Episode: 4429 Title: HPR4429: Handcrafting and Bartering discussion w. Elsbeth Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4429/hpr4429.mp3 Transcribed: 2025-10-26 00:37:59 --- This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4,429 for Thursday the 24th of July 2025. Today's show is entitled Handcrafting and Bartering Discussion W. Ellsbeth, he is hosted by Ellsbeth and is about 43 minutes long. It carries an explicit flag. The summary is, Ellsbeth discusses how to make money as a crafter and how the barter and trade system might be better. Hi, this is Ellsbeth. I am going to talk to you a bit today about crocheting handcrafted items and my enjoyment of that as a hobby and dipping my toe into actually selling on sites online to maybe make a little money off of what I'm producing. I have obsessively watched TikTok videos of crafting and Facebook Reels and Instagram Reels just because I've been wanting to do something with my hands and my grandma taught me how to crochet like decades ago. I kind of don't want to admit how long ago but I was a baby when I started learning how to crochet and I would watch these videos and I'm like, why can't I do this? So I started getting more serious about crocheting as a hobby just to give my hands something to do because I found that it's really beneficial for me with having the ADHD part of ADHD when I'm on a call with someone or if I'm watching a show or something, I find that I process things better when I'm actually doing something with my hands. So I started just making granny squares. Granny squares are basically just a crocheted square in like varying different stitches. They ultimately wind up just being a square and often people will make quilts out of them so they'll make a bunch of squares and then connect them all together. So I started just making granny squares and then I got to thinking I've already made three sets total. One of them's in my hair. I will find something and this is something that I never thought that I could do. I don't know why. But I was sitting there going, why can't I? I can do little like no face videos of me crocheting and throw them on TikTok and I have a link to my Etsy page. That's how a lot of people get their business for handicrafts like this. This is a granny square. So it's basically it starts out with just a small little square where there's only four quarters and this one does have holes in it but you can make them so that they aren't fully. This is more for a market bag originally to like I've got groceries you know vegetables and stuff like that. But this particular one I just kept going until it was the size of the market bag that I wanted folded it into a diagonal and then folded up the quarters and stitched it together so it became a bag. A granny square is typically more like maybe 11 rows where you start with the center, but they call like a magic circle and then you stitch around you do three double crochets. That's kind of complicated to explain just while talking but you do three double crochets and then you do three single crochets and then do a double crochet into the corner. It makes a corner so it becomes a little square so it's actually pretty cool. In the old days and we're talking like way back in the day a granny square could make a pretty quick warm quilt. So you would stitch them together, not in crochet but I have quilted a quilt before with a sewing machine. So I'm kind of multi buried task and whatnot as far as candy crafts I can't get. I have been sewing since I was a little girl when I was in like fourth or fifth grade. I got kind of obsessed with home economics which was hot back then and I really enjoyed the sewing aspect of it of a creating a garment and whatnot. It kind of took a back seat as far as a craft was concerned for quite some time mostly because I was you know as a teenager I was traveling the world and then when I became an adult my kids is step grandma and her husband which was their grandpa owned a auto upholstery trim shop and she taught all of us how to sew from a professional standpoint how to make my own patterns and my daughter really took off on that but we can make our own patterns we can make the dress mannequins for individual. We also know how to do like the auto upholstery like stitching that on and stuff like that but that takes a little more than just sewing you have to have somebody that knows how to create the patterns from the actual automobile itself like whether it be you know redoing a steering wheel or the cushions on the seat so on and so forth and I wound up being more interested in the sewing than the actual piece in it together part. So she was pretty amazing at teaching us how to sew and why but it was hands on I would have never learned if I had gone to some sort of class because I'm a very hands on learner. So since then I've made my own clothes I've made clothes for other people I've made quilts and baby blankets and stuff like that once you know how to sew you can pretty much make anything a lot of the reasons that I did sew was because I wanted something that I couldn't get in a store and I could get the material at a price that wasn't much different than buying it at a store that being said. Sewing is expensive is not cheap and making clothes for yourself or other people unless you just shop around and buy the deals before you have the plan for the pattern and have the stock already in hand it's not really economical it is one of the reasons that clothing stores are clothing places like Walmart where they have clothes and target where they have clothes which is cheaper here in the US is usually the cheapest way to get clothes if you're not going to the thrift store they're mass turning out the same product so they can afford to charge less for the product at the risk of offending people the fact that most of it is manufactured in countries that are paid peanuts for the work that they do. The reality is is the fashion industry regardless of what spectrum of price it is on is a blight on society. There's other people that have stood up and said things about it there are some amazing designers that they thrive on the fact that they try to be ethically sourced does that always happen I don't know but yeah that's not my expertise I prefer to just enjoy the process of creating if you are in this for instant gratification you have to learn the process whether it be how to thread and maintain a sewing machine and manage when you have threads break or learning the different stitches and how to put them together and make it cohesive you have to be able to count I know that sounds kind of silly that you have to be able to count because you have to know how to measure things you have to know and I'm talking basic counting I'm not talking like you know abstract mathematics or anything like that. When it comes to crocheting most patterns you have to have an exact count so there's going to be an exact amount of stitches that goes around this circle headband or hair tie and you have to have the exact same stitch unless the stitch is a pattern stitch where you're switching up so that requires like the number one thing you would need is enough patience but once you learn the stitches and once you know how many stitches that you need something like this is super fast a ponytail holder like the elastic ponytail holder that I crocheted around and every single stitch is a in the US I think it's called a double crochet the US and the UK have different terminologies for their stitches but it's the same stitch so it's a double crochet or a triple crochet depending on where you're at and that's all it is like 99.9 percent of this hair tie being crocheted to make a cute little purple roughly type headband is double crochets as long as you know the stitches and you know how to count how much you need around this and I'm gonna be honest I haven't counted these because this particular type of stitching is super easy I've made three sets of these and three quarters of another one of the first of a set I probably spent about two and a half hours max a pair of these will sell for about five dollars plus shipping because they're handmade and they're good quality made too it depends on what the yarn and what the quality of the yarn is I'm going to be honest these ones here are relatively cheap cost but they'll last for a very long time but the big thing that most creators regardless of whether they're crocheting or whether they're making quilts or whatever you know anything on Etsy most creators will under price their stuff and then you'll have people that over well I don't even want to say they over price it they price for the amount of time it takes them to make it so when I say that this will sell for five dollars between the cost of my time so it's about ten minutes well this type was my first one and it took me about twenty minutes because I just had to get used to it but I turned the rest out in about ten minutes so this would be about ten minutes now that I'm used to it to make two so the total material for two of these is probably about a dollar and a half that's being on the generous side because it depends on what the material is and most people don't want different prices per material that being said if I had my more expensive yarn I would charge more but for these my profit margin is about four dollars for this so ten minutes that takes ten minutes I make a profit of four dollars there's six ten minutes in an hour so four times six that's twenty four dollars an hour that would be my profit for an hour but I would have to make six sets in an hour unfortunately in crocheting and in the handicraft world you can't charge per hour people don't appreciate that they want to lump some that's going to go into and like even even if it took me 50 hours to do a quilt if I charged three hundred dollars for that quilt like you know even just a twin or full size quilt a decent size quilt people don't want to spend the amount of money that it would cost for both the materials and the time and effort most people that do handicrafts are crafting at a loss or doing small things like this that actually create some sort of profit and anywhere you go any these sort of handicraft site will you'll find you you'll see that's what happens if there wouldn't be sites like Etsy or eBay or even the handicrafts on Amazon there wouldn't be sites like that if people weren't able to make a living off of it now anymore to be able to get the attention because of the market saturation that can happen you really have to have social media and be showing what your products are not so much with products but I have done social media stuff when I was doing health and fitness training and I was a yoga instructor I would do videos of myself doing workouts that were tangible for people that were struggling to manage their weight because of health and physical challenges so I would do videos and show people how they can do it without hurting themselves and how to build their balance and what not to be able to build up to being able to do more active things even just walking I think the people that can actually be engaging on their social media are the ones that will actually get more success now that's not to say that you can't create an Etsy store by yourself without having any social media and people see the quality of it and the value of it and are successful but those people usually film videos and have some sort of advertising in their stores that shows what the value of their product is I think I just think social media actually makes it easier it is actually probably the only thing that would compete with corporate items you know corporate stores like big box stores like Walmart and Target and any store like that where you can get cheaper products having social media shows people what it's like to you know back back in the day when I was grown up used to be able to like go buy a road stand and pick up some fruits and veg during seasons and people would you know would often have handy crafts and stuff there you just had to happen across them to be able to find them this is basically the digital equivalent of that I think that people are seeking to to transition more away from corporate purchases as a whole especially our young folk they're starting to look at the value of buying each other's skills and talents you know or purchasing from skills and talents rather than just going to a store and buying it you know conventions you know sci-fi fantasy conventions and stuff like that it's huge on the whole dealer's room is basically as far as I know every sci-fi fantasy convention that I've ever been to has had a dealer's room where people can sell their handy crafts and whatnot or sci-fi fantasy like when I was looking at the convention my daughter went to recently the dealers room there were people that had 3d printed items absolutely it could be anything it could be making buttons with you know geeky phrases and whatnot there's a whole variety I make things that you would find in a bookstore in real life for second life so it's basically the same concept as creating what I would like to see in a bookstore and what others might see in a bookstore and including books we do it the legal way so it's all public domain but that book create you know it had to have a mesh and it had to be something that people would actually want to look at and see I have science figurines like I don't know I have a hedgehog that has science facts about hedgehogs and I have elephants and whatnot and it gives people something tangible and by tangible I mean something physically that you can purchase in second life that you can interact with and learn something from and you can display it so that other people that come by can see what you have and it becomes almost like a collectible if you will kind of like Funko Pop I think that the trade and barter system is absolutely something that our society needs to go back to because people find value in creating something and even if they're like AI assisted or robot assisted creations people are going to want to have some sort of bartering and trade they're going to want to have some element of ownership to sharing their interests whether it be you know recently I was looking at the AI pets where you know I have this little robot dog that can interact with you and whatnot that that's the same concept as people want to have something that evokes some sort of happy emotion or happy memory I would be absolutely thrilled to trade and create a barter system if I were to make you know let's say somebody wanted to have a whole specialty made designed hair tie thing for their wedding okay I'm using that as an example because I could do a barter system with them let's say they happen to be somebody that was more talented than I am at sewing I could trade them an item that I wanted or needed for the product that I have created money has never been the primary focus of the barter and trade system the barter and trade system was about you have something that I can use or want and I have something that you can use or want and we don't need money to trade I think that that is very much the way it probably was in the past you know because I don't have any like specific thoughts off the top of my head that I examples that I can can refer to other the Bible because they do talk about trading and what not in the Bible and the in fact going to be perfectly honest that if you read the translation the right way there is no need for money money is all about someone else controlling your life that's a very dumb down simplified way of putting it so I'm not saying that we can like the there's an addiction to instant gratification in our society and that is highly revolved around money the more money you have the more you can get what you want with the handicraft system you're not getting money I have experienced healthy buttering systems and then the prejudicial and most people don't like that word but it's a matter of fact if when I was living in West Africa now understand that this is back in the late 89 through the early 90s so through 93 the butter system was mandatory there now if you wanted to go the market and pick up some rice you had to go in with the knowledge of what rice was actually worked if you didn't know you were going to get ripped off especially someone like me who didn't quite look like the people that were in the market so they would see this you know white teenage girl come in speaking you know pretty broken French early on trying to make a deal having been taught that you aren't supposed to accept the first price I'm going to say there's a catch 22 you can get screwed over with the barter and trade system but there's also an immensely beautiful social interaction that comes with it as well one of the things that I got out of it that could have been negative was that because I was taught not to take the first deal it created a dialogue between myself and the people that were at the market where they go oh she's been taught she knows that that's not the price that it's worth or that's too much or you know we're just trying to get one over on her and you know that that can happen you know but I think it's a matter of knowing your audience always you know do you can you understand how to communicate with the individual that you're wanting to trade with you know when I'm talking about the more modern version of doing it on Etsy and which is a monetary thing but even if there was a barter system on Etsy I would have to know what my item is worth and what the item that I'm trying to get is worth and it comes down to just communicating you know if I say for instance I've got this pair of head bands and I'm selling them for five dollars in a barter and trade system because I am making a profit off of this they could say well what about three dollars no no I can't get rid of them from three dollars that that's not going to be worth it to me okay how about three fifty well okay I can come down to four seventy five I'll give you twenty five cents off and they're like okay okay they're they're they're realizing that they have a little wiggle room that they're they're making a profit well I really really just want it for three seventy five like that's that's the highest I can go and I'm like well that that doesn't give me a whole lot to work with here you know I know what my item is worth and I know what time I put into it okay okay okay I'll come up to four dollars okay tell you what I'll give you a deal I'll give it to you for four fifty and it's sold and then they have the option to walk away or accept it now it's the same thing whether you're using money or whether you're using drop of cakes this is a nice box of the drop of cakes here I'll trade you drop of cakes are these ridiculously good tea cakes that have well different different different kind of jellies inside of them like kind of a the original I think has yeah the original has orange but I did recently just get get some raspberry ones which I'm really looking forward to but they're they're like a tea cake that you you it's a little snack to have with your tea or coffee and they're from the UK and I have a hard time getting here in the US so I'm very grateful for mine but you know if I want to trade a box of drop of cakes for you know a set of two hand crocheted hair ties what's the worth of the package of drop of cakes and what's the worth of the time and energy I put into this so theoretically I could say well maybe I could do a set for one small pack I could trade that but this might be worth more than this so maybe I would have to if I wanted this pack of two drop of cakes I might have to do two sets and they could say well do I want to or do I just want the one yeah it's all about what the value is and it could be I do a drop of cake and say you know type of coffee or something I you trying to come up with something off the top of my head but you know value can come in different quantities even in a barter system and trade system I'm sorry I keep out really hard on that so most people that do like donation wear that would be more akin to barter and trade you see the value of what I have so you're going to donate for using it but unfortunately the open source system is basically kind of like I'm putting all my work and effort in for no recompense so I'm not getting appreciated for my value now if you were getting something in return like say I am getting the equivalent to my rent paid for a the use of this you know software then it becomes a more reasonable value because of the time and effort put into the actual coding of it so I don't feel personally this is why I'm not well I can very much appreciate open source I don't know that it is actually the best use of ethical coding I understand why they want things open source I get it you put how many hours into developing some form of software how many months how many years to develop a quality product and somebody could donate you can put a donate button they might donate but usually people aren't so where is your value then you have to really really be passionate about a project to just give it away when it comes to open source if you are getting paid to develop code your code becomes proprietary towards the company that's paying you you have to significantly change it enough so that it does not represent that proprietary code for it to actually be open so I mean get have is a repository of code that you can go to and you know some of it can be private but a lot of it's public so you can just go in and check that code and see if that code actually works for the project then you can just copy and paste it into your code and make the modifications you need to create what you want I guess I'm having a hard time viewing it as something that is actually worth one's time and effort unless it's just unless you're just super high for fixated and are willing to give up your time and energy for it whereas with me it's about bandwidth I get something tangible out of crocheting these items because it helps my brain and instead of courting a bunch of items that I've made that I'm going to offer them up for sale to those that might actually want to use them I guess I can understand that if you have a hobby and your hobby is coding then you might want to have some of that code be something that you are willing to just share with those that might actually you know make their life easier and I can see how new new programmers might actually benefit from it but I would really have to be something that you are really passionate about to just give away I think I understand that someone might actually want to share what they created but I'm not certain that I completely understand why they would share something that they created for no recompense I could see how if I can see how if somebody was like just wanting to put themselves out there and actually that that actually makes perfect sense is that you would potentially put stuff out there in code to have it be seen to show what you can do like a portfolio like an artist portfolio but I think ultimately it's kind of like a free gift or a sample in a food market and it's a really really expensive free gift time wise so you have to really love what you're doing to be able to do it and I can assure you most programmers aren't passionate enough about they're more concerned about the paycheck I mean okay so if you were to look at like scripting like in second life you can do something similar in the sense that you write a script you don't charge a whole lot for it because it's something that a lot of people would be interested in and over time a lot of people or purchase you'll eventually more than make up for the time that you put into creating that script but it's not full on coding and I'm not certain that I could process that fully as from a software standpoint other than just freelancing and I think that's what freelancing is about is having the freedom to be able to write what you want I think bug bounding is an excellent way to get your code out there and get something some sort of recompense for it I think that's actually pretty pretty awesome to be honest I think that there's a little bit of you really have to know that you're on a place because you can't guarantee that the person is going to pay out even if they're offering it escrow when you put when you go to buy a house you put your deposit in escrow because there are potential things that would keep the house from going through so you will get your money back if you're not able to buy the house for a justifiable reason in this sense if there is an escrow for the bounty where the person will get paid out if they're able to find the bug then then I think that that's a great idea I think that it is an interesting way for somebody who likes code I think a bug bounty would be very fascinating as somebody who likes to find problems you know issues so somebody that likes the hunt I think it's a great idea underget her welcome to get coin we help thousands of people grow their open source ecosystems and distribute millions of funding now we want to help you and your community decide how to fund your shared needs I think a lot of it is you just have to first off there's the whole get coin bit coin correlation but if you go to get hub there is a get coin area in there developers have always been the heart of the get coin ecosystem ever since our beginning funding open source software we welcome contributions to our projects and would love to support your project so it's basically a way of kind of getting some dot you know getting some credit like monetary credit but you have to specifically be working on something that someone else wants so I mean I see that there is potentially a benefit to it but there's also the it's only there's only so many resources to go around because it's based on who donates to it hold on I want to do a quick search here okay so that takes you back to the bug bounty thing so maybe okay here we go is it possible to make a living through bug bounty programs the best bug hunters make more money on bounties than they could earn through full-time employment if you have an aptitude and tenacity develop your skills so that you can become one of the best so basically you have to find the bug and provide the solution I don't think that's a pretty decent salary for I mean low end 60,000 a year if that's your full-time thing is finding bugs and offering solutions I think it has a lot to do with the whole trying seeing the world kind of shift away from the almighty dollar when you see countries currency being devalued then it becomes in a digital world it becomes a little more intriguing to possibly consider a digital currency but ultimately it all boils down to the same thing it's it's literally just having a monetary value or something so it's either controlled by the people that run the Bitcoin or the Ethereum or Stellarium or you know whatever or it's the countries that are basing it off the gold standard which isn't even really valid anymore so I absolutely believe that without money as a world culture and society we would be far better off but then it would come down to the social credit system to some degree because people are going to control it to some some way shape or form you know until we can completely take humans out of the equation of monetary value or value of effort creativity whatever we're going to be stuck in that same rabbit hole back when Bitcoin was Bitcoin mining was becoming a thing I had I don't even know honestly don't even remember how much I had but I had enough that it would have been worth something today and at the time I'm like oh it never the Bitcoin never really developed into anything you know tangible for me to even bother being concerned about whether that hard drive with that information disappeared and by the time I realized that it was a tangible thing I'm like oh where's that hard drive because I used to keep all my hard drives and I was several moves away from that point in time when I decided that that hard drive just wasn't any value and it's in a landfill somewhere so someone somewhere if they're smart enough and know how to figure out where it is would find a hard drive somewhere that had some value to it I'm not certain how much today but I imagine it was something worthwhile so but I guess I just other than just getting my basic necessities and living life in a way that is comfortable without being excessive I just don't hold too much hard tack to money other than it getting me the life that I need and I'm not talking like you know the one percent or even the not even really middle class really you know just just comfortable I'd like to have some land had to used to be much better than what it is now I understand that there is a level of they have to have some sort of overhead and cost themselves but they have also become a little bit greedy Etsy has become too commercialized they've kind of lost focus how Etsy as a company has come to be to try and cover basically to cover their assets they have become less in favor of the creator and more in favor of the seller and I do understand that to some degree but the buyer can very easily say I didn't receive this product even though they have and even if you have the documentation that it just throws you into a whole loop of having to verify and produce documentation and if you're running even a side business like this little misman I don't think so I will be out there in a moment she's protesting the whole commercialization of Etsy ultimately I think that you have to have some business sense and just some ethical sense to be able to successfully market your skill set and that that takes time I am creating an Etsy shop to list my hair ties that I crochet but I had to be unique with the name on it because I also want to sell digital art as well so I had to come up with I came up with a name that actually is available so I'm calling it Elizabeth's ephemera I love the word ephemera and it doesn't tie me down to just crocheting they make you put an item in first so I have to do something I have to take a picture of the products and list it and also requires me actually having some sort of decent lighting and backdrop I have to get a light box for this type of stuff if I'm successful definitely have to use a little more detailed better quality pictures and whatnot for now I am content with just taking a relatively decent picture and posting it that I should probably take and put all three of them now I have to add the photos this is a process you got to take the pictures then you've got to send it to yourself I take the pictures on my phone and then I email it to myself so that I can put it on the computer because it's a whole lot easier that way okay so let's go let's call this lavender sparkle we have to put it in a description hand-priced hair tie in lavender sparkle yarn slash bowl durable and ready to where I'm going to put this is for five dollars oh see that's something that I didn't factor in they take 93 cents as he takes 93 cents out of the five dollars yeah that's one of the reasons why I have an issue with them and they used to be they used to take less fees but they've increased it oh wow I need to find out how much these way I have a food scale somewhere if I can find it how where did it go I am I'm very curious now how much mommy's you can chill out for a second I am very curious how much they lay though point for point four ounces so I can just do one ounce so that it's very actually that's really good because it's going to cost next to nothing and shipping maybe shipping cost interesting they're estimating the shipping might be about four point fourteen dollars okay I have my first listing yeah a pair for five dollars so you pick the category that's under this is going to be under arts and collectibles slash fiber art slash crochet and then you have to choose whether it's a physical or digital item and then who made it so it's either I did a member of my shop another company or person so I did it's a finished product not a supplier tool it is currently made in the last five years it's made from scratch you have to choose whether it's an assemble from purchase parts an item that my shop alters a curated set of purchase goods or natural materials this is a hand I use tan held or guided tools not computerized or AI the title is crochet hair tie crunchy in light purple at a picture and I'm also showing the way it looks but in a different color let's see description and crocheted hair tie slash scrunchy and in the light purple acrylic yarn it's slash wool ready to wear lasting tones onto the one primary color purple with I'm going to put those in crochet hair hair tie scrunchy this is the tags so people can search it and find this um drafted uh it's another word for a hair time off that's good enough materials real look yarn and about going to select a profile item weight is 0.5 ounces this is the length with the height returned an exchange policy I'm going to do a manual renewal and I'm not going to do a automatic renewal because I'm not big enough yet and that's it it's listed you just go on to the next and keep listing the new ones I have three finished products by the way okay to set up the shop you have to do a whole biometric screening and prove your ID and and all that stuff to verify that you are actually who do you say you are so that you're not just using someone else's bank account or something like that to pay for the startup cost which is it's a nominal $29 fee you have a way of getting that money back after six months and they do give you some advertising credits as well for it so I mean it's more than that they have some benefits to you spending that money up front it's basically for the maintenance and getting everything set up on your platform and it is optional but it it gives you it charges you $10 a month if you don't choose that option so I'm saving money in the long run thank you for listening to this podcast I hope you got some enjoyment out of it and look forward to making them in one soon you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording podcast and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it leads posting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com the internet archive and our syncs.net on the Sadois today's show is released on their creative commons attribution 4.0 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