Pottery business After the onset of the
Great Depression, Hazel and Vin Hannell moved to their getaway home near the Dunes in 1930, as they could no longer afford rents in Chicago. Hannell tried to get a secretarial job, but was "fired for being impertinent". According to Hannell, "One of the foremen told me to do something and I was annoyed with him and I said, 'I won't'," even though I'd already done it". In Indiana, Hazel and Vin ran a pottery business. They created a potting studio from a chicken coop, lived off Vin's government pension, and used the regional clay to gain an income from which a living could be sustained. During this period, a wholesaler saw some of their work and offered her a business deal. Former director of Chesterton Art Center Gloria Rector reported, "Hannell once said that her clay pottery was their bread and butter during hard times". "To make a living as a painter, you either have to be a salesman or have a salesman," Hannell explained to
the Vidette Messenger in 1983, "Pottery sells itself." Clem and Nixon Hall of New York, a designer-distributor organization, brought "their years of design and merchandising experience to the end that Hannell pieces fit market demands."
Save the Dunes In 1952, Porter County area residents began to hear that the area was being bought up by major steel making facilities. Hazel and Vin became charter members of the
Save the Dunes Foundation, and in 1958 the first bill to preserve the Dunes was introduced after bus trips from Save the Dunes Council to testify before Congress. Hazel went on one of these trips to Washington D.C. along with founder
Dorothy Buel. The Hannells also donated some of their land to the
Indiana National Lakeshore, claiming they, "wanted Congress to know that the people who didn't want it were not the majority here." Meanwhile, Hannell painted the Indiana National Lakeshore in watercolor, in hopes that they would aid her audience's value of the environment.
Chesterton Arts Fair In 1952, Chesterton held its centennial celebration as "Gateway Town of the Dunes" in connection with the Hannells, who promoted a tent show art exhibition. The Modern Artist's Guild, including members such as David Sander and Harriet Rex Smith had works in this tent as well. Gaining sponsorship by the Chesterton Retail Merchants' Association, their tent show developed into the Chesterton Arts Fair, which is now one of the best juried shows in the United States. By 1960 a group of the merchants and artists from the arts and crafts fairs developed into the Association of Artists and Craftsmen of Porter County. First chairman of this association was Ernst Schwidder, former head of the art department at Valparaiso University, which now holds over 35 works by Vaino and Hazel. Meetings for the Association of artists and Craftsmen of Porter County commonly took place in the home of the Hannells. ==Late years (1960s–2002)==