Sticking to my knitting

I often worry that I don't specialise in anything. That's a nice way of describing my inability to become an expert in any one area. "Why can't you just pick ONE hobby??" was a lament from my First Husband as he tripped over yet another ball of wool or jar of water or tins of paint. It's been a nagging worry my whole life. Apart from many things, it feeds my impostor-syndrome like a mother-flipper.

Why can't I stick to one thing and get really good at it?

Depth can be inadequate without breadth... I always advise my people to read outside your field, everyday something.
— Jonathan Baron

In his most recent book, David Epstein explains why generalists thrive in an era of increasing specialisation. Range: How Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World gives example after example of people who have done well for having a broad set of interests. And "done well" as in "solved problems" - wicked problems. While this kind of breadth of interests isn't overtly encouraged IRL, it is valuable over a lifetime of challenges.

This isn't a book review, it's just me picking away at my own knitting again.

I've started doing that again too (not the picking, the knitting). And the patchwork, and the drawing, and I even had an inkling of interest in gardening yesterday having planted basil and kale and some other greenery while Googling how to make a raised garden to improve my plot.

I don't consider myself a particularly curious person. I don't ask probing questions of people. When meeting a new person after names and jobs or whatever is covered, I run out of things to say or ask or talk about. One part of me thinks being nosy is a rude thing, and the other part of me just isn't interested. As if I'll remember anything you say, anyway. Damn temporal lobe!

Don’t feel behind. Compare yourself to yourself yesterday, not to younger people who aren’t you. Don’t let anyone else make you feel behind.
— David Epstein

But I am interested in how things work; the process of getting something done; the challenge of figuring out a new or better way of doing something. Working in a team. Tik Tok. K-Pop. Fermenting. Weight lifting.

Puttering about with an idea is what I love best. Falling down rabbit holes is the most glorious thing in the world. I have been recently blessed with my own space to do a lot of that sort of thing. I've gradually taken over the basement and turned it into my own noodling space. It's not flash, but I've conquered it all. I have moved nearly all my "crap" down in my new play pen, and organised it just the way I like it. That's starting to ease the pressure of space upstairs too so there isn't much resistance to this situation at present.

I love having my stuff "to hand". The friction of looking for my tools when I need them drives me crazy. I love reaching for my scissors and they're right where they're supposed to be. My fabrics in the order I need them to be in. Computer cords plugged in where they're supposed to be. Paints in the cupboard. Guillotine left in the 'safe' position.

Last night after work I sewed - because my machine is set up permanently plugged in - finishing one quilt block and starting another. This weekend I'll be doing more of that, including some sewing for my grand daughter and some drawing for the Urban Sketchers group I'm in. I can leave stuff out, pick things up again, do 15 minutes here, 30 minutes there, 2 hours over there! I'll also be putting up a peg board for organising my tools, a cork board for pinning my ideas and a white board for listing my tasks.

You may never see my outside my play pen again!!

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A place of my own

Like all good things I "find" on the internet, Fox told me about an illustrator named @frannerd years and years ago. Fox was right, I did like and continue to enjoy watching @frannerd's videos, following her on Instagram and eventually supporting her on Patreon.

Fran Maneses aka @frannerd is originally from Chile who now lives and works in New York. I watch Fran's youtube.com video on Saturday mornings, curled up on the sofa, cradling a cup of hot coffee and watch her talk to me reflected in a mirror (she only recently purchased a camera with a flip screen). She walks the streets of Brooklyn, sketches, paints, screenprints pre-loved t-shirts, waters her plant, all the normal things a working artist in New York would do. When I can't spend a Saturday morning with Fran, either because of my schedule or hers, I miss her.

A good start to a Saturday is an @frannerd Saturday.

Since moving to NYC, Fran has secured studio space in Brooklyn and I have been coloured envious.

Her lovely NYC studio has caused me to look upon local abandoned or under-maintained industrial buildings with a day-dreamy view to have a converted warehouse-type art space of my own. I will need quite the square-footage to accommodate my "money is no object" equipment and layout to be fair, but what's the point of fantasy if it has limits.

Daydreaming about an art studio is lovely, but it's also a form of procrastination. For me, anyway. It's a way of avoiding the hard part, which is the actual doing of making. I've currently obsessed with quilting again. Each time I decide to work on one of my quilting projects, I need to haul my sewing machine, ironing board, cutting mat, etc out of the cupboard, set them up on the dining room table, rah rah rah and then put it all away again when I'm done or rather when I run out of time. My dream art studio has a whole dream area dedicated to my dream sewing room setup ($25,000 long arm quilting machine anyone?). If only, if only, if only I had a studio like Frans!

Start where you are

Cradling my coffee one Saturday morning watching Fran's weekly video I looked around and it dawned on me: I have the space to have my own art studio! I had always had it, it was just hard to see because of the clutter downstairs. I have a rumpus room full of my kitchen - basically. Boxes of kitchen equipment, pans, and other stuff I've not missed since moving it out for the new kitchen last year. If I moved all that stuff out and rearranged/tidied the space, I too could have a creative space! hashtag revelation!!

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First things first: furniture. I have a desk and a computer set-up down there where I work from home sometimes. I have a drawing table and organised my art supplies in a re-purposed hutch dresser. It just needed a good tidy, and that was half the rumpus room organised. The other half I decided to make it into a sewing space. To have my sewing machine set up permanently would be a dream!

A few Google searches later and I had a couple of IKEA tables being delivered the next day.

I moved the old kitchen boxes out and into the garage (ultimate dumping ground) swept, de-spidered and got the area ready. Tables arrived and were assembled and all quilting equipment moved into the space from various cubby-holes upstairs.

I NOW HAVE A STUDIO!!

So easy when you think about it. Starting where I was and with what I had cut all my daydreaming procrastination off at the knees and set me on a practical course of action.

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