Showing posts with label tucson gem show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tucson gem show. Show all posts

Monday, June 17, 2013

Calla Gold (yes that's her real name!)

Hi there Metalsmiths Unite friends! I had a free moment this morning so I thought that I would revive our interviews on our blog...
Today I thought it would be great to introduce you to my friend Calla Gold... A lovely jewelery designer that I have had the privilege to meet a few years ago, at the Tucson gem show.




MBZ: How would you describe what you do as an artist?
CALLA GOLD:I am a designer of jewelry. Looking at my client’s body type, face shape, lifestyle, personality and the feeling they want to exude with their jewelry choices I put together a piece of jewelry they’ll love that they feel they have been part of designing. I believe there is a jewelry designer in each of us. I put my ego in a box and try to let it be as much about them as I can. I do a lot of listening as a designer. 





MBZ:what inspires your designs? (be it music, nature, beekeeping...)
CALLA GOLD:I love the jewelry I design to have a feel of kinetic motion and for a ring, to make her hand look good.  I am inspired by tree branches and clouds and swirly oil smears and water and old crinkly leaves. Other wonderful designers have given me aha moments with their sheer audacity. I’m like a kid sometimes, oohing and ahhing and needing to be cattle-prodded to move on as I fixate on some speck of beauty.



MBZ: how long have you been involved in this type of making? (how did you start?) I was a door to door salesperson for Fuller Brush. The first woman Fuller Brush Man west of the Mississippi or so I was told. Taking my sales skills and a dream I started Calla Gold Jewelry after apprenticing with a no-store jewelry sales gal. I was just selling, then some repairs, then drawing on napkins and designing jewelry. I never lost sight of the fact that I needed to sell stuff, so the design grew slowly as I focused on selling. I nurtured the flame that I could design jewelry and after years of sales made that a larger part of my income stream. 



MBZ: where are you located?
Calla Gold:I am in Santa Barbara California. It’s on the Pacific Coast in a ridiculously pretty setting between the mountains and the sea. We have a Spanish architectural motif that permeates our downtown. When you drive around the ritzy areas and there are a lot of them, the landscaping is beautiful. I’ll walk the hill neighborhoods marveling at penis like flower sheaths, and smoky, velvety big stinky petals of some exotic plant and marvel at a carpet of different leveled plantings grey, green and droopy, staggered by the vision, the beauty and the no doubt stupidly expensive bill of the visionary landscape architect. I am inspired.

MBZ:  do you have a website?
Calla Gold: I have a website with a gallery that shows the different styles I can design in: http://www.callagold.com
I am active in social media, posting three times a week on my Facebook business page: http://www.facebook.com/callagoldjewelry
I am a mad crazy jewelry blogger, posting weekly to explain things to jewelry lovers, opine about jewelry trends, explain why some men never buy their wives jewelry, and show things to brides to be like “The Sixteen Steps of Jewelry Design” and liked that: http://www.callagold.com/blog
Oh wishful thinking that I had some way to sell my jewelry online like an e-commerce site. I think it will happen, but I haven’t made it happen yet.

MBZ: what other ways do you market your work?(shows, galleries, brick + mortar stores)
I often have a table at a Wedding Showcase. Those are good for me since I custom make a lot of wedding and engagement rings.
Business trade shows for women’s groups are something I go to. I do the whole dress up like a business lady and wear reasonably well behaved jewelry that I’ve designed and go to mixers, networking meetings and promote the fact that I do repairs and custom work.  Once I’ve done their repairs and established myself as no slouch in the care of their jewels out comes the inherited and unworn, the old boyfriend jewelry and the re-purposing and re-designing begins. I start small and come on strong in the end.
I do not have a store. Coming from a door to door background I felt more comfortable visiting clients in their comfort zone. Many of my old Fuller Brush clients became jewelry clients. Many of my cleaning business clients became jewelry clients.
I love not having a store. But it means I do upwards of five hours of calling a week to stay in touch and follow up on the ladies I’ve met at the meetings to get the appointment.9 I do appointments all day long 4 days a week.) One day in the workshop and one day blogging, writing bids and doing a mountain of paperwork. I love it all!



MBZ: do you teach? if so, where-
Calla Gold: I do private one-on-one jewelry business and small business consulting. I do a lot of over the phone consulting. I also teach at Women’s Economic Ventures in Santa Barbara in their Sales segment of their multi week entrepreneurial training.
I occasionally speak at local business groups and have spoken in Las Vegas and at the MJSA EXPO in New York.
Running my SMART group is I guess a form of teaching. Social Media Action Relationship Tactics is what the acronym is for. For about two or three years I’ve run this group, where we share ideas on social media actions and co-market for each other online. I started it when my new website went up and I started blogging so I could drive people to my site.

MBZ: any sage advice for newcomers that you would like to share?
Calla: If you can’t afford a website yet, a Facebook business page is essentially a free website where you can showcase your work and drive interested people to.
*Your job is to sell stuff to make a living and pay the bills. If you have to sell other people’s stuff to get that done, do it, if you are making a living you have the opportunity to hone and improve your craft and have the time to find where your clients are and  what they want from you.
*See what people like best about your work and focus some of your new output on that, even if it’s not your vision. Not a cat person? Everyone buys the few cat things you make? Make more cats, you can do the bats later! If you’re making a living you’ll be able to keep being creative and find your ideal clients who want bats.

MBZ:where do you envision your work going in the next year?
More cool hand engraved and pierced through designs. It’d be great to have more creative clients pushing me in new directions.
In a perfect world I get some e-commerce thing going.




MBZ: anything else you would like to share?
Calla: I’m having fun sharing on Pinterest. I show my stuff and stuff I like: http://pinterest.com/callagold/
A passion of mine is to get people excited about jewelry again including their own unworn pieces. When they don’t have old dogs in the jewelry box anymore they start feeling more creative and ready for the new stuff and new styles. Here’s a video where I explain what I like to do: http://youtu.be/dnlSsztsF8A
I’m sharing the reason’s men don’t buy jewelry for women blog post. I love it, it makes me laugh and makes my clients laugh: http://www.callagold.com/santa-barbara-jeweler/my-husband-never-buys-me-jewelry%E2%80%9D-the-fifteen-reasons-men-don%E2%80%99t-buy-jewelry-for-women/

LOL, that's great Calla! thanks for submitting yourself to an interview!
I hope you all enjoyed this interview and get inspired to go out and make something beautiful today!
May the flux be with you----
ciao-  Maureen BZ

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Metalsmiths Unite! in Tucson!

Whew! February in Tucson is an exciting and busy time- we are now in our second week of Gem show frenzy- Lots of cars on the roads from out of state, no parking downtown...and our favorite eateries? Booked solid! :-) We love it though- because in exchange, Tucson gets to host 40+ of the most wonderful gem shows you ever have opened your wallet for!

Last week was the most active week for me- The Agta show is in the Convention center, all the tents are up at Holidome and Tep. That first official week of the shows (not including the "pre-show" shows the weekend before) that first week is chock full of activities- many seminars to choose from (most are free!) and of course, party after party after opening to attend.


This year, I hosted a small gathering at my studio for members of Metalsmiths Unite who were in town for the shows- Luckily, the weather was in our favor and we had a cool, dry evening to enjoy a bit of outdoors and a warm bonfire (I even toasted a couple of marshmalows....then gave up when I found that I needed a longer stick- ouch!)

I was happy to see some of my Tucson metalsmithing friends come to the event- The crew from Krikawa Jewelry Designs, Shawna Lobmiller from Starr Gems, Danielle Embry, Mark Ramsaur from Tucson Parks and Rec and the Metallink program, Dave Arens (chain maker and inventer of the original jump ring tool) Kevin Potter a jeweler/machinist (who made my hydraulic press and dies)  and Jude Clark, a wonderful local jeweler and friend. My dear friend (an admitted non-creative person) Gina Reyes was there too, along with Guido and my super kiddo, Cosmo (who proceeded to entertain us by dragging out his drums..(I think he really wanted a big drum circle...I worry that he might be a bit of a hippy! lol)
Cosmo and Wendy Van Camp get their Drumming groove on

Then there were some out of towners...Andrea Robinson buzzed up on her motercycle from Sierra Vista, The amazing Gem and Jewelry trade Blogqueen Robyn Hawk came , as well as Whaley studios Teri Masters, Wendy Van Camp, Shari Seager and Karen Pfeiffer of "Hammered and Stoned" ...and later on we had Polly Mary Amalia Spencer and Thea Demitre (both who drove here...DROVE HERE from MAINE!) stop by to soak in a few moments of campfire.

My idea of using Skype proved to be a bit too problematic to pull off- We were able to chat a bit with Julie Sanford and even Erkki Kokko(though the feed from Finland was very choppy)  I think I'll be trying to figure out a way to use skype for metalsmiths Unite - I think it needs to be a Skype event on it's own....but that's a subject for future deliberation.

OK- to those who could not make it to the meet up- sorry, I know how hard it is to juggle all the demands of the Gem show- I hope that you can find more time next year to come to this fun and relaxing gathering- And I hope that you had a good time at the show- made lots of contacts and found gems and tools galore!

I'm now setting my sights on the next fun February event- The Yuma Symposium! I'll be going there in a few weeks with a couple of my friends- it's going to be my 4th time attending the event, and I anticipate a Hugely entertaining and creative weekend- (I'll be blogging about it for sure!)

Have a great week everyone- remember to post your events on the Metalsmiths Unite! wall- let us know what you are up to- Have fun in your studios! be safe-
Metalsmiths, Unite!
ciao- Maureen