Skip to main content

Saving Cowboy True 2020


We have always appreciated a challenge, especially when it comes to helping an organization or cause that we support. Well, that was the case with Cowboy True, a local arts organization that was needing help bringing it all together in this new virtual world. That's where we came in.

It started when I received a referral from one of our great friends and partners, Tana Dale of Star Expos. We have worked with them for over 10 years and the experience has been all positive.  Darren and Tana own Star Expos and put on three big agricultural trade shows each year in Wichita Falls, Texas, Great Bend, Kansas and McCook, Nebraska.  In fact, we relocated to Wichita Falls after being exposed to it through the trade shows.

With less than one month before the show was to begin, we were asked if we could build a Virtual Art Show that would allow both Judging, Sponsors, Full Artist Galleries and give them the ability to conduct their auction, all online, in approximately 3 weeks.

I knew we would need to meet with 'the committee' to make sure this event was even going to take place this year, as there was much talk about just shelving it until next year. We could do it, but would they understand enough to make a decision? We hoped so because this could be a fun event and the artists deserve it. During the meeting, the decision went from "no way" to "ok, if you think it will work" several times I recall.

Just like the less-than-one-month leadway we had on our first Virtual Farm Expo, this one had to be done quickly, and it had to be done right.  It especially needed to be easy-to-use, we were told, due to the age and computer experience of the clientele we were working with.

By the start of the show we had over 600 pieces of cowboy artwork uploaded by the amazing artists and their assistants with very little help needed from us. The artists credited us for the ease-of-use of our programming, but we commend the adaptability of the artists that participated.

Winners of each category were as follows;

Bits : Ken Cunningham
Buckles : Clint Orms
Cartoons : Polly Kennedy
Drawing : Gayle Bone
Jewelry : Bobby Dove
Painting : Dee Elliot
Photography : Dee Elliot
Sculpture : Gary Ward
Trappings : Susan Lankford
Woodworking : Joshua Bradley

The auction saw 36 registered bidders ranging from Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, California, New Mexico, Utah and Nebraska.  A total of 19 items were offered for sale, some of them with some pretty high reserve prices, but in the end, 9 items sold to 8 different buyers and grossed over $4,000 for the artists and the organizations involved.  Whispers of Hope Horse Farm and The Forum were the beneficiaries of this year's auction and showed much appreciation for the help we have them in helping save Cowboy True 2020.

Visit https://CowboyTrue.org  Website by Hale Multimedia


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How much does an average website cost?

Ah, the age-old question whose definitive answer has eluded us for over two decades, "How much does an average website cost?" Being from the computer programming world at the time when websites were first being created, this question has obviously come across my radar on numerous occasions. When I first started building websites, it was me asking the question. Now, after 20 years in the website business, I believe I have answered this question more times than the Army asked me my Social Security number (and that's a lot). It was 1996 and the popularity of the public web was growing rapidly with aol and yahoo leading the way. I worked for a small internet magazine in Oklahoma and had an idea for a website. My idea was to take a database of local businesses with websites and stick them into a searchable online website. I couldn't find a designer that could do what I wanted to do, let alone a cost estimate.  Thus began my journey to learn html, php and sql; the lang...

What's an App?

You may have heard the saying, 'there's an app for that' and it's true, there are millions of 'apps' created for all kinds of reasons.  So, before we go any further, what's an 'app'? Before I could explain to my customers how valuable it might be to have an app, I knew it would necessary to answer this basic question. So, I asked a couple of web savvy folks I knew and here's what their  responses were to this elusive question; Sean Brandt, owner of a website design firm in Lincoln, Nebraska wrote, " Custom software developed and branded to meet the needs and wants of an organization's audience. A mobile site utilizes a browser on your mobile phone and it  usually functions like your main website in design and content usually built by a web designer. A mobile app is a stand alone application on a mobile phone that has it's own graphical user interface fulfilling a specific niche pertaining to your organization that is built by an ap...

2017 : The Year in Review

Happy New Year everyone! Twenty years, wow. I am just sitting here reflecting on 2017 listening to Floyd's "Great Gig in the Sky". For some reason, Pink Floyd never seems to fail in setting the mood. It was a crazy year in many regards, but then again, we are the Hales, and we are in the website / media business after all, so it's somewhat expected. Building a new Mobile Cattle Management System, our transformation of AgMarketOnline into AgSearch.us, Server Security upgrades and a Solar Eclipse dominated the headlines for our most recently completed trip around the sun. The year began with a few quirks and by March we felt the server wasn't performing the best. Prior to May of 2017 we had our website business running on a server that was built in 2008.  We felt it was time for a new server so we upgraded to a machine that has a processor that is twice as fast and has 4x as much RAM (memory). We also doubled our hard drive (storage capacity) and our server com...