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Wednesday, December 19, 2007 

Slow craft

One of the blogs that I read daily is In A Minute Ago. It's a fiber arts blog and this post is about something mentioned on there, but please don't turn away, even if you're not a fiber artist. This doesn't apply just to fiber arts only. The specific thing mentioned on that post is "slow cloth" but this is relevant across the arts and crafts fields, really. If you don't care about the cloth part, fine, scroll down to the bottom. I've talked to people. I know that a lot of people feel the same way as me in what I'm about to talk about.

Sharon, of In A Minute Ago, recently posted a post about "Slow Cloth" but also called it "Slow Craft". And here's the gist of this: what has happened recently is that craft has become cool. BUT a lot of people take this in the same way they take the rest of their lives: in a very hurried pace. What this means is that we're seeing the proliferation of "Last minute handmade gifts - in 15 minutes!!!" kits. The person goes out, buys a kit, and makes the same exact thing that fifty other people made. Most of them change NOTHING and very little thought is put into this. Now, if a craft truly only takes fifteen minutes, but you selected the parts yourself and truly thought about what the person you are giving it to would like (or, if not got a gift, something you'd love to have), I think that could probably be considered slow craft. What we're talking about here is pre-made, might as well have bought you that ever-present butter-cheese-caramel-popcorn-in-a-tin kits. Where very little thought or time commitment is involved on your part. Slow Craft is the opposite of this.

“Do you think we need a craft philosophy that celebrates the handcrafted object made with care and meaning without regard to time?” - pulled from Sharon's blog.

Yes, frankly, I do.

For instance, one of my big pet peeves is Scrapbookers. (I've instantly gotten myself hated by a lot of people, I know, but this is how I feel and I'm not afraid to say it.) I'm not talking about people who make real scrapbooks. I'm talking about someone who announces herself (it's usually a her - though there are men who do this) as a Scrapbooker and goes to her Scrapbooking meetings and groups where they all make the exact same layout. Or worse, she goes to the Scrapbooking store and buys a completely pre-made layout, takes two minutes to shove it in her scrapbook, and then sticks the appropriate picture in the appropriate box. I even saw one that, in the white space where the photo goes, said "INSERT PICTURE OF SON PLAYING FAVORITE SPORT HERE." Ok. How much less thought do you need? ARGH. I remember when scrapbooks were exactly that - books of scraps. You had pictures in there, sure, but you also wrote little bits, and attached memorabilia, ticket stubs, playbills, maybe the napkin from your wedding, or a small map of where you went - even if it was just your route from home to work - and various other things that had meaning to you. Things nobody even thinks of putting in their scrapbook anymore. If I never saw one of those "Scrapbooks" again, it would be too soon. Why do people even bother? Why don't they just stick the picture in an album? Or, even better, why don't they design a page THEMSELVES, without the use of premade pages and die cuts? Maybe even, I dunno, make their own background? What bothers me the most is that these people who put so little thought into it suddenly call themselves "Very Creative". Argh. These people COULD be being creative. It isn't hard. But, instead, encouraged by the idea that these things are creative, they stick with that. They don't expand. I'm frustrated for them.

It isn't so much about the time, but about the thought behind it.

And, if you're wondering where the term "slow cloth" came from, it follows in the tradition of Slow Food.

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Hi Misa your post is very clearly written and I agree with you whole heartedly. I am going to track these ideas more in the new year as I think it is an important topic
I have just done a very late edit to my latest post and linked here as I hope people read it

Hi Sharon! Thanks for reading my post. This is actually a topic I've discussed over and over with my crafty friends and I'm really passionate about it.

Hi Misa. Great post - I agree completely. I particulary liked your example of scrapbooking (or 'crapbooking' as we call it at our place!)

Hi Misa. I understand completely. I'm afraid I picked on the 'scrapbookers' too! I just wish they would call themselves that, and not 'crafters', a word that seems have taken on a completely new meaning with this welcome, put sometimes frustrating and perplexing, explosion in all things relating to craft.

ps: all the way through my City & Guilds courses I insisted in putting my design work in scrapbooks, much to the derision of fellow students, and some of them are very neat, but others are a MESS! And I just got an empty scrapbook out, gave it a new cover and filled it with prints of my paintings and drawing ready for an artshow today. REAL scrapbooks are alive and well!

Hi Misa. Glad to read that you lurk on Sharon's blog daily, LOL. Your comment was very well phrased, I've been watching the (s)crapbookers movement too, the bl**dy supplies have taken over in a lot of craft shops, where once beads, threads and yarns were once stocked. I put the die cuts and cute sayings on equal footing with printed cross stitch kits which masquerade as "embroidery". I know lots of folks buy and enjoy them, but where's the creativity if one follows the directions exactly? I think people are missing out on trying their own designs and ideas, but then that's not the idea in this "have-it-now" world, is it? Hope you and yours are feeling well at the moment and can enjoy the holiday season together.
Hooroo, "see" you in 2008,
Christine in soggy Sydney

I'd have to agree with Christine - I went to a show this year that used to be full of patchwork, embroidery and sewing supplies and books, and I was so disappointed to see aisle upon aisle of scrapbooking and card supplies, anything fibre related was tucked away in a small room at the back!

It did occur to me, thinking a lot about this topic and trying to see it from all angles, that the designs for the kits, scraps, stickers etc. are probably intially designed by people like us. Maybe it is easier to make a profit this way, rather than putting in the time and the dedication to make it yourself. If you need to make money from your craft, this may well be an efficient way of doing it. (In defence of the kit producers, I would say that a few of my fellow students on the City & Guilds embroidery courses I've taken were there because a kit had initially sparked their interest and they found they wanted to learn to design their own work.)

I applaud your frankness! I've always subscribed to the "slow craft philosophy", and I'm pleased that so many folks' thoughts are influenced by and subscribe to the concept.

Love this ! the ultimate slow craft has to be this guy who built a model of San Francisco from

toothpicks-- took him 34 years ! http://news.aol.com/article/toothpick-city/535853

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  • I'm Misa
  • From Seattle, Washington, United States
  • I'm an artist living in Seattle, with my husband and four furkids. I'm pretty happy with life right now.
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