Archive for October, 2008

Quantity not Quality

Friday, October 31st, 2008

Seems a little backward, doesn’t it? It’s supposed to be quality not quantity… But that’s the idea behind NaNoWriMo and I think it applies to Polymer Clay or any other creative activity.

Saturday is the first day of National Novel Writing Month. The idea is to write 50,000 words in one month. I was reading a book by the founder Chris Baty (No Plot, No Problem) which described the concept.

Basically, the idea is to have a deadline and the support of other people doing the same project and to write so much and so regularly that you get past your Inner Editor which makes you procrastinate and second guess yourself. The idea is to just write without worrying about it, to have some fun and prove that you can accomplish something. And he makes the point that it’s often not any worse than a normal first draft that you spent hours agonizing over every sentence.

I think the same thing can apply to art. I don’t remember whose blog had the anecdote but it talked about an experiment with a ceramics class. One half of the class was told they would be graded on one piece. They had all semester to make that perfect piece and they agonized over it. The other half of the class was told quality didn’t matter. They were going to be graded on how many pieces they produced. So, they started whipping out as many pieces as they could. At the end of the semester, their pieces were better even though they hadn’t put any thought into quality.

And that’s the idea behind NaNoWriMo. Quality comes about after quantity, and relaxing a bit about the importance of it all. :)

Origami Crane

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

When we were on vacation, we visited a highschool friend of mine in Wisconsin. She’s always been great at origami and I brought along a scrap of PMC paper I had left. She folded up a quick little crane and I finally got around to firing it the other day. It came out great. And then I very gently wirebrushed it to bring up the silver and the delicate head broke off. AAAARRGGGHH!

So… I got out some oil paste (love that stuff) smooshed some on and in the folds where it broke to reinforce it and fired it again. And this time I put it in the tumbler which I’d been a little afraid to do the first time but I’d read you could do. That little Harbor Freight tumbler works great and brought up a nice shine.

Now I just have to package it up and send it off to my friend :)

NaNoWriMo

Monday, October 13th, 2008

Have you ever heard of NaNoWriMo?

November is National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo). Sign up on the site, write 50,000 words in 30 days and you’re a winner.

No worrying about how good it is, no going back to edit… The idea is to write as much as you can for as long as you can, and free your mind of whimsey. *imagine the last words in the appropriate wise sensei voice*

Actually, it’s more like consign your mind to insanity. AI’m not sure if it’s more insane to voluntarily sign up for this kind of self torture, or to allow your over-tired brain to take over your fingers and your keyboard. It will be interesting to see what happens.

Either way, I’m going to try it this year. I’m really not sure if I can get to 50,000 words in one month. That’s an awful lot of words for me. But I’m going to try. However much I write, it will be more than I had before.

And it ought to be fun :) In a crazy, twisted sort of way…

Kaleidoscope Workshop

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

I just got a new order of kaleidoscopes from Boston ClayWorks. I’m going to be doing a kaleidoscope workshop on October 7th at the Clark library in Rhode Island. This is my second kaleidoscope workshop there – this time we’re going to be making the wand scope kits. It should be a lot of fun.

Of course, I also ordered some other supplies while I was at it. Larry had a new necklace scope kit since my last order and some glass spheres for making teleidoscopes. (A teleidoscope is basically a kaleidoscope without the bits at the end to make up the image. Instead the world around you becomes the image)

This may be just what I needed to re-inspire me on the scope and clay front again :)