8 responses to “Do You Honour Your Own Vision?”

  1. Lisa Orgler

    What a wonderful article! I think we sometimes give up too easily. This is such inspiration to keep believing in ourselves.

  2. Jennifer

    I have recently jumped neck deep into a project that started with a vision.

    The circumstances were ideal. I had lost my job as a costume designer and had begun the job search, but nobody would call for an interview. In the meantime I was busy developing several back-burner projects, including a concept for a spherical cat bed design. I had worked with this concept a bit earlier, developing a few prototypes, and my current unemployment allowed me more time to explore this idea. My product got posted on the ModernCat.net blog in mid-June and the response convinced me that I had developed a viable product. I’m currently wrapping up the last little technical details of starting a legitimate business and will begin promoting very soon.

    All of this is happening as the result of a brainstorm and a vision. I already had the idea and the pattern making skills to create the device, and was so excited about the potential that I’ve been able to remain focused on the vision.

  3. Erin Prais-Hintz

    Your vision may start out as a dream. But without a plan, action steps, it will remain only that. A dream. And sometimes it takes a ‘village’ to help you raise that vision.

    I had a vision to develop a line of components that I would like to use in my own jewelry but also that other artisan jewelry designers would like to use. I adore using other artists’ beads and I wanted to be counted among art bead artists. I wanted these pieces to have a message that was powerful and a sense of playfulness to them. I embarked on a journey with a plan courtesy of the Working Artist Initiative group that I joined (a pilot program of the Intl Arts Movement) back in September. It was their help in honing my vision and stating my action plan that spurred me on.

    I decided after I had the concept that it wasn’t so much the media as the message. So I tried different media from metal to etching to stamping to resin. And then a totally unexpected twist came when I was resisting the planned steps to do etching (obviously, my resistance was speaking to me) and abandoned all for playing with polymer clay after reading a little tutorial. And it just flowed from there.

    I got custom orders the first day out. I developed a special line just for a fundraiser and have others similar. I made jewelry with the pieces for publication that is just now hitting the newsstands (I am the ‘cover girl’ for the Fall issue of Stringing magazine with the first charm I made! Woot!). I set a goal of selling 100 of them by the end of May. I came pretty close. In the meantime they were picked up by a Buyers’ Guide of the best beads, and I even started a sampler club for people to jump on board and give them a try with deliveries every 3-, 6-, 9- or 12-months. That has kept me going doing new things and trying out new sizes, colors and finishes.

    But it all started with the vision that I had of meaningful jewelry components. Now I am on a path to a new and better place my original vision didn’t take me but I am ready to go there.

    Thank you for always being an inspiration and for writing so eloquently exactly the message I need to hear when I need it most.

    Enjoy the day!
    Erin

  4. mary anne radmacher

    Jean’s advice may not be commercially viable but it’s spirit-viable:

    Listen carefully to first criticisms made of your work. Note just what it is about your work that critics don’t like — then cultivate it. That’s the only part of your work that’s individual and worth keeping.
    All from Jean Cocteau, 1889 – 1963

  5. Steven Davis

    Liz -

    I really like the look of your cards, have you considered building them/expanding them into a deck for a card game? (not necessarily a standard deck) or images for a board game?

    My new venture is about creating original, heirloom quality games and I’m interested in working with graphically gifted artists!

    Beautiful work will find its home.

    Steve

  6. Swirly

    Oh I looooove this! I’ve learned to have a clear “big picture” vision of where I want to go, but be incredibly flexible with how I get there!

  7. L'élephant Rose

    [...] Do you honor your own vision? via scoutiegirl [...]

  8. kathryn

    i am sooooo excited about a few ideas i am working on…and yes they have flowed into something more than the original idea (which I LOVE!). and you know what…even when i am done and ready to put it out there into the world, and it doesn’t succeed, i had a blast creating it!! i often think that i am more into just creating for myself and if it sells it sells rather than trying to create to please a certain market…that is just not who i am.

    ps…loved this post (subject) and a similar one on christine miller’s blog. love hearing real, authentic, heartfelt honest posts like these!

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