Last Monday I was tagged by Carmel of Solomon Sewing to take part in the Round the World Blog Hop. A blog hop where bloggers talk about their creative process.
I have to admit to not really analyzing the whole "creative thing" too much, I am more of a doer than a thinker when it comes to making stuff.
What am I working on ?
How long is a piece of string?
I have two patterns ready to release as soon as I manage to take decent cover photos.
I have a cute secret charity project that will need a tutorial soon.
I have a freebie for you guys that also needs to be remade tutorial-style.
I have a new friend called Virginia who is but a bee's whisker from design completion (then comes the pattern writing).
I have a creative card in my mind that I have found the perfect fabric for but haven't started yet.
I have a creative card in my mind that I have found the perfect fabric for but haven't started yet.
I am rewriting a few older patterns and making new cover samples.
I have at least another 12 items in various stages of design, some will get revisited and some will languish in the line until I get sick of them or give up on them.
How does my work differ from others of its genre?
I think every one's work is different. If ten different toy makers were challenged to make a dog, you will get ten different dogs. I have often said I would like to be able to see my toys through someone else's eyes. Maybe this question is better answered by you guys !
I guess I have the technical skills to be able to do a lot of crafty things, but nothing else fires me up like toy making. It is frustrating and exciting and the create problem solving of making things work is absolutely what keeps me awake at nights. I become fixated on new ideas and obsessed with figuring things out.
I sometimes wonder what my life would look like if this crafty world wasn't such a big part of it, and I find it really hard to imagine.
How does my writing / creative process work
Sometimes a particular fabric will send me off on a toy making adventure but it can be a name that I hear or even an emotion I want to try and capture in a toy. Did you know when I made Ernst all those years ago my aim was to see if I could make a sad toy?
Other times it comes about because I want to learn a particular technique or try and achieve a new style or shape. I will often spend time just making legs or practising gussets or darts. I love to figure out how things work - I am a sewing nerd!
Once I have an idea - out come the white sheets. All my toys start with white sheets so I can concentrate on shapes (also white sheets are pretty cheap so I don't feel bad about how many drafts I have to do if I am not wasting good fabric).
As I fart about through this stage I will think about fabrics and try and rein myself in as I generally want to add whole wardrobes of crazy accessories for every toy. ( I use kitchen paper to make up clothes for toys in the design stage- again they are cheap so mistakes don't matter)
Sometimes a toy will go from idea to finished in a few sessions, other times it takes months and months of intermittent time, and sometimes the idea just has to be shelved.
I try not to beat myself up too much when an idea is a flop - there are always other things to work on !
I try not to beat myself up too much when an idea is a flop - there are always other things to work on !
To keep things moving I am tagging Emma Scrapbag
(Emma's latest fabric line - The Linen Cupboard, Pop on over and check it out)
Great stuff Jodie!
ReplyDeleteyou are different because you are you. your toys all radiate such personality and your photo styling has such depth.
ReplyDeleteand embroidered pants and not taking yourself too seriously.
that's some pretty fabric you got there. have you cut it yet?
I love to read what makes people tick. It's true that your personality seems to spill over into the toys you make and that's what makes them different. ( Not that other toy makers haven't got personality but it's a different one - well, you know what I mean).
ReplyDeleteLove that new fabric range - it really does look like those georgous vintage floral sheets.
Good grief you are busy.
ReplyDeleteLoved reading about how it all comes together.
Thanks for sharing
We love ya work, Jodie! :)
ReplyDelete