Hey!
For anyone following this blog, or being lead here via Tumblr, you may be noticing my absence of content. Well, work has given me quite a lot to work on at the moment. I work for a community college, converting textbooks for disabled students, and the new term is always the busiest time for us. This week will be a short break, and things will start in full-force again next week!
In the meantime, I'd like to hear what you guys do to help inspire yourself!
Showing posts with label examples. Show all posts
Showing posts with label examples. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Friday, January 4, 2013
Be A Part Of The Group That Redefines The Industry
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Master-mind groups work |
#10: Be a part of the group that redefines the industry.
Put together a Master-Mind group and commit to it like a shotgun wedding.Master-mind groups are where you get a handful of like-minded people who are having some success of varying degrees and meet on a regular basis. It could be anywhere from 2 to 15 people, but consistency is key.
In these groups, you should plan to meet every week, or once a month, but no less. When you meet, make sure that you have a clearly defined schedule for the meeting. This is how I work mine:
- Go over your current project status
- Talk about what you hope to accomplish by the next meeting
- Group discussion on connections, resources, and ideas for the goal
With a master-mind group, you can hold each other accountable for your work. So if I make plans to write a chapter in my novel by next week, the group will shame me if I don't provide them with the chapter.
Often times, we end the group with some kind of team game to wind down. Have fun, and do the work you set out to do!
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Thursday, January 3, 2013
Working Together In Person Is No Longer Necessary
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Connect across the world |
O.K. GO
I'm sure you've heard of this band, or seen their video on YouTube by now. They started by collaborating on the internet.
Internet collaboration isn't just geared towards music. Many, MANY people collaborate over the internet all the time to create their work with others.
If you don't know how to get in touch with people to collaborate with, you can look on many different websites specializing in different industries as a social network:
Vimeo or YouTube for film
DeviantART or Behance.net for art
SoundCloud or LastFM for audio
and many more. Just do a Google search!
You also have things like forums, and other social network groups. Facebook, for instance, has so many groups it's insane. Join in on some of these groups and contribute. Make friends with the people on there and get working!
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Friends Are Great Sources Of Ideas
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Double-team creativity! |
#8: Friends are great sources of ideas
Friends! We have them. Everyone. Even if you think you're alone, you're not. You have someone you talk to online, in class, at work. Talk to them!
Now, you don't have to say "Hey, give me your ideas for what I can do." If you want, you can. But more organic conversations yield the best ideas.
As an example, I'm working on a story of a cupcake miner. This idea came around from jokingly threatening my girlfriend I'll send her to the cupcake mines if she kept punching me. This gave me the idea of a big, burly miner with a serious look on his face mining for cupcakes.
Ideas also don't have to be something obvious.
Imagine this scenario:
Todd is hanging out with his friends and they're talking about a video game. This particular video is really fun to play, but the music doesn't fit the feel. So Todd has the idea to write an album specifically to fit the feel of this game.
Enjoy hanging out with your friends and absorb their awesome. Then utilize it!
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Look Through Every Eye But Yours
#7: Look through every eye but yours
We use our eyes all the times, literally and figuratively. Our perspective is always with us, and we tend to forget that others will not see things from our perspective, and we also forget that our perspectives change quite often.
Try looking at things from the perspective of friends and family, of a child, a bird, a couch, everything!
If you're a guitarist and you write songs with a lot of crazy guitar riffs, why not try something simple and give the drums more focus?
Dancer? Choreograph your moves as if you're right in front of the audience, instead of on a large stage.
Different perspectives can give you much so much more depth with what you do.
Monday, December 31, 2012
Negative Space Gives More Focus To The Content
#6: Negative space gives more focus to the content.
In creativity, we often pack in way too much content and forget about... space.
Spacing singles out the content that matters, and I'll give you some examples shortly. But what you need to understand is that even a little bit of space can create a huge impact. Especially if that space is different than expected.
For a written example:
"It has come to my attention that you have forgotten why you're doing what you're doing. In fact... I believe you threw that purpose aside."
In this example, the space after "in fact" emphasizes the thought, giving it a slightly bigger punch. The space could have held much longer by adding descriptions of the speaker looking at the accused. The longer the space, the greater the emphasis.
For music, I saw Disturbed live and they played their biggest hit, "Down With The Sickness" as an encore. The whole arena was dark, everyone chanting, then you hear the drummer play a solo. Lights come on underneath him as he plays: the crowd screams. Then the lights go off again. The screams die down. And then... the drummer plays the intro of "Down With The Sickness." Screams erupt like crazy. Then he stops. The crowd gets louder. He starts again, this time with the bassist. The crowd gets louder. They stop.
They start again, this time with the guitarist out on a lit catwalk. Still just the intro riff. Then they stop.
They stop longer then before.
Then you hear David Draiman come into the song, the full band comes in, the arena lights up, and you see Draiman on a platform in the middle of the arena.
The pauses gave tension and anticipation that made the song feel so much more epic. Space can add a lot to your content.
In creativity, we often pack in way too much content and forget about... space.
Spacing singles out the content that matters, and I'll give you some examples shortly. But what you need to understand is that even a little bit of space can create a huge impact. Especially if that space is different than expected.
For a written example:
"It has come to my attention that you have forgotten why you're doing what you're doing. In fact... I believe you threw that purpose aside."
In this example, the space after "in fact" emphasizes the thought, giving it a slightly bigger punch. The space could have held much longer by adding descriptions of the speaker looking at the accused. The longer the space, the greater the emphasis.
For music, I saw Disturbed live and they played their biggest hit, "Down With The Sickness" as an encore. The whole arena was dark, everyone chanting, then you hear the drummer play a solo. Lights come on underneath him as he plays: the crowd screams. Then the lights go off again. The screams die down. And then... the drummer plays the intro of "Down With The Sickness." Screams erupt like crazy. Then he stops. The crowd gets louder. He starts again, this time with the bassist. The crowd gets louder. They stop.
They start again, this time with the guitarist out on a lit catwalk. Still just the intro riff. Then they stop.
They stop longer then before.
Then you hear David Draiman come into the song, the full band comes in, the arena lights up, and you see Draiman on a platform in the middle of the arena.
The pauses gave tension and anticipation that made the song feel so much more epic. Space can add a lot to your content.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
The Past Is Full Of Great Examples
Everyone succeeding now is inspired - at least in part - by those before them. Everyone that succeeded before now was inspired - at least in part - by those before them. So on. And so forth.
There are many great examples in the past of innovation, success, stability, ideas, and so much more that you really shouldn't ignore it. Take a hint from history for a bit!
Turn back the clock and bring in a bit of class from the older days.
There are many great examples in the past of innovation, success, stability, ideas, and so much more that you really shouldn't ignore it. Take a hint from history for a bit!
- ,Music has classical composers.
- Film has classic play-writes.
- Authors, of course, have classic authors.
- Modern dancers have ballerinas and ethnic dancers.
Turn back the clock and bring in a bit of class from the older days.
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the past is full of great examples
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