Made by hand: Ashley Owens weaves together business, pleasure, and community
When Ashley Owens, owner of Black Sheep Goods, sets up shop with her loom at any of the 10-ish festivals she attends as a vendor each year, people take notice.
April 2018 | Vendor Spotlight
When Ashley Owens, owner of Black Sheep Goods, sets up shop with her loom at any of the 10-ish festivals she attends as a vendor each year, people take notice.
Her 3-year-old company specializes in hand-woven tapestries, DIY Weaving Kits, fiber jewelry, and handspun yarn made with all reclaimed fibers. While events and festivals are a great way for her to promote her business and sell merchandise, Ashley loves the community-building aspects that festivals offer.
“Community is a big part of what I do,” Ashley said. “I like to educate people on this relaxing and meditative art of weaving. Seeing people try it out on my sample loom I have out at shows makes me so happy.”
Festivals also give her the opportunity to showcase her ever evolving product lineup. Her latest innovation? Black Sheep Goods now offers one-of-a-kind, ice-dyed clothing and accessories made with dyeing technique that uses melting ice to create a watercolor effect.
FAVORITE FESTIVAL MOMENT:
Narrowing down my favorite is hard, but the funniest has to be when a storm was coming in and tents starting blowing everywhere and people were helping out left and right trying to hang on to these tents so they wouldn’t blow over. It all happened so fast that we couldn't help but laugh at the situation.
TIPS FOR NEW VENDORS:
I would say bring lots of snacks, make friends with your neighbor vendors, and interact with your customers. Talk to them, connect with them. Just think that every person that walks into your booth is a potential sale so don't be afraid to go for the sale. And if they pass on a sale then at least hand them a business card.
How could spending a day at our next event boost your business?
You could spend another day hunkered over your desk or in the studio creating. Or you could step into the sunshine, energy, and excitement of one of our world-class events where thousands of potential customers will be gathered together to meet each other and support local businesses. We’ve helped hundreds of businesses increase their brand awareness and connect with new customers and collaborators. Contact us to find out which upcoming opportunities are the best fit for you and your company and start positioning your brand as part of the fabric of your neighborhood.
How Anna B. Webb built a successful business leveraging Nashville events and a trailer named Ginger
Artist Anna B. Webb says festivals are a great way to make a profit without needing a brick-and-mortar location for her business.
March 2018 | Vendor Spotlight
She’s a designer and an artist in about as many ways as you can be. Over the past 9 years, Anna B. Webb has made a living designing dazzling aesthetics for home interiors and sets, then as a self-taught graphic designer, and as an artist with her business HeArt of Nashville, known for her popular paintings of the Nashville skyline.
If you string your show schedule together carefully, you can have a strong art presence without the bricks and mortar part....and what business doesn't love that?” Anna B. Webb
Her career path tells the story of a woman who knows how to reinvent herself, to stay relevant, and to say yes to a good opportunity when it presents itself…even if that means turning a trailer into a vendor booth on wheels.
“My art business was launched when I decided to stop publishing an annual Nashville event calendar,” Anna said. “Over the eight years of [the calendar’s] run, the same information eventually became easily accessible on the internet. Meanwhile, the demand for more of my Nashville skyline paintings that used to be on the cover had continued to grow. It's a classic, when one door closes.....another door opens story.”
She’s participated in more festivals than she can count. From well known venues including Centennial Park and Bicentennial Capitol Mall to small schools, churches and fields all over town. She’s had a presence at a slew of Nashville’s events, large and small. And now, she rolls into each venue every bit the true arts professional in her 1955 trailer retrofitted as her mobile art gallery, which she lovingly calls Ginger.
Why so many festivals?
“It's fabulous exposure!” Anna said. “Especially since Nashville has so many people moving here every day. They go looking for the interesting things to do in their new home and a festival is on that list every time. So you're immediately in the path of a lot of newcomers who couldn't possibly know about you any other way and it can be very lucrative both that day and down the road.”
Favorite festival moment:
I was at a large festival during the solar eclipse of 2017. People were there from all over the world to be in the path of it. Everyone was excited in anticipation. They were also in a mood to shop, so I found myself literally running into my trailer and back out again for a look. It was crazy. As it got dark, you could see the lights come up in the Nashville skyline in the middle of the day and it got really quiet. It was a fairly cloudy day but just moments before it was to become a full eclipse, a cluster of clouds parted and we could see it perfectly.
Thousands of people ‘ooohed’ and ‘aaahed’ together with our heads pointed to the sky and wearing our goofy looking glasses. My husband and some friends came to join in the experience. It was like a big global party and ended up being a really moving moment.
Advice for first time vendors:
1) Be patient and be kind. The shopper, their kids, their husband, their chatty sister....AND their dog are your friends, not your enemy, and they all have a story that you might actually want to hear.
2) Remember to enjoy yourself (festival fun really isn't just for the attendees) and they will naturally enjoy being in your booth. You're there for a reason. Pay attention and it will reveal itself. One night, besides it being a great sales day, I swear I was really there to give some gals working in the booth next door a safe ride to their car. To this day I get free ice cream when one of them is working. ;)