Friday 24 March 2017

Why We Craft...

The exhibition we have on currently at Salford Zine Library is called Make Do & Mend and is a celebration of us making Sugar Paper for over ten years and to showcase all the amazing creatives we have got to work with on covers for the zine.

It's also a celebration of crafts! We asked people why they craft and the answers ranged from wanting to learn skills to saving money to self care.
Similar to why Kandy and I craft.
Here's what we said....


I craft because I love to create. As far back as I can remember I have been crafting, making stuff for friends and family as well as lots of stuff for myself, often turning useless/worn-out things into useful things.

Growing up there were regular visits to the fabric stall on the market and to the Alladin’s cave like haberdashery (that I completely fell in love with). Fancy dress costumes were made not bought, and the cucumber monster and home-made cake were always a feature of any birthday in our house.  

As well as crafting and making novelty party food, we made things for fun and for gifts. In the holidays my Mum would have us baking, cross stitching, making peg dolls, tie-dying etc. Throughout my teens I continued to craft, making jewellery, clothes and curtains using craft as a form of self-expression. My work now revolves around making and the process of crafting something still excites me.    

In an increasingly manufacture driven and wasteful world I believe that D.I.Y and craft skills are more important than ever. We need to get the next generation crafting so they know that things dont just magically appear in shops and that you CAN make things yourself.

Craft is important to me because it's empowering, it allows you to create; whether it’s a fancy dress outfit made for a few quid, a patch made from an old worn-out band t-shirt that you treasure or a novelty cake for your BFF. Craft gives the option to mend your clothes and make them last longer, to make a special gift for a loved one and in so many ways, to express yourself. 

Kandy


When I thought about why I craft and make things I came up with a bunch of reasons, all bouncing round my head, then I stopped for a moment, organised my thoughts and realised, they could all be summed up in four reasons.

Craft as necessity
I guess this one could be split in two. Necessity in that you want to have something but can’t afford to buy it.
I grew up with very little money, my mum who grew up on a farm was really into home baking, sewing and a belief in doing it yourself. Wanna decorate, do it yourself, wanna fit a carpet, do it yourself, want a cake, do it yourself. She taught me many skills from a young age and whenever I wanted to gift a family member something I just made it. When I was a teenager with no money and a love for dressing up, I made my own weirdo clothes and accessories, like a budget Gregg Araki film.
But also necessity in that I NEED to be making stuff.
I’ve made stuff continuously since I was a child, it’s just something I’ve always done and something I have to do. If I’m not creating I feel like a part of me is missing, like my purpose is lost. Creating things, being able to take something that was floating around your brain into a physical thing.

Craft as skill sharing
All my craft skills were picked up along the way, self-taught, from my mum, from my granddad, a friend here a friend there. I love learning new skills and I love passing skills on.
I craft to spread the joy of it.
I volunteer at a youth centre and teach crafts to young people aged 8-11. I love that I get to skill share with a much younger generation than me and that traditional crafts are still engaging to young people.

Craft as art
The past few years I have been referring to myself as an artist. There are many reasons why it took me so long to give myself this title (class, education, skill amongst some of them) another one being that traditional crafts are so often frowned upon in the art world.
Recently there has been a rise in needle craft and yarn craft being taken seriously in the art world and it’s something I hope continues.
Traditional craft can be art.

Craft as activism
Whether that’s crafting because you want to avoid society’s consumerist culture, you want to reclaim crafts from ‘a woman’s place is in the home’ days of crafting, you want to empower yourself with a skill, you want to be self-sustainable, you want to get a message across, you want to support a cause, you want to take care of yourself.
Crafting can do it all.

These are the reasons why I craft.

Seleena

Tuesday 14 March 2017

More Make Do & Mend....

Our Make do & Mend exhibition is still on at Salford Zine Library until April 1st, but if you can't make it along, here are some pics....
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