Online auction group a boon to Inuit artists
Iqaluit Auction Bids getting hundreds of new members per day
CBC News
Posted: Mar 4, 2012 2:34 PM ET
Last Updated: Mar 4, 2012 4:33 PM ET
An online auction group selling Inuit arts and crafts in Iqaluit popped up on Facebook in November.
In a city of about 6,500, its membership has exploded to well over 7,000. The page is now being credited with boosting the territory's economy, with a little help from the south.
Liz Fullenwider, who lives near Toronto, has never been up North and has no connection to the Inuit culture. But that hasn’t stopped her from scoping out the Iqaluit Auction Bids group on Facebook and splurging on several items.
Liz Fullenwider, who lives in Toronto and has no connection to Iqaluit or Inuit culture, has bought several items from the online auction. (CBC)"I've bought a couple of carvings. I've also got some kamiks [boots] that I've purchased and a hat and a slingshot for my son," she said.
Fullenwider said her footwear makes quite an impression at her Ontario church.
"I wear them to church and I greet at the door, and when people come in the first thing they see is me, standing there in my sealskin kamiks," she said
When the online group started up, only a few locals joined the page. But in the last four months, it has drawn buyers from across the country. Up to 400 new members sign up every day and the current total is more than 7,500.
Price increase good news for artisans
The numbers have driven business and increased prices.
"The average, normal, cost of kamiks were running anywhere from $200 to $500. And now it's going as high as $1,500," said David Alexander, the group’s creator.
With the prices for articles like these kamiks tripling, it's meant a boom for people who make them.
"It's helping individuals like me make extra income and buy necessities like fuel. It helps a lot," said seamstress Alicee Joamie.
Most customers aren't fretting about the prices.
"The prices are good. I noticed the kamiks — they run fairly high, but when you're buying direct from the people making them, it's worth it, to support them," said Fullenwider.
Lori Idlout, the owner of Carvings Nunavut, said when items from her store are shown on the site, they get more interest from potential buyers.
Idlout said the group hasn't negatively impacted her store's sales. She said the market for Inuit art is ballooning due to people like Fullenwider.
Share Tools
Latest Toronto News Headlines
- Councillors vote down downtown Toronto casino
- Toronto councillors have killed the building of a downtown casino, a controversial issue that Mayor Rob Ford had recently suggested was unlikely to go forward as a result of provincial government waffling. more »
- Only 1 set of human remains found at Millard farm, police say
- Hamilton police have confirmed that they are dealing with only a single set of human remains at the Waterloo region farm of Dellen Millard. more »
- 'Very upset' Harper wants fast Senate spending reform
- Prime Minister Stephen Harper told the Conservative caucus this morning that he's "very upset" about the recent conduct of some senators and his own office, and he wants Senate spending rules tightened quickly. more »
- Horwath says NDP will support Ontario Liberal budget
- Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath says her party will support the Liberal budget, avoiding a spring election, after the premier agreed to the NDP's call for an independent financial accountability officer. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Senate debates expense audits amid greater scrutiny
- The expenses scandal is dominating the first Senate session since the audits on senators Mike Duffy, Mac Harb and Patrick Brazeau were released and it was revealed Duffy's questionable expenses were repaid by a personal cheque from the prime minister's chief of staff. Follow our live blog. more »
- Kids from levelled Oklahoma schools recount deadly tornado
- Children from two Oklahoma schools levelled Monday by a powerful tornado are recounting what it was like to survive the "loud" and "scary" twister, while rescuers near the end of their search for any other remaining survivors or bodies. more »
- Deadly Oklahoma tornado confirmed as most powerful type

- Emergency workers neared the end of their search Tuesday afternoon for survivors in Moore, Okla., following a deadly tornado that weather officials said was now classified among the most powerful type of twister. more »
- Only 1 set of human remains found at Millard farm, police say
- Hamilton police have confirmed that they are dealing with only a single set of human remains at the Waterloo region farm of Dellen Millard. more »
- Rob Ford faces more calls to address crack allegations
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford went back to work after a holiday weekend, but he kept his mouth shut about an alleged video that two published reports say shows him smoking what appears to be a crack pipe. more »
- Rob Ford faces more calls to address crack allegations
- Unknown remains found on Dellen Millard's farm
- Will alleged Rob Ford video overshadow Toronto casino debate?
- Councillors vote down downtown Toronto casino
- Horwath says NDP will support Ontario Liberal budget
- Missing Toronto woman's parents unfazed by Millard link
- Man shot dead at barbecue near Ossington and Dundas
- Man shot in leg in Etobicoke apartment building
- Only 1 set of human remains found at Millard farm, police say


Toronto traffic with Joan Chang