living in london, i’m constantly amazed by the fact that the so-called ‘subversive craft scene’ is non-existent. in the u.s., it is everywhere you look and it’s not so much a ‘call to arms’ as it is an expression of something i/you/we can do with our own hands to make our own lives as well as the lives of others a little bit better in the chaos of life around us.
currently i’m helping out with an event called Craft Rocks! at the V&A museum here in london.
there is a press frenzy surrounding it and i’ve been dealing with people who are calling knitting a ‘trend,’ a ‘fad,’ a ‘craze’ and i can’t help but get a little but frustrated by it all yet continually finding it all naive. both my reaction to the press interest as well as their wanting to just find a creative angle to fit their byline.
i don’t do my various crafts because it’s ‘trendy,’ although i do sometimes have crafty dreams that include everyone turning off their televisions and making stuff, whether it’s knitting a sweater or making macaroni necklaces or screenprinting fliers for a local demo. anything as long as you are letting your passion be your guide rather than what’s seen a ‘popular for the moment.’
i’m fascinated by the emails i get from people in regards to their pure love of various crafts. some of them are confused about what i’m trying to do here with this blog or in various work i do. i want to be a resource for people that want to help other people with their various crafty endeavours. maybe i’m helping to fill that void, or maybe i’m just taking up more space on the interweb, i’m not sure most days.
no, everything i make doesn’t go to charity. but some of it does.
the other part of my crafty dream is that everyone becomes conscious of all of their actions.by asking things like: do i need this? do i want to support this company? how can i help? where does my passion lie?
it is all quite emo and i’m sure my parents would conclude that i’m now a hippie.
but it’s about more than that.
my background is firmly entrenched in punk rock. i was always cutting and pasting my own little zines (and then hiding them under my bed because i felt they were crap) or daydreaming about playing drums in the next bikini kill.
but i never felt like i was good enough at anything really to make my mark. it was only when i started learning to knit, crochet, embroider, screenprint, make books, felt, etc etc that i regained my own sense of self and that fire that punk rock put in my belly when i was 16.
craft to me is very punk rock and it’s hard to read article after article about how craft is just for ‘grannies.’ i love my grandmother who knits, she is kickass, but i’m also inspired daily by the way that punk rock influences my own brand of activism and craft. craftivism, if you will.
who knows, maybe you feel the same way, maybe not. but i can never ignore how punk rock shaped my crafting. i owe my creativity to it, and it’s so not just a trend. and some days i get homesick for people who understand that.
xo
Ahhh…. what a lovely and eloquent post. I agree that although certain crafts are very “mainstream” right now, in this society the whole concept of craft will never shake its DIY roots that make it essentially punkrock. And it is nice to think that maybe one day everyone will switch off the TV and make some mittens.
International Let’s Go Make Mittens in the Park Day?
i’m so happy to finally be finding people in this world who i can somewhat identify with…
I think I’m one of the few people i know who actully make things. I’m obssesed with it. I make a new thing almost every day. Mostly things from duckt tape and i love making armwamers so simple but fun! I hate how the stores like hotopic sell duckt tape wallets which don’t look like they were even made from duckt tape. I enjoy many thing from hotopic it but making things is much more fun and no one at school with copy my stly if i make it myself.
Bonjour