Entries from March 1, 2008 - April 1, 2008
new interview up
New interview up at the Inspiration Boards Blog with illustrator and author J. Otto Seibold, or, as I get to call him, Jim.
art lesson: nature journal
Nature Journal Posts
Make a field bag from recycled clothing
Get closer to wildlife at the nature center
• • • • •
Spring has arrived and art class is moving outdoors.
We'll be working on a long warm-months natural journaling project.
If you're following along at home, you will need a sketchbook, pencil, colored pencils, watercolors (I like Prang), and an old water bottle.
First step will be to make a field bag to carry our supplies!
While you're going through the winter clothes and deciding what to discard or donate, keep an eye out for an old pair of jeans or khakis — they make awesome bags. Check in next week for instructions!
If you send me a link, I will make a blogroll of people who are in our virtual class. And don't forget to join the Camp Creek Art Flickr group! All you need to participate in Flickr is a Yahoo e-mail. Any questions? E-mail me!
sharing our work
The marvelous Estea of Robot•Jumping•Rope shared these observational drawings her children did with the Camp Creek Art Lessons Flickr group. Fantastic!
All the art lessons so far are over there in the sidebar, so get a pencil and get to work!
working on: organizing reading material
Yesterday I mentioned my new eco-safe widget that allows you to print anything on this blog (I imagine you want to do this all the time) and then you can save it, read it, clutter up your hard drive with it — whatever you like.
I tried it out myself and it seemed great, then I went to my e-mail and waited … and waited … and waited … Well. Not such a great service if your PDF file never arrives! Those of you to whom I refer as "techno savvy" probably know how this story ends. Yes, the file was in my bulk/spam folder. Where it always is. I never learn. Moral: Add Eco-Safe to your contacts, and enjoy.
Here are two more useful tools for saving things to read later:
• Firefox add-on Read It Later — nifty cool, gives you a sort of impermanent set of bookmarks for things you want to read when you have time but not save forever. I need this, as I have about 608 things bookmarked — not even counting my del.icio.us links. Sigh.
• Instapaper — I like this. It takes all the things I want to read later and makes them into a little newspaper deal for me. Check it out.
working on: being nice to the earth
Eco-Safe is a great little widget for allowing people an alternative way to save content rather than printing to paper .. check it out in my sidebar, and get your own here!
working on: side projects

Interviewing Maira Kalman for the Inspiration Boards Blog was a thrill.
The blog is one of my many side projects. It helps me stay focused to have a lot of little fires to maintain.
If I just had one project — albeit my main project — in front of me, I would go clean a closet or organize a drawer. At the end of a month I'd be very organized but my project would languish.
Side projects give me something to fiddle with that keep me in front of the laptop and exert a gentle pressure back to my main project. They are like secondary moons whose collective gravitational pull keeps me in orbit around my main project.
Because it's a side project, I don't have much fear about failing with it. Failed side projects get swept under the rug or out the door and forgotten, replaced with shiny, new side projects.
Because it's a side project, I don't worry too much about preplanning it to death before I get the job done. The point of a side project is to always have something ready to slap a coat of paint on or drive around the block. If you've ever known someone who restores vintage cars, they typically have a gorgeous — if nonfunctional — sports car in the garage and they drive around in a beat-up Chevy. My sports car is my main project; I drive around the Interwebs in my side projects.
There's no downside to the side project. If you succeed, it's very encouraging and invigorates your "real" work. If you fail, it's always a learning experience — you can't fail without learning something — and you can apply that to your "real" work.
Too many times, we artificially hold ourselves back from our true capabilities. We set "realistic" goals. We hedge things a bit so we can avoid the sting of failure.
Side projects allow me to simultaneously extend my grasp and get used to failing and rebounding. It makes me more confident, because I learn that failure really isn't so bad. It makes me ambitious, because success is so fun.
When I asked Maira Kalman for an interview, the worst thing that could have happened was, she could have said no. A good reminder that most people are nice, and you can't achieve anything if you don't try.
For many people (most people?), side projects would probably simply function as a distraction keeping them from working on their most important goal. They dilute your attention. However, they also dilute your fear, and they gang up to help attract you back to your desk and get you in work mode. It's easy to procrastinate with one big project; it's a lot harder with a handful of mini-projects. There's always something bite-size to work on, and then you're in work mode and you might as well look at your main project.
Bite-size successes whet your appetite for the main course. And .. that's about it for metaphors for me this morning. Have a great day!
The world stands aside to let any man pass who knows where he is going. — Spencer's Mountain


