Etsy CEO Chad Dickerson Etsy Etsy, an online marketplace that specializes in crafts and other artistic items, just filed its S1 to go public.

The decade-old, Brooklyn-based company generated $195.6 million in revenue in 2014, up 56.4% from $125.02 million in 2013.

CEO Chad Dickerson has said that the company has been profitable since 2009, but Etsy had a net lost of $15.2 million in 2014 and $800,000 in 2013.

It will be listed on the Nasdaq under the symbol ETSY. Its $100 million fundraising target is just a placeholder and the company could be raising much more (Bloomberg reported in January that it would raise about $300 million).

About 55% of Etsy's revenue comes from charging its 1.4 million active sellers $0.20 to list a single item for four months, and then 3.5% of the value of the sale if an item sells. It's "seller services," like direct checkout, promoted listings, and shipping, labels, contribute 42.1% of revenue. The rest — which Etsy puts in the "Other" category — comes from fees it receives from a third-party payment processor.

The big winners in the offering will be investors Accel, which owns 59 million shares (30% of the company) prior to the offering, and Union Square Ventures, which owns 30 million (15%). CEO Chad Dickerson, who started as Etsy's chief technical officer, owns 4.2 million shares, or 2%, prior to the offering.

Here's a look at Etsy's financials:

Etsy

Here's Etsy's revenue break-down over the last three years:

Etsy currently has 685 employees. More than 53% of its site visits came from mobile in 2014 and its app has been downloaded 21.8 million times.

Etsy also disclosed some accounting problems, which it says it is taking steps to fix.