Response to  correspondence generated by Devon Thein in which she refers to 
 supporting young lace artists and CV's (Curriculum Vitae - or,  Resumes).  
We need to make it easier for artists to find  us!
 
In the past 20 years,  I have shared with Arachne members much about public 
relations,  publicity, and marketing in connection with lace.  There is 
little evidence  that what I've shared about promoting something like  lace has 
ever been tried.  We need people who will pick up  this challenge and run 
with it.  I learned how to do this type of work in  the 1960s.  Now, 
Universities offer Marketing courses of study.   Perhaps some of you have taken 
these courses and could apply what  you learned - to lace.  
 
Internet technology is  moving forward to new capabilities very rapidly.  
Your Arachne correspondence indicates (to me) that  our major lace guilds and 
museums need to hop on board Meetup.com, Facebook,  Instagram, etc.  
 
Guild and Museum Boards  of Directors could create an appointed position 
that will be held by  someone with technological experience and a strong 
affinity for promoting lace -  by writing press releases, etc.  By learning how 
to do this,  one could add a new skill to a personal resume.
 
In reading your  correspondence of the past 2 days about supporting young  
lacemakers, my reaction was that the Guilds and Museums could write up  a 
basic illustrated public relations story for participants attending  Seminars, 
Conventions and Congresses, write a "Dear participant" letter  explaining 
the press release, and put it in the registrants' packets  of information 
(sometimes called goody bags).  
 
All a lacemaker would  have to do upon arrival back at home would be to 
attach a personal/local  lace-related photo, or several, and mail it to a local 
newspaper or TV  station (or both, though a different story to each would 
be preferable).   Shy or concerned about privacy?  Use a nickname, as I do -- 
for  all lace and embroidery correspondence and memberships.  In some parts 
of  the world, you do need to establish a safe way for readers to contact  
you.  Meet new people in a public place, like a public  library.
 
My free local weekly newspaper puts information and  photos on its pages 
about the progress of college students, news about  business professionals, 
announcements of new businesses, and so  forth.  All these originate as press 
releases.  Would YOU participate  in an effort to reach potential 
lacemakers, if our official Guilds and  Museums wrote the publicity 
information?  
Though they may not re-act, local  TV stations do sometimes offer local "news" 
of this kind.  They need  art-related and human interest items that will 
balance hard  news. 
 
Far in advance, we have  descriptions of lace gatherings, which could serve 
as local press releases.  Add something about the local lace group - and 
pop it in the  mail or e-mail. 
 
You won't get positive  results all the time, but if you don't try - you'll 
get absolutely no  results.  
 
A press release is most  likely to be accurate, which is not always the 
case when a reporter tries  to write photo captions and understand the wide 
variety of skills we are trying  to keep alive.
 
Is everything about the who, what, when, where and how  included?  Always 
ask someone you trust to proofread your press  release.  Sometimes we become 
so close to what we have written that we  do not see errors, omissions, or 
typos.
 
Jeri Ames in Maine  USA
Lace and Embroidery Resource  Center   

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