Friday, April 8, 2011

Under $5 Little Ingenuities That Made Millions

Under-$5 products worth millions

These 7 inexpensive items are so simple, you probably wonder why you didn't think of them yourself. If you had, you would have made some real money. 


Post-it products © Mark Elias/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Post-it Notes
The United States is a nation of innovators. Some of their inventions are grand and revolutionary, like the Internet, while others are small and idiosyncratic. A seemingly small-bore change sometimes has a dramatic effect on the way people organize their lives or get things done.

Consider Post-it Notes. The sticky yellow pads are an example of an inexpensive product that has generated at least $1 million in sales. Post-it Notes got their start with a failed adhesive at 3M (MMM), one of America's most inventive companies. The glue wasn't sticky enough for ordinary uses, but 3M's Arthur Fry began using it to attach removable notes to his reports. Colleagues soon started requesting the sticky notes for themselves.

From its humble beginning, the concept behind the Post-it has been applied to about 4,000 products. Not bad for a failed adhesive.

Girls drinking with Krazy Straws © Jose Luis Pelaez/Getty Images
Krazy Straws
Parents know that kids can be finicky eaters and drinkers. Back in 1936, inventor Arthur P. Gildersleeve of Denver came up with a new twist on this age-old problem. He tried bending straws to attract children's interest and make it more likely they would overlook their aversion to milk and juice. Gildersleeve's simple invention can be found in stores all over the world, marketed under names like Krazy Straws and sold in a variety of colors and shapes.




N'Dea Jackson (left) and Ki Anna Dorsey show off their Silly Bandz © Mark Gail/The Washington Post via Getty Images
Silly Bandz
If you have kids, you're probably familiar with Silly Bandz, those silicon rubber bands that were created nearly a decade ago by Japanese designers who wanted to introduce a more environmentally friendly rubber band as an office product.

The bands can be bent into a multitude of shapes, including animals, rock stars, letters and numbers. Despite a host of imitators, Silly Bandz sells 1 million packs a week.


Pet Rock creator Gary Dahl © Bettmann/CORBIS
Pet Rocks
It started as a joke in 1975. Hearing friends complain about their pets, advertising executive Gary Dahl opined that a rock was the ideal companion because it gave its owner no trouble. Dahl put together "The Pet Rock Training Manual" on the proper care and handling of rocks, and packaged each with a rock that came in a cardboard kennel and cost $3.95.

Within six months, Dahl was selling 10,000 Pet Rocks a day. It is estimated that he made more than $15 million during the first half-year of "production."


A patriotic-themed antenna ball © Bo Zaunders/CORBIS
Antenna balls
Jason Wall became a millionaire selling antenna balls, little round toppings for car antennas adorned with smiley faces, red cherries, ladybugs and other feel-good designs.

Wall was inspired by the "Jack" character in commercials for the burger chain Jack in the Box (JACK). He began selling his invention at auto supply stores near his California home and later contracted with Wal-Mart (WMT) to sell his antenna balls.


Koosh balls and inventor Scott Stillinger © Acey Harper/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
Koosh balls
Another simple ball that made millions for its inventor is the Koosh ball, created by Scott Stillinger in 1987.

Stillinger wanted a ball that was easier for his children to toss and catch. He tied rubber bands together to create the soft ball, named after the sound it made when it hit the ground. Stillinger started a company, OddzOn Products, to make Koosh balls and related products. He later sold the company, but the balls are still on the market.



So what do you think?

I know I am always trying to think of new things to help/improve or just tantilize people.

Slinky toy © George Diebold
Slinkys
This simple invention by Richard James was introduced at Gimbels department store in Philadelphia in 1945 and was a raging success from Day One; all 400 of the store's Slinky toys were purchased within 90 minutes. Since then, more than 300 million Slinky toys have since been sold, making it a classic and inexpensive staple in kids' toy boxes. 

Friday, March 25, 2011

Something to Make You Smile! GARB FEST

I was given this article by Satu (eBay Id: Betty*Blackbent) and let me say it definitely brought a smile to my face.  It so reminds me of one of my dearest friends, Lila Jeannette Houts, who is a fashionista and jewelry buff in her own right.  She has very electic tastes and is often a smart, flashy dresser.  So I am dedicating today's blog story to Jeanette to commemorate her upcoming 66th birthday (June 1st).

Garb Fest

Garb Fest
Photograph by Danielle Levitt; Photographed at the Carlyle, a Rosewood hotel CLOTHES ENCOUNTER From left: Suzanne Golden, Patricia Fox, Lynn Yaeger, Iris Apfel and Tziporah Salamon.

‘Oh, those are fantastic! I want to see them! They’re adorable! Let me fix your socks,” Patricia Fox cries out when she spies Suzanne Golden’s shoes, a pair of black and white Comme des Garçons winkle pickers festooned with rhinestone buckles that serve as a counterpoint to the rest of Golden’s black-and-white Junya Watanabe ensemble. Fox, who is wearing a veiled chapeau with a blossom brim, a 1950s sequined floral jacket, a chiffon dress with a hobble skirt and a pair of beaded gloves, is meeting Golden for the first time at a tea party I have organized at the Carlyle Hotel, an event I refer to (but not out loud) as a “nutty-dressers” luncheon. In addition to Golden and Fox, there are two other invited guests: Tziporah Salamon (1930s cheongsam, bamboo pinwheel hat, 200-year-old Chinese handbag) and Iris Apfel (a tunic made by one of China’s ethnic minorities, a clanging necklace from a Tunisian souk, signature humongous spectacles). I’ve been seeing these grande dames around town for years, and now, finally, I’ve got them all in one spot — at one table — so I can ask them how it came to be that the four of them glitter like spectacular if wacky jewels in an otherwise mostly mundane pedestrian landscape.

So how did it all begin for you? I ask the ladies, who are busy fussing with the tea and looking one another up and down. (It should be noted that I am dressed very simply for the occasion, in a Gaultier dress printed with fish scales over a Bottega Veneta skirt so wide it might have daunted Marie Antoinette.) Fox gives her shoulder-grazing LaCroix earrings a toss (because her outfit needed one more thing?) and says seriously, “I am consistent. My outward appearance goes with my inward feelings. My spirit is timeless; my age doesn’t matter. It’s a reflection of my mood.”

Yes, but sometimes mood and feeling just aren’t enough. I confess that there have been rare occasions — a business meeting, say, or a funeral — when I’ve looked at my wardrobe and thought, Why, this is a clown’s closet! Did the others ever face a similar dilemma?

“A funeral? A business meeting?” exclaims a horrified Apfel, whose fame as an eccentric dresser is such that in 2005 the Met’s Costume Institute dedicated an entire exhibit to her wardrobe. “Who would want to dress for that? Those are life’s dreadful experiences!”

Golden says she was actually a boring dresser in her younger years. “I was looking for a very long time for something that made me feel comfortable, and Comme des Garçons pretty much does it for me. You put something on, and — oh, my God, it speaks to me!” she confesses, shaking the incredible 3-D beaded bracelets she creates. (“I’d buy one right now if they weren’t so expensive,” Apfel says, brandishing her own 17 bangles — eight on one arm, nine on the other.)

Salamon thinks it all started with her parents — a dressmaker and a tailor — who made her elaborate Purim outfits when she was growing up in Israel. “I had to be different! I loved clothing from Day 1!” But Tzip, I say, I dressed up for Halloween, but that hardly accounts for my outfits the other 364 days of the year.

Salamon counters that this penchant may be inherited: her Hungarian mother and her aunts all dressed like Parisians. Fox chimes in that her mother used to line the insides of her suit jackets with chinchilla. (Am I the only one whose mom’s idea of fancy dress was Loehmann’s?)

Whatever the reason, these get-ups certainly get a reaction. Salamon insists that when people see her riding her bike around town with a scarlet fez perched on her head, they give her a thumbs up. Apfel adds, “I have a fan club of little kids!” (Though since she refers to herself as a geriatric starlet, I am not so sure how little these little kids are.)

But it can be quite a responsibility, pleasing all these fans. Golden uses her kitchen as an armoire; an ingenious Elfa shelving system displays 200 pairs of shoes (did Comme really make that many?), with a hole to accommodate a wide-screen TV. Fox describes her entryway as providing a home for “all my little jackets — it’s like a museum,” though a guest once hurt her feelings by saying a visit to her dining room was “like eating in your closet.” Apfel insists that this coming Monday an intern is going to help her organize her inventory. (She once searched for three years to find pants to match a pink striped Ungaro fur coat, only to realize she had the matching trousers in her attic all along.)

Listening to all this, Salamon sighs, the broad brim of her 70-year-old bamboo hat dipping ever so slightly. “Sometimes I feel it’s a burden,” she admits, with a tinge of shame. “It’s such a responsibility to maintain it! Sometimes I just want to throw it all away.”

Friday, March 18, 2011

Happy Weekend Everyone - Big Sale!

I want you all to know that I am having a big CRAZY 8 eBay Anniversary Sale today and tomorrow.  I have also decided to throw in an unusual percentage sale to celebrate my birthday as well.

The Crazy 8 celebrates my 8 years selling on eBay so there is 28%, 38%, 48% and 58% Off ALL Fixed Priced Items.

The Birthday Sale is incorporated to include a few winter or higher end items and it is 69% Off to celebrate my birth year - 1969!

I have Seven For All Mankind, Prada, Coach, Neiman Marcus and Sak's brands, Banana Republic, Lilly Pulitzer, Missoni, ETRO, Valentino, Eileen Fisher, Children's Disney and Ed Hardy items, Da Nang, Dolce & Gabanna, J. Jill, Ralph Lauren (including some Big Pony shirts), BCBGirls, Just Cavalli, Custo Barcelona, Citizen of Humanity jeans, Tamara Catz, Diane von Furstenberg, Tommy Bahama, Marc Jacobs, Juicy Couture, Nanette Lepore, Miu Miu, Exclusively Misook, Vivienne Tam, a few handbags, some shoes, Gossip Girl's own Lorick skinny belts, Rock & Republic jeans, Laundry, Carmen Marc Valvo, St. John, etc.

I have petites, juniors, women's and misses sizings... sizes from XS to 16.  Leather and suede, winter items to spring and summer items listed.

So don't miss this great sale and what a wonderful opportunity to get some great items and drastically reduced prices.  As always I do combine shipping to save you money!!

http://stores.ebay.com/Tels-Closet_W...?refid=stor e

Monday, March 7, 2011

Sorry Everyone for being MIA (Don't Miss The GIVE AWAY link in post)

I haven't posted in awhile - I was busy with work (end of year reports) and then I got really sick and was hospitalized.

I'm getting better and hope to get this thing back rolling.

But I wanted to post a Give-Away for you to enter - it's from a friend of mine who makes beautiful jewelry!!

You can enter here:  Waterwaif Jewelry  for a gorgeous pink crystal necklace (see photo below of the necklace to be given away).

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Let's Talk About What IS Unfashionable - Taxes!

You work, you trudge and you drag yourself to job... or if you're like a lot of my friends who work from home, you roll out of bed and head to your corner home office (still in your PJs)... LOL.

You pay your taxes on time like a good citizen.  Then comes the New Year and it's time to think about filing your income taxes (more taxes... more paperwork... eek).  You relish the idea that you may get a refund.  Why?!!!

Why do you want a refund?  Why do you not just want to break even?

Do you not realize that a tax refund is just an interest free loan you GAVE the government?   Don't you think it's much better and wiser to keep the money you earned?  If you really just want to anticipate a refund - then just send me money every month and I'll hold it for you and I promise to give it back to you after February 1st of the following year - without interest.  I'll even sign a Promissory Note to that effect!  Sounds silly and/or absurd, huh?  Well when you overpay on taxes, it's stupid to allow the government to use YOUR money for FREE!  Plus there's no penalties if they decide to hold your refund check... but you just miss paying them by 1 day and you're hit with all sorts of interest, fees and penalties.

Sure some of you may argue that refunds are a great way to save money...for a vacation, necessary home improvements, a big TV or some new clothes.  How is it a great way to save?  It doesn't earn any interest.

Wake up my little financial fool.  That is why there are all sorts of savings plans with your company.  Payroll savings deductions are designed to do just that - be great ways to HELP YOU save money. Why not increase your retirement-plan contributions, buy savings bonds or better yet, put an extra $50 per paycheck into a money-market fund.

Here is something I read from a financial blog just this morning:
what should I do to just withhold enough?
Aim for the safe harbors. That's the minimum amount you have to pay during the year to avoid any interest and penalties. There's no interest or penalty if any of the following apply when you file your return on April 15:
  • You owe less than $1,000.
  • You've paid in at least 90% of your 2010 liability.
  • You've paid in at least 100% of your prior year's total tax. On your 2009 return, that was Line 60. Go check it as you begin planning your 2010 return.
If your adjusted gross income (Line 37 on your Form 1040 for 2009) was more than $150,000, you need to pay 110% of your total tax, rather than 100%. So if my 2009 adjusted gross income was $160,000 and my total tax was $10,000, I'd need to pay 110% of that, or $11,000, during 2010 to hit that safe harbor. If I do that, there's no interest or penalty to pay, regardless of how much I owe on April 15, 2011.
If you're paying through withholdings, they are deemed to be paid evenly during the year, regardless of when they are remitted. I have some clients who have nothing withheld during the first 10 months and then meet their safe harbors with November and December withholdings.
If you're making estimated payments, they need be equal or, if your income varies substantially during the year, proportional to the income earned during each quarter. So on a simplistic basis, if I have $100,000 in income earned and $40,000 was earned in the first quarter, I'd need 40% of my tax paid in during that quarter. Technically, it's called the annualized income installment method, and it's a bit more complicated than my example.
See Form 2210 (.pdf file) for the required computations.
Jeff Schnepper is the author of the best-selling book "How to Pay Zero Taxes," which is in its 28th edition. He is a former professor of taxation, accounting and finance. Schnepper now has a full-time tax planning and legal practice in Cherry Hill, N.J. Click here to find Schnepper's most recent articles and blog posts.

Okay, the flip side is... what if you expect to owe taxes on April 15?  It would be prudent to put that money into a money market fund (or send them to me) until needed.  At least that way, as opposed to increasing your payments to the IRS, you'll get the interest. Just make sure you hit one of the safe harbors mentioned above.

There are several banking institutions out there who have a nice higher yeilding interest savings account than your local bank.  Also check out credit unions, as they tend to give better rates than your local bank.  You can check out this link as well that will give you some high yeilding interest rate online savings accounts.  http://www.savingsaccounts.com/

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Dress Linda for New York Fashion Week

Fashion Week is just around the corner… and we’re giving you a chance to attend.

Enter our latest Polyvore challenge to dress the icon of chic, our very own Linda Fargo, for Fashion Week.  Mix featured items from her closet to style the perfect look for fashion’s front row — as well as February’s snowy, soggy streets.  Let your imagination run wild but remember: Fashion Week is a frantic, freezing dash from the curb to Lincoln Center’s Tents to the next venue tucked in Chelsea or the West Village.  Keep Linda warm and comfortable but also completely fabulous (she’s been known to mix vintage Céline with a necklace fashioned from a wig).

Submit your collages between Monday, January 24 – Monday, January 31, and Linda will choose the winning set. She’ll also wear an outfit inspired by the winning look to one of the shows — and you’ll be right by her side.  In addition, Polvyore will fly you to New York* the day before so you can make your appointment with our Personal Shopping Department.  Oh, and Yes: we’ll be giving our winner a $2,500 Bergdorf Goodman gift card, just to make sure you’re Fashion Week chic.  And, to make sure you’re camera ready, we’ve arranged for a hair appointment in John Barrett salon and makeup session with our experts at Trish McEvoy on the Beauty Level.

Think you’re up for the challenge?

Then join us on polyvore.com/bergdorf for challenge instructions and to browse through our items hand-picked by Linda.

Here is what I have created that I think would look amazing on her.

Printed sheer chiffon shirt
$1,990 - bergdorfgoodman.com
Printed tops »

Washed-Taffeta Flower Trench
$1,980 - bergdorfgoodman.com
Lanvin vests »

Full High-Waist Trousers
$950 - bergdorfgoodman.com
Yves Saint Laurent »

Ruched Suede Pump
$1,165 - bergdorfgoodman.com
Black pump shoes »

Linda Crocodile Bag, Cherry
$3,600 - bergdorfgoodman.com
Cherry bags »

Shredded Ribbon & Pearl Necklace
$990 - bergdorfgoodman.com
Ribbon jewelry »

Paparazzi Bangle
$525 - bergdorfgoodman.com
Ippolita jewelry »

Chain Square-Drop Earrings
$300 - bergdorfgoodman.com
Chains jewelry »

Thursday, January 20, 2011

I want to apologize

I have been so busy with real life stuff that I've not had time to come and post anything for the holidays or for this year.

I am terribly sorry and I have not just thrown this budding blog to the wayside.  No sireee.

It is just that I am swamped with work and end of the year reports and closing year end reports and files and opening new files and setting up the system for all this year's upcoming work.  As well as trying to finalize all the documents for my business license, setting up my e-commerce website, procurring new retail accounts, etc.

I promise that I should have all wrapped up / caught up at work within the next week or two.  Definitely no later than the 31st of January.  Just hang in there and it will all come together and be a bit more timely and smoothly done.

Tilcia