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May 17, 2005
Transforming
Art into E-Commerce: How Artists are succeeding
in the Online Economy
Digital artist Mary Ogle
trudged from publisher to licensor to gallery,
meeting with rejection after rejection. She
was told repeatedly that her work simply wouldn't
sell. Then she seized control of her own marketing
by creating an e-commerce web site, and sales
soared.
Ojai, California (PRWEB)
May 17, 2005 - The World Wide Web is dramatically
changing the marketplace, and consequently
the way artists reach their audience. Digital
artist Mary Ogle uses Cafepress, an e-commerce
services provider, to transform her artwork
into t-shirts, mugs and other popular clothing
and gift items, and then sells them online.
Ogle and her two partners,
Miki Klocke and Allison Leete, use their e-commerce
enabled web sites, evisionArts.com and earthandmoon.com,
to connect with interested buyers from all
over the world. "We've received orders
from as far away as Japan and Cyprus, to as
close as next door," says Ogle, "When
your store is online, there really isn't that
much of a difference."
The artists of evisionArts.com
use Print on Demand technology to remake their
designs into wearable, functional art. "With
Print on Demand, there is no guessing about
how many of each design you will need,"
Ogle explains, "the item is not printed
until an order is placed." "Since
we don't have to worry about being left with
a lot of unsold items," Ogle continues,
"we are able to cater to niche markets
- like pug lovers and classical music enthusiasts
- topics we ourselves are interested in."
Trained in the more traditional
medium of oil painting, Ogle was at first
unsure about translating her artwork into
more functional art. "But then I realized
I was being silly," she says, "Hanging
something on a wall doesn't make it art. What
is important is getting your work out there
and sharing it with the world. When people
use and wear your artwork in their daily lives,
you've created a special connection with them,
and that is what I believe art is all about."
For additional information
on the artist as e-commerce entrepreneur,
evisionArts, or Earth and Moon, contact Mary
Ogle or visit www.evisionarts.com.
About evisionArts.com:
evisionArts.com and earthandmoon.com
are online stores featuring the artwork of
Mary Ogle, Miki Klocke and Allison Leete on
t-shirts, sweatshirts, mugs, art tiles and
other functional and decorative items. Launched
in 2001, evisionArts.com transforms digital
painting, pastels, oil painting and photography
into wearable, useable art for daily living.
Contact:
Mary Ogle, founder
evisionArts.com
805-646-2277
http://www.earthandmoon.com
http://www.evisionarts.com
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Earth and Moon founder
Mary Ogle was featured in this front page
article of the May 4, 2005 Wall Street Journal.
May 4, 2005; Front Page
By Accident or Design, Selling T-Shirts
Is Big Business on Web
Internet Surfers Buy Souvenirs Of Their Virtual
Journeys; 'Right to Bear Arms'
By PUI-WING TAM
Staff Reporter of THE
WALL STREET JOURNAL
Dan Mowry thought he knew just how to turn
his family entertainment newsletter into a
successful online business. Two years ago,
he designed an attractive site and loaded
it up with features to entice readers and
advertisers: electronic crossword puzzles,
a history quiz and cartoons. Almost as an
afterthought, he designed a T-shirt with his
company's logo, a circus ringmaster holding
a megaphone.
Today the online and print newsletters have
flopped. But the shirts are pulling in up
to $3,000 per month, as Mr. Mowry joins the
growing ranks of entrepreneurs profiting from
an improbable but lucrative Web business model:
selling T-shirts.
All over the Web, bloggers, artists and entrepreneurs
are unexpectedly finding that T-shirts are
more reliable moneymakers than the original
ideas that brought them to the Internet.
CollegeHumor.com, a site offering jokes and
pictures from college campuses nationwide,
sells T-shirts that say "My other shirt
has its collar up," "What Would
Ashton Do," and dozens of others. Its
parent company, Connected Ventures LLC, says
it takes in roughly $200,000 in monthly revenue
from the shirts, about half of its total income.
"A year from now things could be very
different, but for now, T-shirts are a great
way to monetize the Internet," says Josh
Abramson, one of the site's founders.
It turns out the T-shirt is a perfect fit
for online commerce. It captures the Web's
renegade allure and allows surfers to show
off their virtual journeys. Easy to make and
deliver, T-shirts often cost $15 or less online.
More than 1,500 Web sites now sell T-shirts,
says Rodney Blackwell, a Sacramento, Calif.,
entrepreneur who runs several Web sites. Mr.
Blackwell, who began cataloguing the number
of sites offering T-shirts in early 2004 for
one of his Web properties, tracked just 500
such sites last year before the market exploded.
"So many people wanted their T-shirt
sites listed on my page that I had to turn
people away and institute a listing fee of
$19.95," says Mr. Blackwell. He says
he now adds 60 sites every month to his list,
which is displayed on T-shirtcountdown.com,
where visitors can vote for the most popular
shirt.
Recently, one of Mr. Blackwell's own creations
-- a T-shirt declaring "Can't sleep,
clowns will eat me..." -- ranked No.
5 on that list. The shirt is available on
Mr. Blackwell's ihateclowns.com, an elaborate
site whose name accurately describes its philosophy.
The nine-year-old site covers its expenses
by selling up to 90 T-shirts per month for
$15 per shirt, Mr. Blackwell says.
John Wooden of Brooklyn, N.Y., runs a parody
of the official White House site on whitehouse.org,
and pays for it by selling anti-Bush T-shirts
with messages like "Proud Blue Stater."
He says he covers all the costs of running
the site by selling tees and lives off the
rest of the earnings, which total several
thousand dollars per month. "It's not
a bad living," says Mr. Wooden, who declined
to provide specific revenue figures.
It's not hard to make money on T-shirts.
Mr. Mowry, the accidental T-shirt merchant,
often gets his shirts from CafePress.com,
a San Leandro, Calif., company that prints
designs on shirts and other products and even
ships them directly to a Web site's customers.
CafePress charges a vendor like Mr. Mowry
a base price of $8.99 for a T-shirt with a
customized logo printed on it. Mr. Mowry then
charges $19 or more for the finished product.
That leaves him $10 per shirt in pretax income.
Using a local apparel printer, which charges
him only $5 for a basic T-shirt with printing,
Mr. Mowry's profit margins can be as high
as $14 a shirt.
Mr. Mowry's best-selling T-shirts today include
one with the message "Shiny Objects Distract
Me," written in colorful fonts on the
front. Another is rubber-stamped with the
words "Does Not Play Well With Others."
Mr. Mowry has since sold off his newsletter
and last year he launched a site that sells
T-shirts, dubbed thetshirtzone.com.
Mary Ogle, an Ojai, Calif., oil painter,
created a site (evisionarts.com) in 2001 to
sell her art prints at $150 each. But she
sold no more than two prints a month. Two
years later, she added a line of T-shirts
and various tchotchkes featuring blue bears,
pink cranes, mother hens and other images
from her artworks. Sales took off and today
she says she sells several hundred tees per
month, taking in up to $800 in revenue.
Nick Bayne, 25 years old, an entertainment
producer in New York, began buying T-shirts
on the Internet last year, after coming across
the CollegeHumor site that sold tees with
clever puns and cartoons. In the past six
months, Mr. Bayne says, he has bought six
shirts online, for $18 apiece, and plans to
buy more to add to his collection of 100.
Among his favorites: A shirt featuring a
lead character of the movie "Napoleon
Dynamite" that he says he could only
find on the Web. Another shirt shows a picture
of Che Guevara and says: "I have no idea
who this is."
"It's a guilty pleasure," Mr. Bayne
says. "There's a point where my girlfriend
will tell me I'll have to grow up, but until
then, one definitely can't have too many funny
T-shirts."
CollegeHumor.com asks visitors of its site
for T-shirt ideas and receives an average
of two suggestions a day. "The majority
of them are awful," says Mr. Abramson,
adding that many of the submissions are far
too crass.
To generate T-shirts with smarter messages,
Mr. Abramson and three business partners look
for puns and draw inspiration from television
shows. Recent results include one that declares
"Your Retarded" and another with
a picture of a man with bear's arms and the
message "Right to Bear Arms."
Write to Pui-Wing Tam at pui-wing.tam@wsj.com
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