Friday, December 18, 2015

Taking a Step Back

"Take a step back and think."

That's what my professor, Alex Juhasz, suggested I do to finish up the semester. It was during a class dinner for another course I am taking of hers (MCSI: Archive). She suggested I think about my DIY Learning course objectives, and what has changed. What have I done? What have I learned?

To start, I learned I don't need the online communities to be able to create, but they do help. In the end, I found I had to log off Pinterest and YouTube and just do it. I could pin as much as I wanted and watch the same videos or new ones and still I would not be in any better shape to finish the project. There is research and knowledge, and then there is creation.

Online communities are so powerful. Think about #BlackLivesMatter. Imagine the kind of impact a group of individuals was able to create simply by reaching out and starting an Internet movement.

Our lives have changed with the online environment, but the act of creating has not. We use online communities to feel less alone, but when I am knitting a scarf, it does not matter to me if 10 other people have knit this same scarf and taken photos of it and posted them on ravelry. None of that matters during the act of creation.

Before, when I am planning the project, and after, when I am showcasing the project, the online crafters are awesome. They post thoughtful comments and add a +1 to my google post. Which is all well and good, but the gratification has never come from others.

I create so that I feel proud of something I made with my own two hands. Whether other people think it's cool or if I find like-minded individuals-- that is a whole other playing field from the act of creating.

I love the online crafting communities, don't get me wrong. But I have realized that these communities are just that-- communities. They do not hold your individual potential and they cannot cultivate the sense of gratification you reach when you know you have made something all on your own. The act of creating is an individual experience. It can exist in a larger community. You can go out and brag. You can type out the pattern. You can give it away to a catfish you met online. I don't care.

But never forget that crafts are an act of creation. Whatever the book or website that helped you was only a stepping stone. Because YOU were the one who did this. You should be proud, online and offline, in real life and in digital spaces, alone and together.

As always, stay creative.

Much love,
Rebecca "Rivi"


Summary...

Okay. Okay. I got this.

I'm trying to think of the best way to start this post or reflection, because honestly, there's a lot that I've learned. There is a lot to reflect on.

Parks and Recipes: 
This was a fun project. I really enjoyed coming up with ideas for this, and the research I later did on fan art was fascinating. Creating and blogging about these recipes took way longer than planned and did not achieve as attractive of a result as some of my other projects.

Review Video of Circular Knitting Workshop:
This was a hard project to begin but relatively simple to complete. Filming the video itself was pretty fun, and being on camera felt much more natural than I originally thought.

The process of reviewing was interesting, because I was able to share all my thoughts and observations about my projects with anyone who may be interested. Little things, such my vest neckline, could be watched and evaluated by other people, unknown to me, who also understand my frustration.

Also a super fun fact: I mentioned in the video that I would like to be sponsored, which was pretty much just a joke and a cute way to address the fact that many of these types of videos and craft bloggers are sponsored and promoted by bigger companies. I have to assume only a small number of crafters take the time to spread their knowledge online without any compensation whatsoever.

The fun fact is that I was actually contacted by a family friend who owns a small knitting store! Not sure what this means for future lucrative potential of my online crafting stuff, but it is pretty awesome.

Blog Posts:
This was probably the most tedious of all the work I have done over the semester. It involved breaking down all the knowledge I already understand about online crafting communities and writing it out in an organized and logical style. It did give me some time for reflection.

I have discussed this with friends and with Professor Juhasz, but there is a collective thought process on the online crafting communities to be constantly on the go. We are making and creating but we are not considering the complexities of what we are doing. We are focused on the initial idea and on the final project but we forget to contemplate what it means to create.

Required Readings:
I read a few books, but I didn't blog about them as much as I probably should have. For one, it's harder than one would think to connect books and traditional materials to the digital sphere. It almost seems pointless in a way. I read paper books and make highlights and notes in the margins; I read online crafting articles and I write an online crafting blog post in response.

This was a basic overview and summary. Don't go away, I'm adding one more on the philosophical thoughts on what I've learned.

Stay Creative!

Monday, December 14, 2015

Final Project: Random Acts of Kindness

For my final project, I am going to be getting off the online tutorials and actually do something in the real world.

Project: Random Acts of Kindness

Here is my Pinterest Blog

Rant about this project:
I really hate it when people use the online/digital space to brag about all the good they are doing. While I guess it's good that people are doing something, usually it is to boost their own popularity or aid their own selfish agenda. So I will not be documenting my random acts of kindness, but I will post which ones I do and how to do them so you can spread the kindness.

Other notes:
I will be posting a final reflection piece on everything I have learned over the semester

Stay creative!




Sunday, December 6, 2015

Project 3

I will be making an un-boxing/review style video for the book "Circular Knitting Workshop". No, I was not sponsored in any way, shape, or form-- but if knitting companies see this and want to sponsor me I'm right here. Sitting by my laptop, ready to be sent free stuff. Waiting to hear from you. :)