Internet Culture

Etsy is full of beautiful things—for everything else, there’s Regretsy

For every gem found on Etsy, a fast-growing community of DIY merchants offering handmade crafts, there are more than a few duds. Regretsy makes loving fun of the weird, the tacky and the totally uncomprehensible.

Photo of Grant Robertson

Grant Robertson

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Imagine Amazon.com meets the world’s largest arts and crafts fair, and you’ve got Etsy.

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And, much like the crafts fair you’re picturing, for every cute gem on offer, there are several not-so-cute duds. That’s where Regretsy enters, making endless fun of the weird, the tacky and the totally incomprehensible.

Sure, it’s snark-loaded criticism on the surface, takes aim at DIY culture in a way only lovers of DIY could manage. For example, of a CD of original music, the site’s author, April Winchell, writes:

“Oh, it leaves a lasting impression all right. And no matter how much Febreze you use, you never quite get it out of the curtains.”

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See? That kind of ego-puncturing bile requires the same risk-taking creativity displayed by Etsy’s sellers.

Etsy’s megagrowth — it reported year-over-year sales growth of 78 percent in April 2010 — leaves no shortage of targets for Winchell. (The schadenfreude-soaked insult-slinger behind Regretsy publishes the site under her pseudonym, Helen Killer.)

Winchell, a popular voice actress long before her Regretsy fame, gave up her anonymous double identity when she signed with Random House to publish a book version of the site, “Regretsy – Where DIY Meets WTF?

Like the detail-obsessed site it chronicles, Regretsy is incredibly organized, with categories listed alongside the main page in a veritable craft cozy of lovingly handmade archetypes representing nearly any Etsy-fail you might imagine. From the broad “Accessories” to the extremely specific “Not remotely Steampunk,”if you’ve ever laughed at a handmade craft in your life, be warned, Regretsy can easily swallow your entire afternoon with page after page of lovingly handcrafted laughs.

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The Daily Dot