from the marvelous book of collective lists - An Exaltation of Larks by James Lipton
Recently when I decided I want to assemble "lines" of similar pieces that will "tell a story" when I lay them out on my table at the Contemporary Crafts Market in November, I wanted to try coming up with the names first and the designs after (perhaps *I* am the wrong way wren). So I've been writing down words and phrases that I like. That feel good in my mouth. That are evocative of an idea I want to convey. I have the idea that sometimes the words will match something that I've already created and sometimes they'll inspire a design or family of work. Sometimes, they might just make me smile when my designing mind is blank. As I re read the ones I've saved, I realize that some of them actually refer to someone else's work more than mine, but I'm keeping them on the list anyway.
It's an interesting way of working, non? I spend an hour or so in my Mother's 1934 edition of the Thesaurus (so much better than the online version) jotting down synonyms. And looking at them afterwards, pictures *do* appear in my mind's eye. Maybe if I read the book before bed, I'd dream galleries of jewelry. Here are a few of my recent additions to the list:
Collection Device
Memento
Vignette
Heritage
Pastorale
Nocturne
Voyager
Ephemera
Paramour
Dulcet
Ancestral
Parvenue
Past Perfect
I'd love to read some of your favorites.
4 comments:
Hi Lora, thanks for mentioning my little competition! Hope you'll enter your ideas.....I so often have a phrase or quotation that is my inspiration. More often than not, the name of the piece comes first for me! I like your words here - especially pastorale.... then I love the words bountiful, boundless and radiance
Love the word ancestral. Good images come to mind for that one. And I like Past Perfect but it sounds like the name of a band to me.
Just me in the MN this week. Mike and the dog are at home, I miss them something terrible.
What a great way to actively focus your designs... I might have to borrow this idea... different words, of course... :)
Feel free Laura. Although I did think of it myself (as opposed to reading about it) I'm pretty danged sure that there are others who use this method too. Nothing is original. And nothing of mine will ever be patented.
How's the bike ride coming along?
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