Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘maker’

052917--crocheted-tree-Stockholm

Photos: Suzanne and John’s Mom.
Crocheted tree in Stockholm, 2017.

Working with your hands, creating something that is all you — how satisfying that can be! Today’s story is on the latest research showing that that can be good for you and the people around you.

As Nicola Davis wrote at the Guardian, “Winston Churchill had painting, Judi Dench is famous for her rude embroidery and Tom Daley has been known to knit at the Olympics. Now researchers say we could all benefit from creative endeavors and that such pursuits have a bigger influence on life satisfaction than having a job.

“While arts and crafts have long been used to aid mental health, experts said most research has looked at their effect on patients rather than the general population, and tend to look at specific activities.

“However, the researchers have now said such interests could be an important tool for improving public health in general.

“Dr Helen Keyes, a co-author of the research from Anglia Ruskin University, said: ‘It’s quite an affordable, accessible and ultimately popular thing for people to do. And that’s key. You’re not going to be shoving something down people’s throats that they don’t want to do.’

“Writing in the journal Frontiers in Public HealthKeyes and colleagues reported how they analyzed data from more than 7,000 people aged 16 or over who took part in the face-to-face ‘taking part survey’ by the UK Department for Culture, Media and Sport between April 2019 and March 2020.

“As part of the survey participants were asked to rate various aspects of their well-being on 10-point scales, report whether they took part in arts or crafts, and provide demographic details.

“The team found that just over 37% of participants reported taking part in at least one art or craft activity in the past 12 months – ranging from painting to pottery and photography. …

“The results revealed that people who engaged with creating arts and crafting had greater ratings for happiness, life satisfaction and feeling that life was worthwhile than those who did not, even after taking into account other factors known to have an impact – including age, gender, deprivation, poor health, and employment status. …

“Among other results the team found engaging in arts and crafts was associated with an increase in happiness on a par with aging by 20 years (as Keyes notes, well-being goes up slightly with age), while the sense that life was worthwhile was more strongly associated with crafting than being in employment.

“Keyes said [the reults] might reflect that not everybody is in a job they find fulfilling, while people often have a sense of mastery or ‘flow’ when undertaking arts and crafts – experiencing control, achievement and self-expression. …

“Keyes said smaller clinical trials have suggested engaging in arts and crafts can increase well-being. Keyes also acknowledged the increases in well-being associated with creating arts and crafting were very small – on average engaging in such activities was only linked with a 2% higher rating for the feeling that life was worthwhile. But, she said, the results remained meaningful at a population level. …

“Keyes said that backing such activities would offer a simpler route for governments to improve the nation’s well-being than other factors that are known to have a big effect. …

“ ‘But it’s a really quite cheap, easy, accessible thing for us to engage people in.’ ”

What was the last craft you tried your hand at? I made a pottery vase.

More at the Guardian, here. No paywall.

I used to make collage greeting cards.

Read Full Post »

Photo: Seattle Miniature Show.

One of the many small challenges of our downsizing process has been what to do with Suzanne’s elaborate dollhouse, one that I ordered (even before she was born) from a talented high school student written up in a local paper.

It’s not that there aren’t plenty of people who would want a dollhouse that has wallpaper and electric lights, but maybe Suzanne still wants it. She’s not sure. The charm of miniatures is long-lasting.

Emma Orlow wrote about this charm recently at the New York Times. “Moments before 10 a.m., a security guard thanked the crowd for being cooperative.

“When the clock struck the hour, it became clear why: The doors of the Marriott Chicago O’Hare conference center opened, and hundreds of attendees, a majority of whom were over the age of 60, bee-lined as fast as they could to the booths.

“Many had studied the color-coded map ahead of time listing each booth’s location and came prepared with a shopping plan — a scene that could easily be mistaken for a Black Friday sale. Instead, it was the Chicago International Miniatures Show.

“Despite the gathering touting itself as ‘the World’s No. 1 Dollhouse Miniatures Show,’ there aren’t many actual dollhouses. Attendees instead sift through thousands of tiny objects that fill these tiny homes: miniature sponges, chocolate fondue fountains, rocking chairs, barbecue sets, Tupperware containers or fly swatters.

“The Tom Bishop show, as many attendees call it, is considered by its founder, Mr. Bishop, to be the largest dollhouse miniatures event in the world. Numbers appear to support that claim. This year, over 250 vendors traveled from 21 countries and 35 states. …

“Mr. Bishop estimates he has done over 500 miniature shows around the world, though in recent years he has downsized to only Chicago, which has been a continuous stop for nearly 40 years. Even the hotel itself is personal for Mr. Bishop: It’s where he and his wife, Leni, 77, spent the first night of their honeymoon.

“In 1977, the duo relocated from Chicago to Margate, Fla., where they opened their dollhouse store, Miniland, before closing it in 1984 to focus their attention on traveling conventions. Mr. Bishop, who also worked for American Airlines for 17 years, was inspired to create his own show after attending others that ‘weren’t run very well,’ he said. …

“Teri, 77, of Teri’s Mini Workshop, who declined to give her last name, said she wouldn’t have been able to showcase her miniature nacho cheese machines, plates of gefilte fish or medical supplies (about $10) had a booth not dropped out last minute. She hoped her soft power would be her low pricing, in contrast to some other tables, where pieces can go for hundreds of dollars a pop.

“If a collector wants something one of a kind, it might sell out on the first day, said Becky Evert, 68, a customer who had traveled from Denver with friends for the event. ‘Did I come with a budget? Yes,’ she said. ‘Did I stay to it? No.’ Of her seven years in attendance, it was the largest crowd she had ever seen.

“Beth Pothen, 42, who runs Mountain Creek Miniatures and is a full-time postal worker, is a second-generation miniaturist, making items like goth furniture and Christmas cookie trays (she got her start at a Girl Scouts craft fair). She drove from Spokane, Wash., for the convention and hoped to recoup the cost of travel and labor, and then some, she said. Individual tables cost $325, and some opt to have two at their booth, according to Mr. Bishop.

“While there’s value in breadth like that of Ms. Pothen’s, others distinguish themselves with a more niche focus. Kristin Castenschiold, 41, of Heartfelt Canines in Green Village, N.J., made a name for herself selling miniature dogs on Etsy — ‘I get some of the hair from a friend who is a pet groomer,’ she said — and has since expanded to all kinds of furry friends, miniature light-up aquariums and trompe l’oeil cat litter boxes.

“Margie Criner, 53, of Chicago’s Itty Bitty Mini Mart, makes miniatures as part of her full-time fine art practice (she’s currently on display at the traveling show ‘Small is Beautiful‘), but wanted a way to make her work more accessible. Her tiny items, which include translucent Jell-O and teensy records from the rock band Television, are inspired by items she had growing up.

“Ms. Criner is a part of a new generation of miniature makers, following in the footsteps of artists like Laurie Simmons, bringing the genre out from the home, into the gallery — with designs more modern and cheeky than the antiquarian selections that once came to define the miniature world.

“While it can be hard to stand out, everyone described the world of miniature selling and buying as quite collaborative and joyful.”

More at the Times, here.

Read Full Post »