Are you a teenage jewelry artist? Young jewelry artists who want to sell their work have some unique advantages over their older counterparts. And there are lots of ways young jewelers can find profitable market niches.
As a teenager, you are in close contact with the most fashion-conscious market segment of all - your peers.
If you wear different pieces of your jewelry to school every day, you'll always have people asking where you got it, and wanting to place orders for their own. Once you're known as a jewelry artist, you'll probably get a lot of custom orders too. Be ready to quote prices when someone at school says, "Hey, what a cool choker! How much would you charge to make me one?" And offering them color choices is very important.
In addition to your regular jewelry line, "school spirit" jewelry in your school's colors is likely to be a huge seller.
Bracelets tend to be popular among the high school crowd. They take less beads and other materials than necklaces, and can be made faster. If you carry a cloth tape measure around in your book bag, you'll be prepared to do custom sizing. You can charge by the inch or by the bead, or just have a flat rate.
Chokers are also a big seller. A bead or pendant strung on a leather or rubber cord can be a fast and profitable seller. It's quick to make, not too expensive for supplies, and very cool. Among the high school crowd, hemp chokers with beads are also popular.
And don't forget that there's a market for young men's jewelry. Surfer-dude necklaces and bracelets made with bone, wood, shell, or glass beads on leather or rubber cord are popular for guys.
Also see my newsletter article, Designing Jewelry for the Teenage Market.
You may be interested in raising money for your school while selling your jewelry. Ask someone in your school office if you can do a fundraiser. Bring samples of your work and your business card, if you've made one. It's important to show that you're a responsible jewelry artist. Get permission to choose a school event that will already have a crowd (like a football game, PTO meeting, or carnival), and set up a table at the event with a display of your jewelry for sale.
Donate 10% of all proceeds to your school, and keep the rest. You can set your prices to add in this 10%. Have a sign at your table letting people know that part of their purchase price goes to their school.
Be ready with a notebook to take custom orders. Doing a "show" like this in the fall should net you some nice Christmas shopping sales.
If you're interested in the idea of helping your school or another organization while you sell your jewelry, see Fundraiser Jewelry Shows for more success tips.
Do you know someone who owns a local business? If so, you may have an excellent opportunity to hold a trunk show. A trunk show is a one-person show that's held in a store or other business to promote a particular jewelry artist.
It usually involves setting up a table with your jewelry displayed on it, inside the front door of the business. You sit or stand near your display and politely greet people who come in, and sell your work from your table. People like to meet the jewelry artist who created the pieces they're buying.
If you do get the opportunity to do a trunk show, be sure to get the word out to as many people as possible. Have the business owner email or distribute flyers to all their customers with the date and time of your show.
For top sales, see if you can arrange to have your trunk show shortly before a gift-giving holiday or on the business' payday.
For an example of a successful trunk show, see Jewelry Trunk Show - a niche almost missed.
Also see my newsletter article, Profiting from a Jewelry Trunk Show.
To operate profitably, develop jewelry lines that are affordable and appealing to your customers.
In jewelry gifts under $20 you'll find good suggestions for jewelry that's very profitable to you and sells fast to teenage customers.
Another important aspect of profiting from your jewelry is to spend some time working out how to price your jewelry.
Try working backwards - for example, if you want to sell chokers for $18, figure out how much time (say 15 minutes or less) you'd want to put into a piece that you'd sell for this price, and how much materials cost (say $2 to $4) would make the item profitable for you.
Then figure out what supplies you'd use that fit within your budgeted materials cost, and what sellable design you could make in 15 minutes using those supplies.
Now you're thinking like a businessperson as well as a jewelry artist! It's a creative challenge, but if you want to be successful financially with your art, you have to think this way.
Also see Price Points for Your Jewelry Line and Pricing Your Goods for more tips on pricing jewelry.
As a teenage jewelry artist, you have a great opportunity to start earning money from something you love doing. I wish I had started my jewelry business in my teens.
May you enjoy a lifelong successful jewelry journey!
AnnaLea Sloan - Young Jewelry Business Entrepreneur
Discover how AnnaLea's passion for jewelry making, her determination to learn how to run a business, and her supportive family combined to make her jewelry dream come true - including a net profit of $1000 from her first jewelry party at age 14!
I've Been Beading My Life Away
Thirteen-year-old jewelry artist Ruby tells about her successful jewelry show where she made $100 - when she was just age 12.
Jewelry for Teenagers
Carolina Gonzalez shares how she designs and markets jewelry for teenagers - targeting a specific interest niche, going where these teens go, and building relationships with them.
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