Speaking only from my very limited personal perspective as a small vendor of personally crafted dioramas, the TCA Meet was, for me, a way of finding out if my work would be accepted, demonstrated by hobbyists taking my work home with them, as well as hoping to become a "recognized brand," as Jim Elster referred to my work on the occasion of one of his visits to my booth.
The expense of staying at the Holiday Inn Express in Lancaster, from Wednesday to Sunday, which included rooms and meals for myself and my friend-helper, was a necessary cost of that entrepreneurial journey. By the second Meet I attended, when I started selling-out of everything I had made, the profit far exceeded my expenses, and that is when the overall experience at being there became fun. As long as I had product still on the tables of my booth in the Orange Hall, I stayed up to the last minute on Saturday, though usually very tired by then.
It turned out to be very lucky for me that I did, because two significant customers became accustomed to strolling into my booth, with purpose, late on Saturdays - Tony Lash and Richard Kughn. And for those of you who know of whom I speak when I mention their names. you can understand why I was motivated to stay to the last minute. Both paid with handsfull of hundred dollar bills (!!)
I tell you all this because staying until the last hour required on Saturdays can be a wise move, considering that we vendors are present to sell, even if we do get tired and a bit restless.
Also, several other customers, with whom I became further acquainted late on Saturdays, became clients, hiring me to travel to their layouts to do custom work, which took me as far as Kansas City, for example. To this day, I have more work to do for such clients than I can actually, as a practical matter, accomplish. So the investment of self, energy, time, tedium, hopes and dreams, and presenting my work, and staying to the last required minute paid off totally. What more could I have asked ? You never know what a few extra hours at York may accomplish. I didn't know, but I sure learned.
I didn't expect anybody to change rules to suit me. I expected, of myself, to keep to the commitment and promise to be there for the duration. The TCA promised me a place, in a nice building, a booth, that I had wanted to keep for each Meet. I kept my promises. The TCA kept theirs.
FrankM, Layout Refinements