Carla Sinclair Welcome

>> Carla Sinclair is editor-in-chief of CRAFT magazine.

carla@craftzine.com

The Crafting of Craft:

Welcome to the new magazine for the new craft movement.

Originally, CRAFT magazine was and KnitKnit to build community, exchange ideas, and

supposed to be a one-off craft-themed sell their projects. They’re also networking at real-life

issue of MAKE magazine, featuring craft/DIY fairs like Bazaar Bizarre, Renegade Craft

some of the cool but “craftier” DI Y projects that Fair, Stitch, Swap-O-Rama-Rama, and Felt Club.

enthusiastic readers sent in. When MAKE had its first Maker Faire in San Mateo,

For instance, Ph. D. student Leah Buechley from Calif., last April, we were blown away by the attention

University of Colorado at Boulder sent us photos our special craft areas received. An excited crowd

of her programmable LED tank top that flashes the swarmed our craft demonstrations (like how to use

Game of Life. This project definitely has the elements a Gocco printing machine), our tech-geek-meets-

of a MAKE project — it involves soldering, LED haute-couture fashion show (featuring Diana Eng’s

technology, and programming. But there are also amazing clothing), and craft booths that offered

craft elements that don’t quite jibe with MAKE’s handmade treasures such as reed switch necklaces,

harder-edged sensibility: it requires a sewing machine, skull-patterned baby clothes, one-eyed monster dolls,

sewing skills, fabric, and a pattern. And unlike the espresso-charged soap, and scads of other items.

projects in MAKE, where the end result is more about It was during the Faire that we decided to turn

function than form, it’s essential for this project to be CRAFT into its own quarterly magazine — a sister

as aesthetically attractive as it is useful. publication to MAKE. This first issue of CRAF T

We also received a bunch of simpler projects that has over 20 projects, including how to make an

had MAKE’s DIY tech flavor but, again, also involved LED shirt, how to embroider a skateboard, how to

“craftier” skills, materials, and an emphasis on the convert a dud pair of shoes into awesome knitted

visual outcome. Some of these include hacking boots, and how to make a felted iPod cocoon.

action figures, knitting steel medieval armor, making Beyond projects, CRAFT is also filled with features

notebooks out of floppy disks, and building lamps on topics such as crocheting math equations and

out of vintage kitchenware. the fascination with knitted robots, zombies, and

While we were putting our CRAF T issue together, other creepy-cute creatures.

we became aware of the exploding craft movement The new craft movement encourages people to

taking place all around us. This DI Y renaissance make things themselves rather than buy what thou-

embraces crafts while pushing them beyond sands of others already own. It provides new venues

traditional boundaries, either through technology, for crafters to show and sell their wares, and it offers

irony, irreverence, and creative recycling, or by using original, unusual, alternative, and better-made goods

innovative materials and processes. to consumers who choose not to fall in step with

Crafters are creating websites like Craftster, Get mainstream commerce. Crafting empowers people by

Crafty, Crafty Chica, The Anti-Craft, The Church of allowing them to create something useful. If you need

Craft, Sew Darn Cute, Hobby Princess, Extreme Craft, something, just make it yourself. And make sure you The Craft Mafias, The Switchboards, SuperNaturale, check out craftzine.com for more crafty resources. ×

References:

mailto:carla@craftzine.com

http://craftzine.com

Archives