Posts Tagged ‘ideas’

Creating white space


10 Jan

The two obvious prerequisites to any creative endeavor are first, making time to be creative and then second, making the most of our creative time. I learned a great deal from this article that was recently written up in the Harvard Business Review about how author Jim Collins creates regular “white space” for creative endeavors. It is important to note that Collins isn’t a painter, a novelist, or a musician. His creative work is to write books about business. This is important to note because it reaffirms the truth that all of us are creative, just in different ways. Creativity is in no way limited to the arts or to artistic endeavors. We can approach every aspect of life creatively, whether it’s our job, our work as a parent, or in any other endeavor in which we are involved.

If you don’t have time to read the entire article, (because you’re too busy being creative! Yeah!!) here is the most relevant excerpt:

“Jim took out a piece of paper and drew a picture of four blocks stacked atop each other. Pointing at the top block, he said, “I block out the morning from 8 am to noon to think, read and write. ” He unplugs everything electronic, including his Internet connection. Although he has a reputation for reclusiveness, when asked about this, he replies: “I’m not reclusive. But I need to be in the cave to work.”

After lunch, he spends his afternoon in the office with his researchers, or with clients. (His work looks different to an onlooker, who expects work time to be filled with meetings, phone calls and emails. Au contraire, he doesn’t want to “confuse activity with productivity.”) In the late afternoon he goes for a long run or rock climb, again to clear his mind. Then comes dinner, possibly more writing, and bed.

One of his favorite quotes comes from the famously disciplined French novelist Gustave Flaubert: “Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work.” For Collins, high-quality work requires long stretches of high-quality thinking. “White space,” as he calls it, is the prerequisite for fresh, creative thought. It’s the time that he spends with nothing scheduled, so that he can empty his mind, like the proverbial teacup, and refill it with new thought.

He aims to spend 100 days next year in the white space. “As a great teacher, Rochelle Myers, taught me, you can’t make your own life a work of art if you’re not working with a clean canvas,” he says. (Another smart bit of Collins philosophy: “Speak less. Say more.”)

Clearly, Collins lives different life than the rest of us because, as a best-selling author, he can afford to. (But even when he couldn’t afford to — before he became famous — he spent his time thinking and working on his first book, Built to Last, turning down consulting offers from large companies that wanted him to travel to them. And he credits that “time in the cave” spent thinking for his success.)

So he challenges the rest of us to “afford” white space time. He questions whether that frenetic pace is actually getting companies anywhere (indeed, frenetic companies are usually those in decline, as he points out in his recent book, How the Mighty Fall). At the end of his keynote speech, he exhorted the gathered HR managers to create their own white spaces — even if for only a half hour a day. I could practically hear everyone thinking, “Great idea. Love it. But I haven’t got time!”

Here’s to making some personal “white space” in 2010. Excuses are so 2009. Let this be the year that you start small and “afford” some white space to work on creativity. “If you must, you will.”

High Dynamic Range Imaging


13 Oct

I just learned about HDR (High Dynamic Range imaging) and it is totally cool! Do a search for “high dynamic range imaging” and you’ll see what I mean. I’d love to hear from anyone out there that might be using this process in their photography – it is really amazing. We live in an amazing world. Sometimes that is easy to forget. Click twice on the photos above for a small sample of the coolness. Now I want to learn the Photoshop tricks behind it. Love to learn!!

coming attractions


17 Aug

In no particular order, here is a very small representation of future posts and items for discussion…so start musing! Better yet, feel free to start a post about these or any other items you’d like to muse upon.

Alchemy
Tools – Moleskine,  etc.
Overcoming fear
Getting started
Sharing
The anatomy of a poem
Stories
Developing a network
Procrastination
Mentors
Making time to make stuff
joy in the journey
Mistakes
The process – learning in it, using what is learned later
Why something works/doesn’t work
Problems and why they are important
Children and creativity – what we can learn
Doesn’t matter what you make, just make something
Discipline
Choosing someone to smash what you made
Inspiration
Fatigue
Trusting your instincts
Positation – saying “yes!” to every idea without editing.


Be Mused

every fire needs a spark