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Seminary Collection

April 24th, 2007

Today I added a new digital download art collection to the store just for Seminary Teachers.
Seminary Certificates, ETC.
I had some certificates I have sold in the past, they needed updating, and along with improving the certificates, I added several new accompaniments to make a neat collection. There are Perfect Attendance Certificates for all four years of Seminary. Likewise, there are Master Scriptorian certificates for each year - and I designed a new R.E.D. Certificate for anyone who has been using a “Read Every Day” program in their class. Then I carried the designs through some fun coordinating projects:

  1. Program Covers - to use for Seminary Graduation or other programs
  2. Postcards - these would make nice invitations or notes to students or parents
  3. Bookmarks
  4. Gift Tags
  5. Scrapbook Papers

I hope you find them useful.
Debra

Working on the Sabbath

April 22nd, 2007

I wonder if any other online LDS oriented businesses have the same problem – orders and requests coming in on the Sabbath. This is a job for Debra and me, not a hobby or church calling. I personally try and do no work on the web site until after 10 or 11pm on a Sunday, but by then the orders and information requests completely jamb my email inbox. When I started my email program tonight (11pm) I had 95 new emails, since just before midnight the night before. What’s a guy to do?

I believe this problem is a product of the ‘always on’ nature of the internet; that is the access is always on, so the service should be to. I also believe that folks do not really think about ordering something online on Sunday, after all, it’s not like driving somewhere to shop at a brick and mortar business. That said, I am still continually surprised by the amount of orders that come in Sundays.

Are we partially responsible for this? Yes. Just yesterday we sent out an all members newsletter with links to products we hope would be purchased. We do have our reasons for sending on a weekend:

  • The web server is much less busy on late Friday and Saturday than other days of the week. Seminary teachers are trying to sleep in at least once in the week and do not generally start worrying about
  • Sending out thousands of emails taxes the server enough that we try to choose ‘less busy’ times.
  • Frequently (this weekend) we just do not get out marketing act together early enough in the week to get a newsletter out.

Selling LDS Stuff

April 17th, 2007

I was born and raised in Ohio and didn’t join the church till I was almost 17. I came out to BYU a year later. I’ve lived in Ohio, Utah, Idaho, Montana, Washington and Florida since then. So plenty of time has been spent in both what I will refer to as Mormon Country, and what a lot of people call the “mission field.” For years I served in the Primary. I always developed my own materials. My best friend and I would go to the nearest LDS bookstore and she would always say something like - “Oh Debbi, you ought to write a book with all your ideas.”

Honestly - this is kind of embarrassing, but, in 1992, I did one of those beauty make-overs/glamor shots dealy things at Nordtrom’s or somewhere down in Florida. When I saw the photos, I thought to myself - “This looks like an author’s photograph you see on a book jacket.” And I got it in my thick skull that someday that picture WOULD be on a book jacket. I had ZERO idea what the book would be about - but it was like this kind of knowing I had - it was going to happen - sooner or later.

So a few years go by and I am called to be Primary President in my ward. I develop this program - right off the bat - first week - I call it Primary Scripture Search. It takes a few weeks to iron out the wrinkles, but in general, I’d take a scripture reference from the primary outline for that month, and come up with a search - something the children would have to look up in their scriptures somehow to figure out. I passed these out on little slips of paper before Sacrament Meeting. The children would work on them as they sat there in the chapel. Then afterward, they’d run up to me and hand them in. I saw whole families feverishly flipping through their scriptures before the meeting started to find the answers. Before long, the children in our Primary really knew how to use the Topical Guide and footnotes etc.

When I was released, I had already prepared a lot of the searches and activities for the upcoming year. I decided to see if I could sell them on the internet. My boss set up a webpage for me on their server. I got a very few orders. Then one day I was in the stake offices and noticed the stake Primary President had the new outline for 1998 in her box. I admit it, I sneaked a peak. The theme was “I Know the Scriptures Are True” and the instructions said leaders should teach children to use the Topical Guide and other study tools in the LDS scriptures. I felt like the spirit knocked me over - I had to sit down. I knew right then that I HAD to publish a book - a Primary Scripture Search book for 1998.

So I hunted up LDS publisher email addresses and contacted about seven. I heard back from three or four, including Deseret Book. They wanted a sample but insisted there was no way to get the book out before the start of the year. I said it was of no value whatsoever unless it was available before the start of the year. But I prepared my sample. Then I heard from a small publisher who was ready to print the book ASAP. That is how I started writing books.

I got to attend the annual LDS Bookseller’s Association Convention in Salt Lake City the next year. I was so overwhelmed! Yet, a lot of people came up to me and acted like they knew me - all because of my website! It blew my mind. Marvin Goldstein called me the Primary Guru.

Well, that was a long time ago. In web years - it is almost pre-historic. The thing was, I got free internet with Netzero. I got a free browser and web editor from Netscape. I had a free webhost in my employer (two brothers - Clayton and Alan Chevrier - from my ward who basically said as long as I didn’t bug them with too many needy questions I could have my site on their server for free). My publisher covered the cost of printing my books and marketing them. So with no monetary investment, I suddenly had a web business.

I realize that the LDS market is tiny compared to the rest of the world. But every time I have considered creating materials targeting a wider audience I feel absolutely no desire to do so. Tell you what - writing and web design were very late entries in the “What Debbi likes to do” line up. I would say art and music and mostly theater are what I had invested so much of my life toward - but none of them ever made me much money. Now I had a book to put that ol’ Glamor Shot photo on - and I was actually earning some money. Not much, but some. It is very creative work - I love it - but what I really love is that it is gospel oriented. That combination - creative and gospel oriented - is what sets me on fire.

So some people have criticized me for charging money for what I spend my full-time effort doing. It is material for people serving in church callings, for the most part. That really bothers some people. Tim and I have been accused of “extorting” money from latter-day saints because we charge for our materials. This is a simple case of economics. My house costs money. The food I eat costs money. The car I drive runs on fuel that, unfortunately, costs money. There is no end of sources demanding that if I want to do almost anything at all, I will have to fork out some money to do it. Well, where am I to get that money? Same place the vast majority of people get their money. They have a job - they have a business. They are employed. My choice of employment is Latter-day Village. It doesn’t even pay my house payment frankly. I guess it is a compliment that people assume we make tons of revenue and have sizeable incomes - but that is absolutely not the case. I could no sooner live on my income from LDV than I could having an average newspaper route. But I work as much at it as anyone works at their full-time job. For awhile, my elderly mother lived with me and together we got those proverbial ends to meet. When Mommy died, she left all of us a nice inheritance. I bought a house - or was able to get a mortgage I should say. Now all that money is gone. I got married to Jerry and moved to Ohio. My husband had a job at the time, it was a new job and they started him off at half what they usually pay - to see how it would work. Just about the time he was supposed to get that big raise, we moved back into my home in Utah and for a year and a half, he has been struggling to get his business going in a new state. It isn’t happening fast enough. On the verge of losing our home, he has taken on two jobs. So that’s us.

We sell LDS stuff. Mostly the stuff we sell is to help people in their callings. A lot of it is online material or digital download material. I create a TON of original material. I choose to publish it digitally rather than make 12% or less on royalties from printed books I often only had three weeks to write. Tim has gathered material from teachers in the field for ten years. He has organized it and maintains a huge number and variety of software programs that make LDV useful to people. We pay a lot of money for our server and all this software. We pay a lot of money for our hardware and supplies. If someone else can do all that without charging, there is a reason for it. They are being supported by a well salaried spouse or an institution or business or advertising revenue, or are independently wealthy. That is a blessing to both them and those who benefit from their efforts. Tim and I don’t have those advantages.

As poor as my husband and I are - we love movies. The other day I went through our accounts and figured what we were spending on various types of expenses. I was surprised how much we spent on movies! We go to the cinema 1-4 times a month (usually matinees) except for a few months when even that was out of the question. We rent DVDs from Netflix, occasionally Hollywood Video, and now Redbox. We do not have tv service. So maybe we watch more movies than most people. Still, it is a lot of money. When I look at that, and realize that most people pay for cable or satellite tv, and buy DVD’s and go to evening cinema for full-price - we probably spend less than a lot of people just to watch a screen for entertainment. So while I have no doubt many people are on a tight budget, I see that LDV offers people wonderful material that is conveniently organized at a remarkably low price.

I also realize that a lot of women derive a huge amount of satisfaction and sense of contribution by serving in their callings. If they are stay at home moms, their callings are one of the most public forms of expression they have. If they work outside the home, mostly it will be at something far removed from gospel service. So again, their callings are very important forms of expression in the lives of LDS women.

I propose that no one needs to spend money to fulfill their callings. Nor do they need to hunt the WWW to find ideas. The spirit will reveal what they need and provide all they need. So if anyone feels they are deprived because they cannot afford to buy stuff at the bookstore, church distribution or from online sources - they sell the spirit short. On the other hand, I have really enjoyed many things I have been able to purchase that have helped me with my callings and just spiritual development. Frankly, I can’t get enough - there aren’t enough books to read, there isn’t enough music to listen to, there aren’t enough films to watch, there isn’t enough art to adorn my home - I want more and better choices than I currently have.

So I will leave the general Christian market to someone else. I will leave the general education market to someone else. There are PLENTY of options already available in every area of life. Except our LDS gospel centered world - there isn’t enough. The quality begs to be improved as well as the quantity. So as I learn how to do things better, I am happy to offer it to my fellow latter-day saints and hope it will enrich their lives. If I can’t offer something better or different, I don’t want to bother - so I work hard to have something better or new.

Blogging is - I don’t get the huge attraction to it - but I guess there is something visceral about it that people like. - These are things I have not known how to express to our internet audience - so maybe this blog will work for that.

I’ve been over all this with the Lord for years. It has been my path for whatever reason, and a better path has not been found - I’ve tried! I just figure I will keep at it until some other path clearly reveals itself to me. When someone takes a minute to write in a thank you - believe me - it makes my day - it makes Tim’s day. I never tire of what I do - though it is pretty late and I need to go to bed.

TTFN
Debra

New Stickers

April 17th, 2007

The wonderful art that is being generated for the Download Depot Club is now found on new LDV mail-order stickers - for YW and Primary! The following collections now have matching stickers in our store:

ON DEMAND STICKERS
We design our stickers to print on several sizes of sticker paper we keep on hand - and we print on demand, meaning - when we get an order for a certain sticker design, that is when we print it. This allows us to offer many more sticker designs. We invest in the sticker paper, but don’t keep a large stock of pre-printed stickers. So we are always ready to offer new stickers. And our sticker prices are competitive. We do not charge for shipping either! So it is a great way to find lots of sticker designs.

REQUEST A STICKER
If you are looking for something in a sticker and don’t find it - let us know! We can design stickers without a large investment in pre-printing - so we hope you will tell us what your needs are.

GETTING THE MOST OUT OF OUR ART
The digital art collections for downloading often work for other products - like stickers - it is just another way an artist can earn a commission for their artwork.

I hope others can appreciate how important it is that LDS artists get paid for LDS designs. When I was growing up, I learned that the women in my life that I looked up to had all made major sacrifices to raise their families and pursue careers. I come from a long line of very practical women who sacrificed pursuing their artistic talents to do the more practical thing. When I realized how talented my grandmother was, my sister was, my mother was - but they set aside these talents to work at more practical things and to be mothers, I was DETERMINED to keep my art an active pursuit.

On the other hand, deep inside, I knew that if I were to pursue a professional career as an actress, which many people told me I was capable of - that I would be endangering my moral and spiritual welfare. I am passionate about the stage. I throw myself completely into a role. I am competitive and ambitious. I saw how easily I could get sucked into the entertainment industry nightmare if I made it my goal to rise to the top. I chose not to do so. Over and over in my life I have made such choices. Though I studied theater at BYU, and graduated with a degree in theater arts - and have worked in equity theaters, I have refrained from aggressively seeking a professional career as an actress.

Many of my friends have pursued acting/music/art careers. I am very sad to report that a good percentage of those who have “made it” in the professional art world have become lost spiritually. Many others have stuck to teaching and doing local productions or being self-published musicians/authors/artists.

We want great music. We want great film. We want great art. We want great theater. But we don’t want to pay much or anything to get it.

I have many friends who have a singular gift for theater - who would be homeless and maybe even dead if they had to rely on any other skill to survive. I am blessed to be technically minded as well as artistically minded - so I have some options - but some people really don’t. I love the artistic soul. It pains me to no end to see an artistic soul set aside their art to work at a bank or sell real estate because they can’t make ends meet as an artist.

So anything I can do to give artists a chance to earn some money at what they love and are best at - I am thrilled to do it.

I say this in the context of selling stickers, and it sounds pretty stupid. But sometimes, all it takes for an artist to be willing to keep their hand in their craft is to have a little success selling their art. It builds confidence - and that is almost more important than anything else.

WOW - I started this a long time ago - didn’t I publish it already??? Sorry if I did, but here it comes again - Debra

Churning Out New Art

April 17th, 2007

New YW Collections, Pioneer Collection and new Scrapbook Collections that you will love, and some stickers to match.

Tim insists that blogging is where it is at - I am having a hard time catching on to it - but will try to do better. See, I am too busy CREATING to stop and write about it. About two weeks ago I attended a Photoshop Seminar here in Salt Lake City - put on by the fine folks at National Association of Photoshop Professionals, NAPP - LDV paid my way - I LOVED IT! And I joined the NAPP. I can’t stop thinking about all the things I learned and what cool new things I can do - so to stop creating to tell people what I’ve been up to is like a rude interruption. But I do, afterall, want people to KNOW, so I guess I better tell you!

Along with the Photoshop Seminar, I go out looking for ideas hither and yon - recently I checked out HP’s website to see what their latest printing projects were. That’s where I discovered there is a new product out for inkjet printers - printable fabric sheets (June Tailor has some - JoAnn Fabric sells them too) - they are treated with some chemical process so that regular inkjet ink becomes permanent on the fabric and can even be washed! So that opened up my imagination to all kinds of possibilities for projects for our digital download Art Collections! I added a pattern for a stuffed Chick to our Easter Club Collection.

I’ve always loved pop-up books. So I got it in my head to find out how to make them - and to start creating pop-up projects for our digital art. I also love paper-dolls! So I told one of our artists about these things and I’ve done a pop-up project with the new Young Women Tagz ‘n Thingz Collection by Lori Nawyn. Another way fun part of that collection is a set of Playing Cardz - I think YW will love those for Girl’s Camp this summer.

Serene Heiner has done it again with another wonderful monthly theme poster for May’s Primary Theme. This is part of the Primary Membership And if you haven’t checked out Serene’s scrapbook Collections, you need to see what she is up to. She has designed three beautiful scrapbook collections - and now you can get all THREE for the price of TWO! Soft Snowflake Sensation, Small and Simple and Families Are Forever.

Some people create their scrapbook pages on the computer and have them printed out by a service that can print on 12×12 archival paper (like Kinko’s or Walmart)- or they simply keep a digital scrapbook. But you can use the digital images to print out the paper and cut and glue it just the way you do with paper you buy in the store. If you don’t have a wide format printer, just use your own stock of blank scrapbook cardstock as the base, and layer with the printed digital papers.

And I am so excited about this one, Elsa Remund’s Pioneer Collection. Elsa came from Brazil to the United States for a visit, but lo and behold, she fell in love and got married, and ever since, she has been living in Utah with her husband, with no more of her things from her home in Brazil than she had in her suitcase when she arrived. She called a few weeks ago to see if there was any work she could do for LDV to help with finances, and I told her we needed Pioneer art. I am THRILLED with what she came up with, and you will be too! It is so lovely - whether you are finishing up your church history seminary curriculum or are planning your youth conference around a handcart trek, or do the Sunday bulletin in your ward and want some lovely art for the covers - or have a Pioneer Day celebration coming up - this collection is WONDERFUL! I took the artwork and put it into a lot of ready-to-print pdf files.

I am already anticipating the May and June Club collections coming up - Serene has designed a darling Mother’s Day Collection and Lori Nawyn has designed a delightful Girl’s Camp Collection that I have already seen (it includes those paper dolls I mentioned) - then there will be a beautiful Temple Marriage Collection by our wonderful photographer, Courtney White, and much more coming just around the corner.

I am just more and more amazed by the art coming in from our talented artists. And, I have to admit, I have so much fun turning the designs into special projects. The more I work on these collections, the better my own computer design skills become. I keep trying new techniques and am delighted with the results. I learned a super fun trick at the Photoshop Seminar for creating gorgeous plaids from almost any photograph in a few mouse clicks. I’m having a blast!

There were about 400 people at the seminar - mostly photographers - duh! PHOTO - shop - I guess I should have expected it, but I don’t limit my use of the program to playing with photos. And the photographer I sat next to turns out to be LDS and has some work he wants to hook up with LDV. I am very excited.

If you are an LDS artist and would like to have a chance to do LDS themed art for sale, please contact me! I am open to almost any possibility.

Well, enough of this writing shmiting stuff. I told Tim it BLOGGLES my mind!

more later . . . Debra

Name change (and more)

April 17th, 2007

Rather than just a log of site changes are updates, we are expanding our blog’s role in the site. We’re calling the blog the Village Town Square, as in a central location where Saints can gather to converse. We will still try and let you know about what we are adding to our shopping cart and such, but we also have contributors who will pen articles on various LDS oriented topics, including some of our authors and artists. You are invited to add comments to any of our posts here. Look for new category and authors here.

We are also adding a couple of editorial categories to Debra and I can drag out our soapboxes and go off on a tangent when the mood strikes. Of course you can simply choose a single category to completely bypass our ramblings.

We updated our menus again:

  • Added new link to the Annotated Scriptures Old Testament section (Barb Gardner has added the entire Old Testament with cross references and her GA annotations). You can read more about it on our Annotated Scriptures home page. Click the brown banner titled ‘Old Testament’ for a more detailed description.
  • Free LDS Clipart. This link was previously titled “Image Gallery”; however there is more clipart in our free gallery than photos.  If you are a member, free or paid, you have access to the 3000 images and photos there. 
  • Clipart Downloads. As our Village Download Depot Club grows (each month there are two new collections with minimum 48 new clipart or photos, two fonts, and numerous new projects; e.g. bookmarks, invitations, cards, posters, calendars), the previous collections are put into our shopping cart for individual download; you have the choice of getting just what you want. Check our Digital Art cart category for these fantastic clipart and image collections.
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