you buy one you’re pretty much guaranteed to be able to flip it on eBay for much more than you bought it for. It’s likely that many, if not the majority, of these posters are going to speculators and not to people who love them.

Mondo is just one publisher, though. There are many others out there who are doing great things. So many, in fact, that it’s only a matter of time before Martha Stewart “discovers” them and puts a link to OMG Posters in Living magazine. Then it will be letterpress all over again. Every decent screen print will be bought by speculators while the people who loved the medium and made it possible won’t be able to afford to buy the work of the artists they once supported. The market will be flooded and diluted by mediocre “me toos” trying to cash in on the latest fad. Screen printed business cards and wedding invitations will proliferate.

It doesn’t have to go down this way. Screen printers could decide right now to take a different course.

For starters, stop this “to be released at a random time” crap. Who does this serve? Is there anyone buying posters because not knowing when it is going to be released is such a thrill? No. The random time thing is just stupid, insulting, and pointless, and only caters to people who are buying the prints to resell them.

Stop manufacturing scarcity. There was a time when the signed, numbered, limited edition prints were a matter of honor. The plates that made the prints degraded with each print, so lower numbers really did mean a better quality print, and the artist would stop before the quality degraded to an unacceptable degree. However, a properly treated silk screen can last for 5,000 to 10,000 prints, far more than the 200-400 prints that screen printers usually limit themselves to. Scarcity is why speculators buy things, but it’s not why true art lovers buy art. There are legitimate reasons for doing a limited print run. Many screen printers are one-person shops, handling everything from creating the artwork to pulling the print to rolling it up and mailing it out. An artist would go crazy, and never be able to start producing new work, if they didn’t find a way to limit the run. However, there must be ways to cater to the true fans, not the speculators. Instead of random drops, how about pre-selling a run? Limit the print to the number of orders received on a specific day? Announce that day in advance. Don’t make it random. Leave a wide enough window open so people who have jobs can order. The worst thing that would happen then is that you might get 10,000 orders for a poster and have a lot of work to do. But you know, if you’re selling that print for $45, you now have $450,000 to solve that problem with. Expand your shop. Hire an assistant. That’s not a bad problem to have!

Poison eBay. To their credit, publishers like Mondo have a lot of integrity. They’ve kept their prices low even while speculators are selling their posters hours after their printed for many times what Mondo sold them for. Mondo and artists like Olly Moss deserve all the success they’re getting right now. Hard work and talent should pay off. Clicking “refresh” until you can click “buy” on something just so you can resell it isn’t something that should pay off. If a printer were to say, print an extra hundred copies and then sell them on eBay the day it dropped, with an opening bid of whatever the print sells for on the main site, it’d make the speculation a little more unattractive. There might be some complaints that it’s unfair, but you could shut that up by giving any extra profit to charity. As a buyer, if I have to pay extra to get a print I really want, I’d much rather that go to the artist, not to some speculator.

That’s just the first three things off the top of my head. I’m sure there are plenty of other ways to keep screen printing awesome. The time to fix it is now, however, while it’s still fun.

Share