Thursday, March 24, 2011

Cyber falls!

So I've been eying these for years, and I've finally gotten a chance to make them for a reasonable price.


Not quite done with them yet--I want to add more rexlace so there's greater texture and not just mountains of crin, but I want to trim what's there first (will do...once my hair dries), and I'm playing with the idea of stringing gears on embroidery thread and adding that to the mix. No, this is not 'steampunking' my falls--gears just make things more shiny, and shiny is good.

Now, Anachronaut's falls are the only ones I've seen that I would remotely consider steam...or Predator. Either way, they're gorgeous. (And you know what? There's not a single gear in them. Anyway, I digress.)

These took much longer to make an I anticipated, though a lot of it was me staring at the parts trying to figure out how on earth I was going to put them together, given the strange cuts I had.

Pictured: Brother-turned-mannequin

I'm going to test my theory about these being worn in a 'normal' setting, and not just for clubbing (would you consider school 'normal?'). Simple grey dress with feminine cut, tights, and boots. Personally, I don't think these are any 'weirder' than a headful of dreads, but we'll see.


Materials: Tubular crin, foam, rexlace, plastic tubing, woven ribbon, watch parts, patience.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Decanting fun


Fabric will go up later this week--my first day with spare time (loosely speaking) was spent relaxing/decanting. Pretty vials...

Army of pretty vials.

Decanting is the process of moving liquid from one container to another, usually larger to smaller (yes, just like liquor)--in this case, moving perfume oil (note, NOT the same as perfume) from 5mL bottles into tiiiiny 1/32 oz vials.  I've been doing this since late '07 and now have a permanent bruise on my right thumb from capping so many of these. It's fun and relaxing until it's time to package *sigh*

Certain companies have limited edition lines that they don't offer sample sizes for, so some of us offer to decant it for others. I've been working most often with Black Phoenix Alchemy Lab, Black Phoenix Trading Post, and Blooddrop Clothing and Fineries, though I do dabble in others on occasion, depending if I find anything that really piques my interest that others aren't already decanting for. The companies I deal with--and have dealt with--are well aware of what we decanters do, and they don't seem to mind. After all, we encourage people to buy more (since they don't have to buy a large bottle blind), we spread the word, and the companies have zero cost in this process: we buy the bottles, we decant, we ship.

No, this is not for a profit (though there's the perk of testing these for 'free,' if you consider donating hours of time 'free'), but we decanters do have to run this process like a business. There are so many of us, we really do have to compete to find enough people to fill all the slots in the bottles.

Each bottle = six people
Price per vial = price of oil/6 + price of vial + shipping from company/number of bottles ordered

Of course, those are the basic numbers. Then you have to worry about cost of label, teflon, ink for the printer, pipettes...So when each slot is 3.25 to 5.25 base cost, each slot really begins to add up. So when is it better to just eat the cost of several unfilled bottles in order to keep a few circle members from pulling out of an incomplete circle? When is it better to just drop a bottle? Then, of course, there's invoicing everyone, making sure they pay, and find the time to decant, finding time to package everything up and mail it. So much stress...

But damn, I can't stop. I'm slowly weaning myself off the whole thing. At my height, I was decanting something 100 bottles per large update (roughly every other month, with the months between having about 10 bottles). Now I'm down to...okay, still in the 70's and 80's.