Blog Archive

Observations of My First Market in NYC

I'm part of the Brooklyn Indie Market, which started as a Yahoo group and recently emerged into a forum and then a new showcase-website. They are market-happy people, and have it down pat. Displays, credit card things, tables, all of it. So when Elaine Perlov put an offer out to share her table at The Market NYC, I took a leap and grabbed the spot.


market nyc

I made a banner the night before to hang (at Elaine's near insistence, although it would have been fine with her if I'd xeroxed something, but we just don't have one in the neighborhood, so I sewed something). I used my godmother's copper pots to display the jewelry bags and Chow Chows, and sparkly FashionMistas were all over the table.

It was pretty cold in the gymnasium of the church on Mulberry street where this is housed, so our table was missing fuzzy wool hats and gloves. But to my surprise, the sleep mask got the most traffic, especially by men! It was fascinating watching people pick up, turn over, open, close, show to friends in foreign languages, Katie James products. Here are some of our observations on the traffic around the table:

  • Men liked the sleep masks, which do have a lingerie quality...(silk taffeta, sexy black strap around the head)
  • If a boyfriend told his girlfriend to say, buy a new sleep mask (while holding up the Katie James sleep mask), she not only refused, but turned her head in a huff and went to look at ugly over-ruffled purses. Each time a man suggested to a woman that she like something, she nearly hissed. We soon learned to telepathically send couples away.
  • When one person comes to look, they are a magnet for other people.
  • People don't really like to be talked to. They barely tolerated smiling. And by tolerate I mean stay at the table. There's a balance between acknowledging them, talking to them, and pitching to them. There's just no trust anymore in the world.
  • Reading works. Read a magazine and be really into it, and before you know it, you won't have noticed someone touching your products who'd been there for 30seconds. And she'll stick around when you look up from your magazine and will be ready to hear the wonderfullness of your products.
  • Being on the phone can also work. Gives the person time to be anonymous at your table.
  • Push your website. Suggest they can buy online at their convenience. Elaine says that she's had sales years later from the markets she's been in.

I'm not a shark sales person, which may not be a good thing, and I've got a lot to learn about closing the sale (I was actually afraid to get a sale and calculate tax). But it was super fun talking shop with a designer who's been doing this for 14 years. And fun to see what tricks work (picking up the jewelry bag and playing with it attracted eyeballs and bodies), and what flop (displaying the jewelry bag inside out to show off the pockets...only caused confusion). Feel free to chime in if you've had market observations!

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Glitter Princesses, Knights of Prosperity and Tinfoil Men

Happy Halloween!

I had great ambitions to be a Goth Kitty, but when my cat mask wasn't turning into what I envisioned, and I was lacking time and resources to research and buy all things goth, so Wallgreen's became my next answer for a quick costume for...the night of our first party! So, for $5.99, I found fairy princess wings, a tiara lined with a boa, and a pink tinsled wand...and for David, a very plastic skull sword (also $5.99).

A little rummaging in the art room at home, and voila!! I became a Fairy Glitter Princess! And glittered all of my friends (and the bathroom floor, and the kitchen, and Dinah the cat). The first night of a party David was A Crazed Buckey Fan in all red Ohio State attire, including Buckey slippers. The second night, David was a bit more prosperous...

me glittering the hostess aka Poison Ivy with powdery green glitter...



Poison Ivey showered in glitter...her costume is now complete


David and the host of our second party...Knights of Prosperitaaay (tune into ABC in January for the real thing)


ahh! The Tinfoil Man!!


it's just my silly brother...(but wasn't he scary?)...he needed a quick and effective costume, and asked me: "Kate - do you think I could just put tinfoil on my head?" This reminds me of when I put a carved pumpkin on my head and wore a slinky dress one year.


Don't eat all of your candy at once! I have a pumpkin of candy here at the apartment - a left over bribe attempt from the Emerging Designer NYC Market. It was my first time being a vendor at a market...click here to learn about it!

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Message from the Universe...

I LOVE messages from the Universe.

You all know I create and offer free Katie James desktop wallpaper over in Katie-James.com. My mom still can't get over the fact that I don't charge $.50 for it or something. Well, it makes me happy when I make it, and I love it getting out there, with my little signature on the bottom, onto people's computers to make the computer a happy place in a land of dreary documents.

While at a Ladies Who Launch Live event (delayed blog about which is to come), I was talking to Tonia of 3SL, formerly PaperArtsInc, who suggested I make wrapping paper out of my desktop art to sell to the corporate gift crowd. Loved it. It was one of those ideas that is staring you in the face and you never knew it. Further, and long ago, in my office, another printer had sent me a paper sample of super safe non stick wallpaper. It's on my wall right now with the printer's contact information, because I just love the concept of non-stick sticky wallpaper. So today, I called him to get a quote for polka-dotted wallpaper. That's right, polka-dot, and you place the dots. He's getting back to me.

In a separate world, I've listed my Lazy Susans at Dusk desktop wallpaper at Etsy.com, just so that people could see it and grab it - for free - from katie-james.com. Well, I can't sell a darn thing in Etsy (Katie James might be too pricy for that crowd), but today, right after I made the call to the printer, someone bought my Lazy Susans at Dusk desktop wallpaper for the listed $.10! You can imagine my surprise! And I felt terribly that she bought something that was free...So I emailed her, and wouldn't you know, she did it on purpose to give me good feedback and wish Katie James success!

Well I'll be.

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The Prestige - LOVED

That's right. LOVED it. And it wasn't even that I was swooning all over Christian Bale's lower middle class bad English accent, or that I wanted Scarlett Johansson's bosoms, golden locks, corsets and tulle skirts. The story was amazing, easy to keep up with, yet tricky enough to keep you looking for the secret. What a refreshing movie. Perfect escape for a Friday evening.

Go here and check out a trailor. David and I have practically memorized all of the lines in the trailor - in English accent - because we've seen it so many times. Heck, I thought It had already come out last month. There is: "No...more...secrets!" or "It's not a trick - it's real." or "And then there's the third act." Actually that's all I can remember now that I've seen the whole thing.

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Conversation with Chez Bec

Conversation with Online Jewelry Boutique Chez Bec

chezbec jewelryBorn on the beaches of Antigua, in a mad fit of love for her new hubby and a growing frustration with her high powered lawyer job, Rebecca Doyle tossed her ball and chain (aka blackberry) into the sand and said: "Damnit! I WILL do something with my life that makes me incredibly happy!" which is how the fabulous London based online jewelry boutique, chezBec.com, came to be...(thank god, as the jewelry is so refreshing!)

Ok, she didn't toss the blackberry into the sand, as she's too practical to lose a perfectly good blackberry, but she did declare then and there that she would open an online jewelry boutique. After consultations with her new husband, her step father, and anyone else she would captivate, Rebecca formed her company name and strategy for success.

Just after being approached for this interview, Rebecca and Chez Bec was celebrated on DailyCandy London. So before you dive into her easy-to-shop-in site (and get a special FashionMista discount...details are below), here's a glimpse into the brains behind the pink.




Talk about the part when you were a corporate lawyer lying on a beach in Antigua with your Blackberry in your hand, and you thought "To hell with corporate calls on the white sandy beaches of Antigua…"
That holiday to Antigua was a real turning point in my life for two main reasons. First and foremost, I had met the man of my dreams, the very same gorgeous man I married 8 weeks ago in a fairytale wedding, and there was no way I was going to let him slip through my fingers! Secondly, I guess I had just reached the point where I realized that there had to be more to life than working all hours that God sends in a job that was not giving me any time off or any job satisfaction. Antigua really was the holiday of a lifetime, a fabulous treat from my husband, and I resented having to work while I was there. It was a breaking point for me.

chezbec gold necklaceSo how did you make the big switch between being a lawyer and deciding to launch the online jewelry boutique? When I say "how," I mean what enabled you? Did you set it all up while you were still at your job? On the weekends? Did you have loads of savings or cash out your 401K?
As soon as I got back from Antigua I incorporated a company and got the legal logistics in place. Being a lawyer all that was relatively easy. The next stage took slightly longer and I spent every spare minute, evening and weekend for the next 6 months trawling through website after website checking out my competition and looking for a web designer who could build the site I had perfectly pictured in my head. I resigned 3 months after we got back from Antigua. It was a terrifying moment. I knew I didn't want to be a lawyer anymore but my boss and I were great friends, and still are, but that made it even harder. Plus, I was giving up a tremendously well paid job with great prospects to go it alone in the jewelry world, a world which I didn't really know much about, other than my longstanding love of all things beautiful and sparkly. But I wanted to set up my own business more than anything in the world and I didn't enjoy being a lawyer so I had to go for it. So far, Chez Bec has been financed out of mine and my husband's personal savings.

Where did the name come from?
My step father came up with it. He is a great reader and is always coming up with quirky puns and phrases. He suggested a few names but Chez Bec was my favourite by far. If you take it as a literal interpretation from the French language, it means House of Bec. I am known as Bec or Becks to pretty much everyone that knows me so it was just perfect!

What kind of research did you do before opening up the boutique? Do you have book recommendations? Did a small business association of some kind help?
I read a few books written by entrepreneurs and they inspired me and gave me the confidence to go for it. Other than that it was all down to endless research on the web. Plus I phoned and emailed the owners of a few other web boutiques and they were kind enough to share their pearls of wisdom and potential pitfalls with me. That was a great help.

Did you need start up capital? If so, how much?
I did but this was funded out of mine and my husband's personal savings.

Did/do you have outside investors? How did you approach them?
I don't have any investors at the moment but I am considering taking one to expand the business. I have put some feelers out in the City through my old contacts so I'll see what comes of that.

chezbec gold necklaceDid you have a business plan? You must have, you're a lawyer! If so, did you write it, or did you hire or work with someone to write it?
Of course I have a business plan. Lawyers love paper! I wrote it myself with lots of input from my husband. I bought some books about how to write a business plan and I found some useful example plans on the web. It didn't really take that long to put together and it was quite fun doing it as it enabled me to really focus on all aspects of the business.

Did you form an LLC or sole proprietorship at first? What was your reasoning?
I set up a limited company. Given my legal background I wanted to get the legalities sorted right at the beginning. My husband and I are the directors and I am also the company secretary as I know how to do all of the filings at Companies House.




Who runs Chez Bec? Areas of your site are so fun – a competition to celebrate your new marriage; the Boys Gift Guide for shopping for his girl; a very important "most wanted" page – do you need to run these fantastic ideas by anyone?
I run Chez Bec myself. I have a lot of help from my husband. Plus I have a wonderful accountant, a great book-keeper and a fabulous PR girl. And a great circle of friends and family who I bounce ideas off and who regularly come up with new ideas and suggestions for the site. The idea for the Boy's Gift Guide came from my husband and it has been a great success. I update the most wanted page regularly with the pieces that are flying out of the boutique. It's funny as everyone seems to want to buy what everyone else is buying!

Have you hired a publicist? If not, will you?
I have a part-time freelance PR girl who works alongside me on the PR side of things at the moment. Although I am considering launching a full scale PR campaign soon and I will contract a PR firm to do that for me as they have the contacts and the time to do it properly.

How do you find your super unique, "must-have" pieces? What are your qualifications?
I am always on the look out for new and up-and-coming designers whose stunning collections catch my eye. If I love it and would wear it I'll stock it. If I don't I won't. I carry a little white book around with me at all times and I am always scribbling things in it. I have been known to go up to people in the street or in bars and ask them where they got their necklace or earrings from.

Do you have a great story from the Boys Gift Guide?
It was my husband's idea. When he suggested it I ran it past my brother and all of my male friends and they loved it. And it has been a tremendous success so far. I think most boys find the idea of going into a jewelry shop to buy a gift for their girlfriend or wife or any girl a bit terrifying to be honest. The fact that they can submit a simple form to me and I will then hand pick the perfect piece for them is just so easy. No embarrassment and no harassment from eager shop staff.




chezbec black necklaceDo you think about opening a brick and mortar store? Or is the online boutique fun enough for now.
I am loving the online boutique! The online market is growing so fast year on year and it still has a huge way to go. I hardly ever shop on the high street now. Online you have such a wide choice and you don't have to battle the crowds to get it! I really do think it is the only way forward. Having said that, I think a shop would be fun to have as well so who knows what might happen in a couple of years. Watch this space!

Are all of the jewelry pieces made exclusively for chez Bec?
No, only the Vanessa Maxton and Harriet Rouse collections have been designed and made for Chez Bec.

How do you handle your online orders? Do you have a certain time of day where you stop and fill orders? Do you have order fulfillment for you?
I do the order fulfillment myself each day. I don't set aside a set time to do this. I just have to fit it in along with everything else. It's a bit of a whirlwind at times but I am naturally a very organized person so that helps me stay in control!

About how much time per week do you spend fulfilling orders?
I spend a part of every day fulfilling orders but how much time depends no how many orders come in. It does fluctuate. Some days are busier than others.

Do you have a buying schedule? Meaning, do you buy for the season, or whenever you see a must-have, or both?
I do both. My collections change seasonally but I also buy those must-have pieces whenever I see them and when the budget allows. I don't really have much patience so when I see something I want on the site I have to buy it there and then, I can't wait!




How involved were you in creating your website?
Right from the initial concept of Chez Bec I had a perfectly formed picture in my head of what I wanted the site to be like. I wanted it to be chic and elegant, clear and simple and easy to use. My web designer was brilliant and he built the site just as I wanted it. I worked alongside him throughout the whole site build and we tweaked and changed things and played with different ideas the whole time. It was great fun but a little stressful at times as it took so long! The site build over ran by 3 months which put the launch date off track. But then these things always take longer than one thinks. Especially if you are a perfectionist like me and want every single little bit to be 100% perfect.

What shopping cart do you use (if you know)?
A good one! I'm afraid I have no idea what it is called. My wonderful web designer built it and incorporated it into my site for me.

What bookkeeping software do you use (if any)? Or are you an Excel wizard?
I don't use any as I have a great accouontant and book-keeper that do that for me. In the beginning I set out to do it all myself but there are just not enough hours in the day and I am not that good with numbers!




What advice do you have for a person thinking about or starting an online boutique?
Think about what you want to do very carefully and do your research. Make sure you have people around you who will support you in your new venture. It is a lot harder than it seems and you often end up working longer hours than you did before. If you are set on the idea of having your own online boutique, I would say go for it. The rewards are immense and there is so much job satisfaction. It is the most challenging thing I have ever done but I am the happiest I have ever been. I love it!

Eleanor Roosevelt said "Do one thing every day that scares you." What's been a pretty scary thing that you've done so far that has lead to a great success?
Setting up Chez Bec! I gave up a high-flying career as a City lawyer to set up an online jewelry business. It was, and still is, absolutely terrifying at times but I love what I do. I am a much happier person and I go to work every day to do a job I adore.


shop chezbec

Chez Bec has given FashionMista readers a special 10% discount until January 1, 2007! Enter FM10 at checkout. Start filling your Christmas carts!

Take your pick of fun places to shop on chezBec.com:
Chez Bec's Most Wanted
Collections
The Boy's Gift Guide (nudges for the men)
Competition to Celebrate Rebecca's Marriage (seriously)

PS: In case you're wondering about how Rebecca met her supportive hubby, I got the answer:
It was quite random really. My husband is Scottish and was working and living out in Sweden on a work secondment. My best friend is Swedish and we were in Stockholm with a group of friends celebrating her birthday. One night, we went to a Scottish bar (the only Scottish bar in Stockholm) and there I met my gorgeous husband. He was there to meet a mutual friend of ours. It really was love at first sight for us both and 8 months later he asked me to marry him and I of course said yes. We married 8 weeks ago in a true fairytale wedding.


fashionmista
Thanks, Rebecca!!



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Gone Wheatgrass Crazy

I'm crazy. I've spent all day madly alternating between two very pressing deadlines, feeling like the walls are closing in with every passing minute, and yet, I get home, beg David to cook up his Peter Luger left over steak for us, and get to work on a new and exciting Conversation. SO excited am I about this one. First of all, it will be in pink. I think. If it looks good. But it's an inspirational one.

Oh, the point of this title, is that to prepare for the day of deadline madness, I had a one-ouncer of wheatgrass from Whole Foods for lunch. I knew it would keep me going through the night, feeling fresh as a daisy to post more content...and here I type at 11:06pm, after leaving work at 9pm. For some, 9pm is not very late at all. And I commend those people. For me, 9pm just means the end of one job, and the beginning of another...

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The Importance of Passion

Over at Ladies Who Launch's blog, this is the question of the week: "Have you launched something related to your passion? Do you think this is important?" Here's my answer, plus a little more for the Mistas:

I have spent the past five years searching for my passion. I moved to New York to pursue one of five careers: publishing, advertising, film, writing, and one I can't remember anymore. However, while debating a career in television programming as a temp in the research department of the Food Network, I decided to take a class in fashion design at FIT, and promptly fell in love.

However, following my passions has led me to some seriously wrong jobs. To pursue graphic design, I took a job in a blue printing company and ended up selling an online blueprint system. To pursue a career in publishing (and to become a writer), I took a highly coveted job as an editorial assistant at a major publishing house, and quit after surviving a crazy boss and realized that I didn't want to be an editor. To pursue a job in film (to write scripts), I took a job as a production assistant on Law and Order and learned that I was a construction worker, not an architect, and that the hours prevented me from having a life at home with my dog.

That said, while debating a career in television programming (and contemplating writing a book called Confessions of a Careeraholic) as a temp in the research department of the Food Network, I decided to take a class in fashion design at FIT, and promptly fell in love. I never thought I'd be making and selling accessories, but that's where the venture has taken me.

You've got to tap into your passion - really tap into it and accept it. And accept that it changes. After getting this question to write about, I searched around my brain to pinpoint my passion(s), because it's not like I think about them everyday. So far, the list includes: lines, color, space (like the space between two objects), light, nature, love, my family, my dog and kitty, helping people, expressing, glitter and money. David's passions are: "Work, YOU...I AM VERY PASSIONATE ABOUT YOU, Ohio State football, my family, and to be honest, I am passionate about being a good person."

By accepting and believing in my passions, no matter how simple or complex, I've allowed them to root themselves around my heart. At the same time, I have to let some ideas go if they aren't working out in order to make room for new ideas. Take Elle Woods from Legally Blond I. She follows her passion (marrying the "right," rich guy with a convertible), which takes her to Harvard "to be a law student" to get him back after he dumps her (of which she works very hard to get in), where she discovers that her passion for doing the right thing, helping people, and promoting pink at all times, reveals that she is quite good at being a lawyer. And best of all, it makes her happy and satisfied. Her passion switches from a guy (who is icky) to law.

In the words of Elle, the following can bring you happiness and success: "Passion, courage of conviction, and a strong sense of self."

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Holiday Cards for Live-Ins

I've been dating David for almost 3 years now. We've lived together for almost 2 years, which means that last year I sent a Christmas Card - without him on it. Just Gerdy and Dinah. I'm thinking that it's just bad luck, or not fitting, to include a live-in-boyfriend on a holiday card. Am I wrong? I just got an email from Shutterfly on their holiday card options, so it's got me thinking...

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Katie James on Handbag Designer 101

A very...cyclical thing just happened. While browsing through the Ladies Who Launch NY Incubator, I found Emily Blumenthal of Yasmena Designs. You remember her from a FashionMista interview - she patented her hand bags and sold them on QVC. I contacted her to say hello and to say that I do was a Incubatee, and sure enough, she was launching a new website called Handbag Designer 101 that features handbag designers and asked for an interview! So, here it is!

handbag designer 101

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Addicted to My Inbox, Shopping, and Stockings

David says I'm addicted to my computer. I think it's not my computer that I'm addicted to, but my inbox! He asked if, when I lived with my first boyfriend/fiancé (hehe), was I on the "computer this much." You know, I was. But it was a desktop iMac and when my former boyfriend would build a fire in the family room, I wouldn't come in, as I was trying to build my business as a freelance graphic designer (many, many careers and decisions would follow this time in my life).

But it hit me, that it's not my computer, it's my inbox! I get tons of goodies in there sometimes! It's like opening a stocking at Christmas! The longer I'm away, the more buildup there is for potential opportunities, sales, cute new things, old friends saying hi, and random new friends dropping a line. I mean, just last weekend, I rolled out of bed, fed the animals, watered the plants, and opened my computer to check my email (no one would email at 8:30am, but I like to check), and sure enough, another Katie James from NC bought a sunset pink checkbook cover. Well I'll be! That's the 3rd Katie James this month! The first two are in England.

I mean, there's a whole silent world out there that David really doesn't know about, even though he claims to "live the blog," he doesn't get the visuals of products that fly into my inbox like the spoon necklace, the hot new online jewelry boutique, possible names for new businesses from new friends, even fashion model opportunities! This doesn't include my fare share of wacko stuff, like people-to-people lending of money, weird people wanting to advertise on this blog, off the wall comments that I delete, and constant Google Alerts for Katie James that I've set up that are usually (and imprecisely) for Katie Holmes and Katie Couric, with a few exceptions of new mentions of Katie James out there on the web.

So today, while walking back from Starbucks with Gerdy, David announced that he thinks I should get the satellite internet, when you're connected ALL THE TIME and don't need stupid cable companies. I have to say, I agree.

Now, let's get to the good stuff...

Shopping From My Inbox


SpoonFedArt.com


spoon fed art
spoon fed art
This girl's got a great story. She went from underwriting commercial loans, to turning her hobby/outlet into an awesome, kick ass necklace company. How does she get that candy-like appearance? She uses a wide variety of materials in her spoons - old bits of jewelry, guitar picks & strings, buttons, beads, candy, wristwatch parts, original drawings, photographs, miniatures, and/or/etc. - then she seals it with her own special mix of clear and durable resin-like material to create her beautiful 3-D collages. A lot of these spoons are sold out! So get there quick!

Peggy Li


peggy li jewelry
Golden Ear Thread Earrings

peggy li jewelry
Star Necklace, because we all need some stars

peggy li jewelry
Triple Gold Neckace (pretty, I think! am loving the circles right now...very sexy)


This line is unique, hand-made and feminine. Peggy emailed me to say that her line has been on the new series, which I like, "What About Brian," my favorite and now canceled show, "Related," and in Lucky.


good morning, morning!


good morning, morning organizer
Floral Lattice Organizer (Pink Cover)



Scalloped Bags


I somehow found this line and emailed it to myself. Love their name!

Inside Avenue


Oh man, I love everything on this site. It deserves its own post, but for now, will live in this Shopping From My Inbox as I browse stores...I was quite happy to be contacted about this store...
inside avenue furniture
Sicilian Mirror


inside avenue mirrors
Virginian Mirror


inside avenue rug
Contemporary Rug


inside avenue rug
Contemporary Rug


inside avenue chandelier
Arcadia Chandelier


PS: if you buy anything at Inside Avenue, kindly look to the right in the side bar, and you’ll see a largish ad for them. Click on it, and then buy. I’ll get a tiny commission!


Ok, I must stop browsing and make lasagnia!!! Until the next one (still not done sifting through my inbox)...

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My First Baby Burp Cloth

Coming soon to katie-james.com, Pretty Baby Burp Cloths! All hail my new serger that I've devoted 2 Saturdays to in order to thread it correctly (remember when I couldn't get it to work?). Now I fully understand what they mean when they say: pick your colors, because you won't want to change them.

baby burp cloth

baby burp cloth

For this baby burp cloth, I used one spool of baby pink while the others are brown, so that a pink loop runs along the side of the burp cloth. One side is a printed cotton, and the other is a super soft french terrycloth. Washable of course. To be notified when it's available for sale, sign up for the katie-james.com newsletter. You'll get subscriber-only discounts, alerts of new, free desktop wallpaper, and whatever else happens at Katie James.

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Business Plan Heaven - With Spark Chart!

Yes, you heard me! I'm making friends with my business plan!

I joined the Ladies Who Launch Tuesday Night Incubator with the hopes of developing
branding for Katie James, as well as figuring out how to make it survive in a world of fabulous accessories offered at all ranges of the price spectrum. Well, lucky me, I sat next to a secret weapon dynamo who just happens to help her friends develop their businesses as a business consultant - in her spare time. Through the incubator, she has decided to take her MBA and ability to memorize business plan books and incorporate her own style of helping young businesses get from point A to B to C with clarity.


Ladies and Gentlemen, may I introduce The Matchstick Group (website to come)! The group that helps you get your spark! We met at Starbucks and she had printed out my fledgling business plan and my 2005 and 2006 expense sheets. She plugged everything into her advanced Excel-ness, and we were looking at a quick percentage breakdown of my expenses. We discussed the gory details of how much I need to produce, both in accessories and websites (stay tuned for that future development) and discovered that I am currently making $800 a year from Katie James - as my salery! We determined how to make the numbers really work, and moved on to...The Spark Chart.

The Spark Chart was where we charted the 3-5 year projection of Katie James in terms of visions, goals and enablers of goals. My intensions for Katie James flew out of my head and into little boxes on her spark chart that led to the 5th year.

And the best part is, we had first bonded over my purple faux-alligator shoes at the first meeting, and my whole take-away from that meeting was that I'm wearing the ruby red slippers and have the ability to "go home" or get sparked or take off, but I just didn't see it...

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Celebrity Bang Me

I'm dropping out of the Split Ends Club and dropping into an 8:15pm hair appointment tonight at the Scott J Aveda Salon Spa (their name rings through my head b/c I used to call so much for bikini waxing appointments...no longer!). Ever since Anne Hathaway's bang in The Devil Wears Prada, I want my bangs back. I'm over my swoop, no-bang look, so am looking for a new bang to hopefully give a little life to my just-got-out-of-bed-and-didn't-brush-my-hair look. Also, because of my roots, the new, undied pieces of my hair are healthy and limp. I need me some color damage to bring this droopy look some volume!

Here's what bangs I'm going for:
Ashlee


NOT this person (oh wait, I think that's a 1998 Jessica!)



If only I had curly hair! (Ruth!!)


I could take a little of this bang - a whispish swoop:


Most of these pictures have brown hair...maybe I should get that too...??

This sent from MistaVille:
Hillary


An iVillage article on bangs (check out the before and after picture...it's amazing what a little makeup and an expert blow-dry and style can do)

My Bang:
my bang

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