Artisan


Sweetheart (Busy Bean, #1)
Farmer (Light Online, #1)
The Songwriting Secrets Of The Beatles
Thinking Physics: Understandable Practical Reality
Homestead Crafter: A Litrpg Crafting Slice of Life
Ink & Intent (The Glyphwright Chronicles - Book 1)
Foolproof Freeform Embroidery: Exploring Your Creativity with Fabric, Threads & Stitches
Dare to Love (Return to Starlight Bay)
Interwoven: Exploring Materials and Structures
Norwegian Pick-Up Bandweaving
A Winter Reverie (A Sanctuary For All Seasons, #1)
Summer With A Chocolatier
Champagne Cheers (Holiday Hotties)
Moonlight Omega
Eli (Kings of the Mountain Book 6)
Geoff Hamilton's Cottage Gardens by Geoff HamiltonCottage Garden Flowers by Sue PhillipsEnglish Cottage Gardening by Margaret HenselAquaponics for Beginners by Nick   BrookeGrowing Oregano by albert swope
Cottage Garden
22 books — 6 voters
Flour Water Salt Yeast by Ken ForkishTartine Bread by Chad RobertsonThe Bread Baker's Apprentice by Peter ReinhartTartine Book No. 3 by Chad RobertsonItalian Baker, Revised by Carol Field
BREAD--Stars That Rise & Shine
144 books — 27 voters

The Ultimate Guide to Selling on Etsy by Noelle IhliSupercharge Your Website Traffic by Carolyn ChoateTop Sellers Dropshipping Suppliers Revealed!! by Felicia W. JohnsonProduct Photography Tips for Ebay and Ecommerce by George SekondaThrift Wars [Updated 2022] by Eric Michael
Help for Etsy Sellers
14 books — 12 voters

Robert Kurz
Technologiquement parlant , il s'agit pourtant du fruit de leur travail concret, mais dans le processus de production l'activité concrète ne vaut pour les producteurs que comme combustion indifférente et abstraite de leur énergie. En conséquence, aussi bien la "matière" à travailler que sa transformation concrète leur restent par essence indifférentes et étrangères, et ils ne peuvent s'identifier avec les objects qu'ils fabriquent, comme pouvait encore le faire l'artisan prémoderne. ...more
Robert Kurz, The Substance of Capital

Tara Mohr
Feedback doesn’t tell you about yourself. It tells you about the person giving the feedback. In other words, if someone says your work is gorgeous, that just tells you about *their* taste. If you put out a new product and it doesn’t sell at all, that tells you something about what your audience does and doesn’t want. When we look at praise and criticism as information about the people giving it, we tend to get really curious about the feedback, rather than dejected or defensive.
Tara Mohr, Playing Big: Practical Wisdom for Women Who Want to Speak Up, Create, and Lead

More quotes...