About Publishing and Change: a guest post from Woolly Wormhead.
      Arbour House Publishing have been lucky enough to work with and publish Woolly Wormhead's marvellous hat knitting books for a number of years now. Sadly, the decision has recently, jointly, and amicably been made that we are not going to be publishing Woolly's books anymore.  
Woolly has written about it very eloquently on her own blog, and has kindly allowed us to repost her words here.
                            
About publishing, and change.
    Friday, April 1, 2011 at 4:49PM
Friday, April 1, 2011 at 4:49PM                                            
  
    Woolly has written about it very eloquently on her own blog, and has kindly allowed us to repost her words here.
About publishing, and change.
 Friday, April 1, 2011 at 4:49PM
Friday, April 1, 2011 at 4:49PMSome of you may remember when I started working with Arbour House Publishing a few years ago. Having first published Going Straight through Lulu, the chance to work with a small publisher couldn't be missed.
And they have been  wonderful to work with – they've allowed me creative freedom, we've had  many informative discussions about layout and content, and they have  enabled my books to reach a whole world of knitters who had no idea my  designs existed. Being a small, ethically led company, they've taught me  much about the behind the scenes concerns of publishing, much of which  most of us don't see, and how that can impact the side of business that  we do see. Over this time we've developed an unusual and strong  relationship, one that is unique to the publishing world, and one that  has allowed us to develop our strengths without compromise. And it's  allowed the friendship between Susan and myself to grow.
Sadly, we now need to  tell you that we aren't able to carry on as we are, and that Arbour  House will no longer be publishing my books.
After much discussion, we  can't find a practical way to go forward. Because of our unique  relationship, which allows me to maintain the rights to my work, I'm a  low profit author for them. With all 3 books due for reprinting, and a 4th  one due for release, the investment needed to keep all books in print  at a reasonable wholesale cost would have been difficult. Had the  investment been made, neither of us would have earnt anything from the  books for many months, if not years, with Arbour House running at a loss  for a period of time, and that to me didn't sound like the best  business investment. Arbour House aren't a big corporate publisher, they  are small, independent one with limited funding, funding that I felt  would be better spent elsewhere. After tentative discussions with Susan,  we both agreed that this was the best way forward. It's best for both  businesses, the risk is reduced, and there won't be a strain on our  friendship.
The last week or so has  been difficult, but as the dust has settled, it's clear that we've done  the right thing. Susan and her family are coming over in May for a visit  and it's going to be lovely to spend time together and have a real  holiday without the need to talk about business.
Going forward, I've been  working on a plan or two. I was thrown into a bit of a tizz for a few  days, trying to get my head around the available options but it's  starting to come together. And ironically, I'll be going back to POD, at  least for a while.
CreateSpace  is an Amazon owned company, with very competitive printing costs for  full colour books. They will get my books onto Amazon, into certain  distribution outlets in North America, and wholesale to stores will also  be possible. As much as it seems like a backwards step, going from a  small independent to a corporate giant, it's the best thing to do right  now. Sometimes, we're not in a position to make the decisions that  please our inner moral code.
I'm not sure yet whether  this will be the long term plan, but for now, it will keep my books  available in print. There are a few more things that need to be done  before they will be available for sale, and once those are done, I'll be  able to direct you to where you'll be able to purchase them.
This change has bought  about a huge amount of work, most of which isn't visible on the surface.  I hope you can appreciate our reasons, and bear with me while I get a  few things straightened out.
From: Woolly Wormhead, 
Susan, Gavin and Ingrid, the Arbour House team
Labels: books, woolly wormhead








1 Comments:
It is so sad that we're not able to carry on as we were, but it is the right thing for us to do.
And I'm very, very glad that we have been able to agree and work this out amicably! That's one of the silver linings in all of this - that we've been able to part on the best of terms :)
Thank you for everything you have done for me, for all of your help and understanding.
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