Santa Monica, CA again

I adore Santa Monica! But the show there left me puzzling out what is hand-made today. When I first started selling textile art I puzzled this same question. I came to terms with what was in the market place and joined the community (more on the craft community later).
There were things in booths near mine that made me uncomfortable. One woman was selling silk scarves that she painted then pole wrapped-- no shibori there. Just the look without the work.
Across from here a woman had prominently displayed scarves with shibori on them:



She told me that they were cotton viole and the shibori was done in Africa. Nice shibori, cheap labor.
The corner booth was occupied by Marla Duran of Project Runway fame.

She had ready-made shirts in rayon prints. Her clothes were probably sewn in the US.
No one can be expected to know all about every craft. The public used to rely a bit on the show jury to weed out the inappropriate stuff.
Questions that are rolling thru my head:
Are the show applications down that they have to accept these inappropriate crafts just to fill the show? I know some shows have a dirth of applications.
Is this all the public wants to pay for now, half made in the US crafts? I got endless new questions about starting with pleated fabric this time-- why now not 10-15 years ago?
Now that our fashion industry is overseas, where are the small scale manufactures going to sell? Will these small scale manufactures flourish in this wide open field? Or will they need to be custom makers? Justin Limpus Parish say that most of her work now is custom mother-of-the-bride work.
Any thoughts?

A view from the Santa Monica Pier of the handicap accesible beach! There is hope to make it to the sea for all of our lives. Gotta love Santa Monica!
Comments
Posted by: glennis | June 27, 2007 12:11 PM
Posted by: glennis | June 27, 2007 07:56 PM
Posted by: Karren | June 28, 2007 10:26 AM
Posted by: glennis | June 28, 2007 02:40 PM