SFA, is 'small format art' - art under 14".
There is a SFA group you are welcome to join, if you wish. It does include ACEOs and miniatures.
ATCs (Art Trading Cards) have been around for centuries in one format or another. Parisian artists used to exchange them as samples of their work, for instance, and sweethearts exchanged small portraits pre-photos. In 1995 a Swedish (or Swiss - sorry, I forgot) artist re-introduced them at an art exhibition, with the thought that artists would swap them face-to-face. This has spread world-wide and countless creators enthuse in making, collecting, exhibiting, swapping. Because of world-wide participation, they could no longer be swapped face-to-face, so mailings and the internet expanded this further. They were only to be traded, so original guidelines decreed. Hence they are called trading cards.
But as we know, all trading cards (baseball, etc.) ended up getting sold, as one way to obtain wanted cards that couldn't be obtained by swaps.
ATCs are HUGE in the world of altered art and rubber stamping!
There was a discussion on the A&A ebay boards in October 2004 about selling these cards. bone*diva headed up a new group with some other artists to sell these on ebay. By poll at the time the term ACEO (Art Cards Editions and Originals) was the winner, rather than ATC. They have steadily grown in popularity, to what you see today. There was originally a huge uproar from ATC artists about selling these cards - stretching well into late 2005, but now they do publish in ATC books that ACEO is the name used when sold.
I actually discovered them in discussions on wetcanvas, and didn't realise for several months it was an 'ebay thing'. I finally came over to ebay and joined Lisa's group (bone*diva) in April 2005 - there were 400 members and about 1,500 ACEO listings or less at that time. Today Lisa's group is about to hit the 3,500 membership mark.
This group was started late December 2005 for personal reasons.
Many people do not realise ACEOs were 'born' on ebay.
~Jillian
~Jillian
artist, Jillian Crider
... google me!