Why Art Yard Sales Are Better Than Social Media

This article is for artists wondering if there is another way to make some income atypical from the many hours we spend marketing on social media. I spend a lot of time researching how to make a living as an artist. The advice I get quite often is to post on Instagram or another social media platform consistently and frequently. As most of you know this takes hours of time each week. This activity never feels right to me. I have the past experience of making a full-time living as an illustrator in the 90s and 00’s by simply advertising in one illustration book, and sending out a postcard once a quarter. That was all the marketing I had to do. The time it took was a fraction of the time that artists, especially young and new artists, spend on social media today.

My discontent with social media has a lot to do with me being over 50. I have several friends who are not on social media at all. I clearly remember being happier without it. But, at the same time, because of the huge amount of presence on social media, if I want to reach people, I still feel it is essential to be on it. So, I take the middle path of being intentional, and not feel like there is anyone judging me on how much I should be using Instagram. I realize that the main purpose of social media is to connect with others, but any business hours worked need to lead to financial return. And, the return I have found on social media, so far, is minimal. Therefore, I suggest trying something different in a physical space, such as having an art yard sale.

“Happy Valley”, colored pencil & pastel, 2021 SOLD

Sometimes, the strategy you least expect to work, turns out to have the best results. Quite often I find the most successful results for me is often not what everyone is telling me to do. I never hear people online suggest—have an art yard sale! But, that is what has produced the most financial return in one day for me. When you make the discovery of what works, repeat it.

The Required Components For An Art Yard Sale To Work

I’m not suggesting everyone go out and start having weekly yard sales. My success with this has a couple of key components. You would need to have a majority of these to have an art yard sale work for you.

  • LOCATION: I’m grateful for the North Seattle neighborhood I live in. It both has lots of foot traffic, and is safe. I know this intellectually and have experienced it. I was saddened on my most recent trip out of the region (to Eau Claire, Wisconsin), where almost no one walked through the neighborhoods. One needs to see the people in their community. As an artist, you need to be seen by your community. I can’t tell you how many benefits one gets from living in a neighborhood with less cars and more walkers and bicycles! You must be in a pedestrian friendly location for your sale to work.
  • LOCATION: Many people in my neighborhood are aesthetic, curious, and supportive. People saw our ads we placed on the Facebook neighborhood page and on Craigslist. And they came. I know a lot of people in my neighborhood personally, and they want to support me. If you live in a neighborhood where don’t have this kind of interest and support, an art yard sale will not work.
  • LOCATION: Maybe you get my reference to the old expression, “location! location! location!” by now. But, the third reason: be in a city where people can afford art. I price my work to sell, but you need to be in a place where people have expendable income for this to work.
  • THE REAL SOCIAL: COVID has been hard on all of us. Being a social person, the hardest thing for me has been not seeing people in person. Now that people are coming out again to socialize, my yard sales have had the feeling of a party! I invited my friends as well as people from the general public. If you are a shy person who chooses not to have a lot of friends, or reach out to the public in person, having an art yard sale would not work for you.
  • INVENTORY: If you are a digital artist with no prints of your work, this advice is not for you. But, if you have original paintings or prints of your digital art, your yard can be your portfolio. Spread the art out on tables and blankets and it becomes a visually stunning display of your work. I’ve been a working illustrator and artist since 1994, so I have a huge inventory. Some years I created as many as 100 physical paintings a year.
“Dungeness Meadows”, colored pencil, 2021 SOLD

The Benefits of an Art Yard Sale

There are many benefits to having an art yard sale. Some obvious, some discoveries I had not thought of.

  • FREE: The event is free to you and the public. People get to attend a free art event, and you don’t have to spend a penny on tents, market entry costs, or sales commissions.
  • INCOME: some of my income as an artist can be slow and laborious. But, due to the amount of inventory I have (30 years of making art), I can sell a lot of paintings in one day. My income for one day selling art is over half a month’s salary!
  • MARKET TESTING: I think even better than social media, at an art yard sale, you get real feedback on what art people like. If you choose to be strategic, what work should you be making more of? For example, I leaned that people still love landscapes. All of my new landscape drawings have sold. I need to make more!
  • MEETING A PATRON: One person in particular taught me something important at my last art yard sale. There is a market that I have ignored, that many people in it may be interested in contacting me directly, as she did. There are house staging designers who need art to stage the sale of their client’s home. It was not that I didn’t know this existed, but having someone buy several pieces of my art and explaining to me what they were doing, told me: this is something I need to pay attention to!
“Rosario Beach”, colored pencil & pastel, 2021 SOLD

The last art yard sale I had, was a seminal moment for me. It confirmed in me that art has value. Art as a creative skill has value, and sometimes we don’t feel that, because of the present obsession with other things like politics, COVID, and technology. Yet art does, and has for centuries, connect people and make them feel something that their day-to-day tasks cannot. At the time of my last sale, I was preparing to move out of Washington state. The success of this art sale confirmed in me (along with many other messages I’ve received), that the Pacific Northwest is my home. The people here support me and understand me.

As an artist, you need to find your physical community. As a person who expresses themselves through art, and cares about my relationship with people, this is essential for my happiness. I hope that wherever you are, your community supports you and your art.