TWITTER REDESIGN (well, your profile anyway)
Some say it’s starting to look more like Facebook.
Not everyone can see the changes, but by the end of the month they say the new format will be rolled out to everyone.
STRESS DREAMS
Do you have recurring dream themes? I do… and they’ve changed throughout my life.
Supposedly the one where I’m back in school (college,
usually… which is funny since I didn’t go to college) and I can’t find my
class. Ugh! It’s so stressful. I know I’m going to be late and/or I haven’t
done my homework. Blah!
To me, stress is stress.
Yeah, I realize “dreams aren’t real”, but does that matter if the stress
is still real?
Apparently this is the same theme as being late to catch a
flight. Guess what… another recurring
theme of mine.
Here’s the surprising (not!) part… perfectionists tend to have
dreams of “unpreparedness” (both the above mentioned examples). One article stated that one explanation for
these dreams is “… you may be tying your self-worth too tightly to how you
perform at work.” Ha ha ha! Yeah, that could NEVER apply to artists. ;-)
When I was working in the corporate world, I used to have
recurring dreams where I was on out of control elevators. So yeah… me not being in control of my
direction. Didn’t need a book to tell me what that meant.
SQUARE UP
Do you use Square? If
so, I hope you know you’ve got to get the updated card reader eventually.
A CUTE, WEARABLE BUSINESS CARD
Ran into this blog post the other
day and thought I’d pass it along. This
is a really cool idea and kudos for the author for passing along the
instructions for everyone to see.
A WEEK OF ACTIVITIES TO BREAK CREATIVE BLOCK
If you don’t feel creative today, sort your beads, clean
your workshop, or rearrange your books.
But on day two, sit down and sketch. It doesn’t have to be something you’re going
to end up making… just sketch. Doodle,
zentangle, anything. Write words if they
come to your mind, too. None of this has
to be jewelry design related. You’re
just practicing the relationship between your hand, your pencil, and your
paper. Your brain doesn’t have to be overly
involved. Today should be about fun, not
work.
On day three, relax. But
didn’t we just do that? Grab some of
your favorite craft or technique books and read. Just look at the photos and see how you feel
about them. Keep a sketch book by your
side and when trust me, the ideas will come.
You will see things or read things that will inspire you. Whether it’s an actual design you can sketch
out or just a note that starts out with “what if”.
A couple of my favorite books when I need to take a brain
break:
- Landmarks of the World’s Art: Prehistoric and Primitive Man (by Andreas Lommel)
- Jewellery: The Intelligent Layman's Book (by Jack Ogden)
- Narrative Art (edited by Hess and Ashbery)
On day four, realize that being creative doesn’t always mean
you have to be wildly innovative or ground-breaking. That kind of thinking can stop a designer
cold in their tracks. Frozen with fear. Stop.
Take a step back and do some rote technique all day long. Set up your soldering station and fuse some
silver rings… over and over… make necklace after necklace. By the end of the day, your fusing or
soldering skills should be wildly better than they were in the morning. Remember
“wax on, wax off”? That’s what we’re
doing. You can also do wire-wraps or
torch some beads or do some chain maille or simple enameling… anything that
needs a bit if improvement in your skill-set, but nothing that’s so complicated
that it will be a big stress for you.
On all of these days, set a timer to limit your time on the
computer. Social media can be fantastic
for our jewelry business, but in the wrong hands (or for the wrong reasons) it
can also be a huge time vacuum, sucking up hours and hours of potentially
creative design time.
On day five, shake up your routine. Take the day off and go exploring. Drive on a road you’ve never driven on
before. Go to a park and hike where you’ve
never been before. A museum, a zoo, a
bike trail… any place you’ve never been before.
If you’re really brave, talk to strangers too. Just be in the moment and notice what’s
around you. You want to fill your senses
with new experience. Let your brain know
it’s not in a rut.
Also, I think one of the most important things you can do is
keep a notebook with you at all times.
Write down all those ideas that you’re SURE you’ll remember. ‘Cause you know what? We don’t.
We don’t remember lines we saw that made us think of a necklace design
or the color combination on that tv ad that made us think of a bead idea. Write down everything. And then when you think you have no creative
ideas, go to your notebook and remind yourself about all these wonderful things
you thought of and can now do.
On day six, search the internet and download a
project/tutorial that looks interesting.
Make sure you have the materials on-hand and then go at it. Don’t download one that you won’t be able to
do that same day. Sometimes following
someone else’s instructions takes a load of pressure off of us and gives our
brains the time to relax and begin thinking again of ideas for us.
On day seven, commit to blogging on a regular basis. Pick a project and just start babbling about
it (with photos!). Other jewelry makers
love to read about what we’re all up to.
We want to see how it’s done and what you tried and what worked for you and
what didn’t work for you. One of my most
popular blog posts is about the day that I tried to learn how to fuse fine
silver. There are tons of videos and
tutorials online from people who already knew what they were doing, but a lot
of people really enjoy seeing it through the eyes of the explorer. And sometimes the explorer shares something
that a master might not think to mention.
So that’s one week where you don’t have to agonize over your
creative block. And hopefully, something
in that week will spark your ignition.
Will this jumpstart week work for everyone? I should think not since we’re all wired
differently. But you never know until
you try.
Report back here. I’d
love to hear how things went for you.