Pill Joy In the press
KGW News September 17, 2022
“Etsy sellers form guild to promote the interests of online sellers”
PORTLAND, Ore. — On Labor Day, the organizers of the Etsy strike launched Indie Sellers Guild (ISG), an international non-profit created to promote the interests of independent artists and creators selling their work online.
“The Etsy Strike was only the beginning” said Kristi Cassidy, ISG President, in a press release. “Since then our sellers and supporters have continued working to build solidarity and leverage our numbers to advocate for ourselves collectively. We are a grassroots nonprofit, created by indie sellers, for indie sellers.”
One of those indie sellers — Thredd Tenenbaum. They are the artist behind Pill Joy and create specialty pill organizers.
"Seventy percent of people take pills, so why are 100 percent of pill organizers offensively ugly and boring?" they said, "We have enough reminders of why we don't feel good. This is my way of being in the world...it's like I see you, I know that you're a person. You're a wonderful person. You have a personality, and you deserve a pill organizer that reflects that."
In addition to selling the pill organizers at the Portland Saturday Market, Tenenbaum sells online — making use of the popular website Etsy.
Recently many creators found the e-commerce platform made some unfair changes amid record sales — like upping seller fees and failing to stop resellers.
Tenenbaum said these issues have made it more difficult for them to sell and profit.
"For me, like as a disabled maker, like I'm in a very small margin of what I'm trying to do... and Etsy has so much potential, but they have gotten so massive and so monolithic, it's really difficult for all of us small makers to advocate for ourselves."
The launch of ISG, they said, will bring a collective voice for all craft sellers online.
"We need a voice, and we have a really big, booming voice when we speak together. We're not making unreasonable demands. We just want to be fairly compensated."
KGW reached out to Etsy's media team for a comment but we have not heard back.
Beaverton Valley Times July 7, 2022
“First-ever Beaverton art show centers autistic, disabled artists”
Charlie "Thredd" Tenenbaum, the artist behind Pill Joy, said they were a little hesitant about the art show at first. It'll be a new experience to show their art at a gala, Tenenbaum said, but they'll be there, showing off their bedazzled pill organizers that "make illness fun."
"The pill organizers are almost a metaphor for the disabled experience," Tenenbaum said. "And when it's just kind of treated as this ugly, functional, practical thing, it's just forgettable. You want to shove it in a drawer, it's not part of life. … It's kind of like when people don't see the whole person."
But pill organizers are part of life, Tenenbaum said, and imbuing them with some personality — as they do with their art — makes them more notice-worthy. They're included in the conversation, and they should be, because they're giving people the best life they can have, they pointed out.
"I want that to be a celebration," Tenenbaum said.
Tenenbaum mentioned one customer in the past who was looking for a pill organizer for her 9-year-old child with autism. Pill time had always been a chore for them, but when her son worked with Tenenbaum to make a new, monster-themed pill organizer, that changed.
Now, he's reminding his mom every day about pill time and asking her about the monster of the day, Tenenbaum said.
Tenenbaum will have pill organizers for sale at the Artful Autism gala, but various designs are also available on their website, www.pilljoy.shop. They also have a giving program for people to pitch in for pill organizers for people who can't afford one.