Maker Project Calendar: What to Design, Make, and Sell Throughout the Year
Most makers wait too long.
They wait until the holiday rush is obvious… until craft fair season is already close… or until everyone else is already promoting the same products.
By that point, they’re not really planning anymore. They’re reacting.
And that usually leads to:
- worse product choices
- rushed listings
- late promotions
- unnecessary stress
This page is meant to fix that.
Instead of treating seasonal selling like a last-minute scramble, this calendar helps you think ahead. Whether you’re running a laser, CNC, UV printer, or a small handmade shop, this is designed to help you understand what you should be designing, producing, listing, and promoting throughout the year.
This is not just a holiday list.
It’s a planning tool.
The big idea is simple:
The profitable season usually starts before the visible rush.
Fast-Scan Seasonal Planning Table
Use this when you want the quick version.
New Year / Reset Products
- Plan: October – December
- List: December – January
- Promote: December – January
- Too Late After: Mid-January
- Notes: Great for organization, planners, and “fresh start” products
Valentine’s Day
- Plan: December – Early January
- List: January
- Promote: Late January – Early February
- Too Late After: Late January (core offers)
- Notes: Short window — shipping clarity matters
Easter / Spring
- Plan: January – February
- List: February – March
- Promote: February – March
- Too Late After: Late March
- Notes: Overlaps with Mother’s Day prep
Mother’s Day
- Plan: February – March
- List: March – April
- Promote: March – April
- Too Late After: Late April
- Notes: Hidden workload overlap
Graduation Season
- Plan: February – March
- List: March – April
- Promote: March – April
- Too Late After: Late Spring
- Notes: Competes with Mother’s Day + Weddings
Father’s Day
- Plan: March – April
- List: April – May
- Promote: April – May
- Too Late After: Late May
Summer Craft Fairs
- Plan: March – May
- List: May – June
- Promote: May – June
- Too Late After: Start of event season
- Notes: Great for testing best-sellers
Back-to-School
- Plan: June – July
- List: July – August
- Promote: July – August
- Too Late After: August
- Notes: Niche-dependent (teachers, personalization)
Fall Craft Fairs
- Plan: May – July
- List: August – September
- Promote: August – September
- Too Late After: August
- Notes: Collides with Q4 prep
Halloween
- Plan: July – August
- List: August – September
- Promote: September – October
- Too Late After: October
Black Friday / Cyber Monday
- Plan: August – October
- List: October – November
- Promote: November
- Too Late After: Thanksgiving week
- Notes: Focus on bundles + ready-to-ship
Small Business Saturday
- Plan: August – October
- List: October – November
- Promote: November
- Too Late After: Late November
- Notes: Great for brand storytelling
Christmas / Holiday Season
- Plan: June – July
- List: September – October
- Promote: October – November
- Too Late After: November
- Notes: Q4 is execution season
Last-Minute Gifts / Local Pickup
- Plan: September – November
- List: November – December
- Promote: December
- Too Late After: Shipping cutoff
- Notes: Fast-turn + simple personalization wins
Month-by-Month Maker Planning Calendar
This is where things actually get practical.
Instead of thinking in “holidays,” think in actions:
- design
- produce
- list
- promote
January
- Design: Easter, spring, organization products
- Produce: Valentine’s inventory
- List: Valentine’s + New Year products
- Promote: Valentine’s + fresh-start content
February
- Design: Mother’s Day, spring decor
- Produce: Easter + spring inventory
- List: Easter + early Mother’s Day
- Promote: Valentine’s final push + spring
March
- Design: Father’s Day, graduation, weddings
- Produce: Mother’s Day inventory
- List: Mother’s Day + spring decor
- Promote: Easter + early Mother’s Day
April
- Design: Halloween + back-to-school
- Produce: Father’s Day + graduation
- List: Father’s Day + teacher gifts
- Promote: Mother’s Day
May
- Design: Fall + Halloween + Q4 review
- Produce: Father’s Day + summer markets
- List: Summer + Father’s Day
- Promote: Graduation + early Father’s Day
June
- Design: Christmas + fall lineup
- Produce: Summer + early fall
- List: Summer + early fall pages
- Promote: Father’s Day + summer markets
July
- Design: Christmas + bundles
- Produce: Halloween + fall inventory
- List: Back-to-school + Halloween
- Promote: Summer + early fall awareness
August
- Design: Final holiday additions
- Produce: Fall + Christmas inventory
- List: Halloween + fall + early holiday
- Promote: Fall + craft fair prep
September
- Design: Small refinements only
- Produce: Christmas inventory
- List: Christmas + holiday collections
- Promote: Fall + early holiday
October
- Design: Only simple add-ons
- Produce: Holiday inventory
- List: Bundles + shipping updates
- Promote: Christmas + deadlines
November
- Design: Quick-turn + January prep
- Produce: Replenishment
- List: Black Friday + ready-to-ship
- Promote: Holiday urgency
December
- Design: Valentine’s + next year ideas
- Produce: Last-minute items
- List: Final gifts + digital options
- Promote: Shipping deadlines + local pickup
The Biggest Selling Windows to Prioritize
If you’re not sure where to focus, start here:
Christmas / Holiday Season
Your biggest opportunity.
Planning starts in summer — not November.
Fall Craft Fairs
Where in-person selling and Q4 collide.
Valentine’s Day
Short window, high intent.
Mother’s Day
Bigger than most people expect.
Graduation Season
Often overlooked, but strong demand.
The Biggest Mistake: Waiting for the Rush
Here’s what happens:
You wait until you see the season…
Then you start planning.
By then:
- competitors are already live
- listings already have traction
- production time is tight
- stress goes way up
Seasonal selling isn’t one step. It’s stages:
- idea
- testing
- production
- listing
- promotion
- fulfillment
When those get compressed, quality drops.
If You’re Overwhelmed, Start Here
You don’t need to do everything.
1. Pick 3–5 key seasons
Start with:
- Christmas
- Fall markets
- Valentine’s
- Mother’s Day
- Graduation
2. Build on what already works
Don’t reinvent everything.
3. Make planning a habit
Not a panic response.
4. Fit it to your business model
Custom vs ready-to-ship matters.
Final Takeaway
If you want better results from seasonal selling…
It’s not about reacting faster when the rush starts.
It’s about starting earlier so the rush doesn’t control you.
If you found this Calendar Helpful check out these other resources:
Frequently Asked Questions ( FAQ )
Question:
When should I start preparing for holiday sales as a maker?
Answer:
Most makers should start planning for major holidays like Christmas in the summer. By fall, you should already be producing inventory, creating listings, and preparing promotions rather than starting from scratch.
Question:
What are the most important seasons for small product businesses?
Answer:
For most makers, the biggest opportunities are Christmas, fall craft fairs, Mother’s Day, Valentine’s Day, and graduation season. These windows consistently generate strong demand.
Question:
How far in advance should I list products online?
Answer:
Ideally, listings should be live 4 to 8 weeks before peak demand. This gives time for search visibility, platform algorithms, and customer discovery to work in your favor.
Question:
Why do I feel behind every season?
Answer:
Most makers wait until demand is visible before they start preparing. By then, design, production, and marketing are compressed into a short window, which creates stress and limits results.
Question:
What should I do if I’m already late for a season?
Answer:
Focus on simple products, fast-turn personalization, ready-to-ship items, and local pickup options. These allow you to still capture demand without overcomplicating production.