Selling Your Work and Your Creative Business
A creative business allows artists, makers, and crafters to turn passion into possibility, sharing work with the world while creating meaningful income.
Building a creative business is not about waiting for buyers to appear; it is about opening doors so people can find, connect with, and purchase your creations.
Multiple income streams bring freedom and security, helping your creative business flourish in changing times.
In this story, Part 1 of our Creative Business series, we explore the why and what, with Part 2, 12 Strategies to Grow Your Creative Business Successfully, (you’ll need to be logged in for this) revealing the practical how.
Read on to discover how you can grow your creative business today.

Why Have a Creative Business?
If, as an artist, you want people to see your work, you need to create opportunities for them to find it. Simply making art and waiting for buyers to appear is rarely enough. Visibility is essential, and without putting your work into the world, it will remain unseen no matter how strong your talent may be.
Having your art discovered means showing up in places where people already look for creativity – whether that is markets, fairs, galleries, or online platforms. Every time you make your work accessible, you are not only sharing your creativity but also giving people the chance to purchase it.
Earning an income from art is more than a dream; it is the practical outcome of treating your creativity as a livelihood. This is what defines a creative business. It does not lessen the value of your art; instead, it ensures sustainability so you can keep making.
Many artists fear the idea of running a business, imagining it as overly complex or rigid. In reality, learning the skills to support a creative business is much easier than expected, and often more rewarding than first believed.
Income Streams for a Creative Business
A creative business flourishes best when it is supported by multiple income streams.
Relying on a single source of income can leave a creative business vulnerable to change, whether that is seasonal demand, shifting markets, or unexpected circumstances.
By diversifying, artists and makers build resilience, stability, and room for growth.
An income stream simply refers to one way that money flows into a creative business.
For example, selling original artworks directly to collectors is one income stream. Running workshops is another, and selling prints or digital designs online adds yet another.
Each one contributes a piece of the bigger picture, giving your creative business a stronger foundation.
The importance of multiple income streams lies in balance.
When one slows, another may rise, ensuring your creative business continues to thrive.
This flexibility reduces financial stress, helping you focus more on making art while still earning an income.
Income streams can be practical, digital, or experiential. They include markets, trade shows, online platforms, teaching, or licensing designs.
Together, they expand your reach and opportunities.
A creative business is not about doing everything at once; it is about carefully selecting income streams that align with your skills, values, and goals.
Shaping a Sustainable Livelihood with a Creative Business
Building a creative business is about more than making art; it is about shaping a sustainable livelihood from your creativity and skills.
For many artists and makers, a creative business offers freedom, flexibility, and the chance to build a career doing what they love.
It can grow from working on it on the weekends to dedicating a week day work to it and changing from full time external employment to part time. And it gives you the choice to figure out which combination works best for you.
Multiple Income Streams and Financial Security
The first step in growing a creative business is understanding why multiple income streams matter for long-term sustainability and financial security.
It is much easier to choose where to focus your efforts when you’ve figured out where to start with what.
Having a plan, even a basic one, makes all the difference with giving yourself a road map where you can learn the skills needed, learn from experiences and others and explore your ideas.

Scottsdale Art Gallery Cafe Exhibition Showcases Vibrant Autumn
Discover Autumn Works: a vibrant exhibition at Scottsdale Art Gallery Cafe, featuring 13 artists showcasing the beauty of autumn in oranges, greens, and browns in their Exhibition News with Art Trails Tasmania

Discover Botanical and Nature Journaling with Tanya Scharaschkin
Explore through art and science botanical and nature journaling with botanist Dr. Tanya Scharaschkin in a unique three-day art retreat experience!

Unveiling “Imagine”: The Launceston Art Society’s Premier Exhibition
Join us at Launceston Art Society’s debut 2024 exhibition, ‘Imagine,’ as members explore boundless creativity and diverse perspectives.

7 Ways to Use Exhibitions to Grow Your Artist Profile
Entering art and craft exhibition can be a very effective way to grow your artist profile. Here are 7 tips on how to do this easily by Art Trails Tasmania

How to Use Facebook to Grow Your Artist Profile
Use these Facebook tips to tweak your Artist Profile page to grow your following and connect with your audience by Art Trails Tasmania and flourish
Easy Starting Points
Markets, fairs, and festivals provide excellent opportunities for selling your work and earning some money, as well as testing new ideas, meeting customers face-to-face, and raising awareness for your creative business.
Selling online through platforms like Etsy, Bluethumb, Redbubble, and Spoonflower gives your creative business access to national and global audiences without heavy upfront costs. They do each require consistent effort for them to flourish.
Each online platform offers different benefits; choosing carefully ensures your creative business maintains control over pricing, presentation, and overall customer experience.
Our series of stories on these various platforms are all about helping you understand what’s involved and finding your own clarity about what you want, what fits best for you.
Patreon provides recurring income, giving your creative business stability and stronger connections with supporters who value early access or exclusive creative rewards.
The Hub of Your Creative Business
Using a website built on platform like WordPress or Shopify gives your creative business a professional home online, where customers can browse, purchase, and learn about you.
A website is your hub for your digital eco-system, where all of your marketing points back to.
So your social media posts all link back to your website to specific pages where you want your audience to go (obviously not all to your home page, but to your content specific pages like your Newsletter sign up page, your promotional blog story, your product pages etc).
A blog can extend your creative business by sharing stories, new releases stories, behind-the-scenes processes, and useful tutorials, while strengthening your online search visibility.
Blog stories give you the opportunity for Google to find your content more easily.
Your newsletter also points back to your website, to the blog stories, products, projects, events, markets news. Newsletters are vitally important for a creative business and can be setup to be simple to work up each edition.
All of your online platforms like Bluethumb etc all need to point back to your website to, ideally having your supporters sign up to your newsletter too.
Running Events as a Creative Business
Running workshops and classes allows a creative business to share skills, build community engagement, and generate income from teaching rather than just making.
Art retreats expand this idea further, letting a creative business create immersive experiences where participants combine travel, relaxation, and creativity in unique settings.
Online Courses and Workshops for Creative Business Income
Selling online courses and workshops enables your creative business to reach learners worldwide, while also creating scalable digital income beyond local opportunities.
These diverse income streams protect your creative business from seasonal fluctuations, pandemics and lockdowns, while also giving you freedom to experiment with different models.
You could also consider licensing designs to local businesses, collaborating with tourism operators, or creating artist-in-residence programmes to expand their creative business.
The key to licensing agreements is clarity so all involved thoroughly understand and respect the creative and financial terms of the agreement.
Collaborations and Your Creative Business
Collaborations with charities, local producers, such as distilleries or furniture makers, can help a creative business access fresh audiences and build shared projects. Again, make sure you have the details clearly nailed down and understood.
Limited Editions, and Seasonal Collections and Commissions
Offering limited-edition prints or seasonal collections adds exclusivity to your creative business, encouraging collectors to engage regularly with your new work.
This can be done for both online audiences such as having a Christmas range of Redbubble or Bluethumb as well as in person such as at the Tasmanian Craft Fair.
Commission work remains a valuable stream, where your creative business adapts to bespoke client needs while retaining your own artistic identity.
Commissions such as pet portraits can be a great entry point for example.
Storytelling plays a crucial role in building trust; sharing why you create helps audiences understand the values behind your creative business.

Capturing Tasmania’s Beauty with Steve Barnes
Meet the passionate photographer Steve Barnes and see the world of beauty through the camera’s viewfinder in his Art Trails Tasmania Artist Profile.

How to Set Up Your Website for Workshops and Events Success
How to setup your arts & crafts website so you can get more bookings for your workshops, events, courses & classes in this Members Only Art Trails Tasmania story.
Wholesale Income for a Creative Business
Wholesale opportunities allow your creative business to reach new stockists, giving you steady orders and building relationships with shops aligned to your values.
Trade shows help a creative business connect with stockists, industry professionals, galleries, and tourism outlets, opening new avenues for collaborations and wholesale accounts.
Trade shows can be very expensive to do, easily costing over $10,000 when you factor in trade show rent, setup and promotions, and then add on travel and accommodation costs. They are a big step and require a fair bit of research and preparation.
Wholesaling requires careful consideration of pricing so you each have a sustainable business.
Enabling Creative Business Resilience
By weaving multiple income sources together, a creative business becomes resilient, flexible, and capable of adapting to changing markets and customer interests.
In 12 Strategies to Grow Your Creative Business Successfully – Part 2, we delved into what is involved in growing your creative business on purpose and with clarity.
Read the Latest How To Blog Stories
No Results Found
The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.
Read the Latest Blog Stories and Flourish…
Unveiling the Canvas: A Guide for Artists to Discover Their Unique Creative Voice
How to Explore Your Unique Creative Voice Embarking on a journey to find one's unique creative voice is an exhilarating adventure for any artist. But it can also be starkly daunting, especially when we are layering too much expectation and harsh judgement on...
Arts and Crafts Kids Events Call Out
Call Out for Arts and Crafts Kids Events It's time to share your arts and crafts kids events news that you have happening across Tasmania on our Facebook and Instagram pages. With the school term recommencing so too does the after school arts and crafts classes for...
Found Collected Dyed Stitched Workshop with Textile Artist Aukje Boonstra
Come Found, Collected, Dyed, Stitched Workshop Retreat with Textile Artist Aukje Boonstra You will explore our farm and surrounding bush to find interesting objects. Then you will use your collected objects and natural vegetation to create embellished eco-dyed...
Flourish with 10 Inspiring Creative Goals for Artists and Makers in the Year Ahead
Dive into Our Creative Goal Collection and Flourish Having creative goals is crucial for artists and makers as they provide direction, motivation, and a roadmap for artistic growth. Goals challenge individuals to push boundaries, explore new mediums, and refine...
Unlock Colour DNA Art Retreat with Richard Klekociuk
Come to the Unlock Colour DNA Art Retreat with Richard Klekociuk This coloured pencil workshop explores the therapeutic value of colour through analysing the colour structure of both the surrounding forest and waterway in a superb rainforest setting in North East...
Arts and Crafts Trails Call Out
Call Out for Arts and Crafts Trails It's time to share your arts and crafts trails news that you have happening across Tasmania on our Facebook and Instagram pages. Being part of an art trail or a craft trail can be loads of fun. For the visitors it is often about...
A Guide to Planning Your Nature Journal Sketching Holiday in Tasmania
Finding Joy in Nature Journal Sketching Planning a nature journal sketching holiday in Tasmania can be an exciting and enriching experience. And your sketchbook will be a lasting treasure and reminder of your Tasmanian sketching adventures. A Land of Inspiring Beauty...
The Joy of Life Through the Lens of Art with Christie Lange
Meet Binalong Bay Ceramist Artist Christie Lange My art making process starts with the joy of learning; about myself, others – human and non-human – and the world we all live in. I’m drawn to the lives of small organisms like fungi, lichens, mosses, slugs, plants,...
Exhibitions Call Out
Call Out for Arts and Crafts Exhibitions It's time to share your arts and crafts exhibitions news that you have happening across Tasmania on our Facebook and Instagram pages. It is a busy time of year for exhibitions to be happening all over the state. Getting the...
Read What Our Members Say About Belonging
Join the growing, supportive artists community today and have your Artist story told here.
Belinda is doing a great job creating a professional looking artist hub online. Check out the profile I posted recently to see how well she does them. To all my artist friends let’s help make this THE go to place to discover local artists.
You won’t regret joining Art Trails Tasmania . It’s a welcoming community for creatives at any career stage.Becoming an Art Trails Tasmania member wasn’t a hard decision for me to make as it’s such a wealth of knowledge and support.Being member provides a quality way to showcase your creative endeavours and it’s quickly growing in reach.
We operate a home based picture framing business and recently joined Art Trails Tasmania as a means to giving us exposure to the wider artist community. We have almost immediately seen increase in activity thru our online sites, which I am certain will lead to more opportunities to grow our business.