Crafty Things At LETS Market

I went to my first Adelaide LETS market yesterday.  Here is a picture of some of the things I sold.

 

craft stall

Craft Stall- hats, drink bottle covers, face washers

 

– Do you have skills to share?
– Do you have time to help others?
– Would you be prepared to exchange your skills, goods and services with others?

The Local Exchange Trading System (LETS) is a non-profit community organisation which enables its members to exchange goods and services with each other without using money. LETS provides a means by which people’s experience, talents, knowledge, labour, energy, time and resources can be used to benefit themselves and others.
LETS enables you to choose from any of the goods or services offered by its members, without requiring you to make a direct exchange.
LETS is a system of community exchange, rather than individual barter.

https://sites.google.com/site/adelaideletssa/

Craftifesto/Hacking/Making/Sharing

I was looking for a copy of the Craftifesto and came across Barbara Smith’s article Hack/er/ed/ing on The Journal of Modern Craft website.

 

Craftifesto

Craftifesto

Barbara says, “At the American Craft Council Conference Creating a New Craft Culture, keynote speaker Richard Sennett spoke briefly about the distressing doctrine of user friendly and intuitive products which, he believes, perpetuate laziness and the disinterested use of a “thing.” I began to wonder if “the hack” of material goods, or what I then understood to be “hacking,” was an individual’s direct reaction to this need for involvement in the goods we consume; goods which we supposedly desire to be unable to fix.”

I’m definitely not the norm then because I’ve always wondered how things work and what’s inside something. I love being able to repair things or make my own, to make do and use what’s around me.

Barbara expresses some of the things I’ve been thinking about lately and puts them much more eloquently than I could.

“While “hacking” has always existed in some form, for our purposes, the clearest foundation of the Maker/Hacker movement is found in the tinkering of ham radio operators and the modding of cars in the 1920’s. In 1969, the earliest incarnation of the internet appeared. The 1970’s saw major universities utilizing email applications to connect individuals. This development later gave birth to a community of computer and software hackers who operated under the philosophy of hacker ethics; a ideology which included collaborative working methods, open exchange of information, and challenging bureaucracies who sought to limit this free exchange of information. In 1991, The World Wide Web first appeared, making our current social condition of connectivity a little less than 20 years old (Chandler). This period also produced the new media boom, or the creation of self-authoring software, which allowed individuals to edit their own photographs and videos, blog, and create web pages. These advances in technology resulted in a lasting cultural and structural impact. Society embraced the heightened sense of interactivity and self-authorship desktop computing allowed. By 1999, new media, the dot-com boom, open source technologies like the Linux operating system, and hacker ethics officially reached the mainstream.”

It was in 2000 that I first became interested in the Linux operating system and 2003 before I started using it full time.

I agree with Barbara that without an audience and the ability to share things so easily a lot of the current maker/hacker movement wouldn’t have happened. I use Instructables, Facebook, my local Hackerspace and here on my blog to publicise and share some of the things I make. Only one of those four is a face to face meet up.

You can read the rest of Barbara’s article here.  It is well worth the read.