Search Results for: creative check in

Creative Building Reuse

Yesterday, Parade magazine published an article on a creative building transformation that has taken place outside St. Louis, where a struggling enclosed shopping mall has been turned into a thriving arts center. If you haven’t read it yet, check out Can Art Save a Mall?

It’s a good example of how an existing building, and once popular destination, can be reinvented instead of torn down. One of my other favorite creative building reuses is the Torpedo Factory Art Center in Alexandria, VA. Once an actual torpedo factory during the early part of last century, the building now houses three floors of working artist studios, galleries, an art school, and a museum.

As the economy struggles and more buildings become and remain vacant, I wonder what other creative building reuses will emerge.

Image Parade.com

Cleveland is Creative

Although, I have known this for awhile, the rest of the world is just catching up and realizing that Cleveland is creative. Featured as one of Fast Company’s most creative cities, Cleveland joins other national cities like San Francisco and New York and international cities Taipei and Vancouver.

While the article focuses on the creative reuse of land in the city, there are so many other things here that make Cleveland creative and just a cool place to live.

  • Check out Cleveland.

Image Courtesy of Fast Company

Twitter Tips for Creatives

I am a recent convert to Twitter. I resisted the temptation to join, because like most people, I didn’t understand the benefits of tweets.

Last month, I finally took the plunge and joined Twitter. Once on the site, I immediately got hooked on finding other creatives to follow and reading their tweets and checking out their links.

I also found this article on Tweetable Art: 10 Twitter Tips for Artists. Some of the suggestions like linking to works in progress and your blog are pretty standard social media marketing, but I really like the idea of starting a collector’s club by setting your account to private and offering discounts to those who follow you. Don’t miss the comments section where there are even more tips.

Your Ultimate Playbook for Success: Unlock Your Creative Genius

As I mentioned in a previous post, I am a huge fan of the Big Idea on CNBC. Last night just reaffirmed why I think it’s such a great show. The topic was creativity – as you all know something I am quite passionate about.

The show highlighted how to tap into your own creativity plus how creativity is the currency of the future and featured some prominent creativity experts like Robert Epstein and Richard Florida.

One segment even featured the Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize encouraging teams to design more fuel efficient cars for a cross country road adventure. The collaborative power of crowds and teams is a new area of creativity that is being explored and something I am extremely interested in too.

Creative Problem Solving

After reading Jack’s Notebook, I’ve become more interested in creative problem solving (CPS). It’s definitely a tool worth checking out for solving problems in both life and work with many applications.

Cans Get Creative For a Cause

In another life, I used to work and teach simultaneously in 2 architecture museums in Washington, DC. Although, I don’t have a degree in architecture, like many people assumed at the time, I do however have a passion for the built environment.

Another organization with a similar passion, Canstruction enlists competing teams of architects and engineers to create sculptures out of canned food, which are later donated to local food banks for distribution to those in need.

Spring Clean Your Creativity

Do you clean your house when spring arrives? Why not clean your creativity too?  Spring is the optimal time to revisit and tidy up all aspects of your creativity and creative practice from your physical to your mental and psychic spaces.

After a long winter, our creativity may be stuck in the doldrums. I know for me, winter is a hibernation and incubation time. It’s the time where most of my creative ideas are formed and shaped. Spring is the time I make them bloom.

Here some tips to spring clean your creativity:

Physical space: This is the first place I start. I believe that creativity thrives with a blank canvas. Begin by clearing the the clutter. Remove everything from your work space, and I mean everything. Wipe down the surface with a damp cloth.

Now that you have a clean surface, slowly add things back to it  while being mindful of what you truly need. Toss out things like dried paints or brushes or other tools that no longer work for you. Recycle any paper scraps that you don’t need. Finally, organize the rest in a way that make sense for you.

Additional ideas:

  • Add some plants to your space. According to research conducted at Texas A&M University, adding potted plants and flowers to your office can significantly enhance problem-solving and creative thinking skills.
  • Paint your ceiling blue. According to research out of the University of Minnesota, people in rooms with 10 foot high ceilings were found to have more abstract thoughts than those, who focused more on specific details, in 8 foot high ceiling rooms.

physical space

Mental space: Next work on your mental space. Sit in a quiet place and reflect on the creative ideas that are filling your mind at this moment. Yes, I realize there might be a lot.

Take out pen, crayon or pencil and paper – or voice record app and get them all out. You can list them, mind map them or whatever method works for you. Capture all your current project ideas and inspiration. Next assign deadlines to them. These can be to finish them the next day or the next year, but whatever they are, mark them in your calendar.

Additional ideas:

psychic space

Psychic space: Finish up cleaning your creativity by revisiting the love letter you wrote to your creativity. Remind yourself that you ARE creative.

Often as creators, we let ourselves believe that we are not good enough to create. That’s simply not true. There is no correct way to be creative. It’s a not a destination but rather a journey we are all uniquely travelling. Remove those limiting beliefs about your creativity for once and for all.

  • Get inspired and try something new. Try my top 10 Creative Cures to help you explore new ideas and techniques. Do them all or do a few. While there is no formula for sparking creativity, there are small things that can help shift your perspective.

What will you do to spring clean your creativity?

Even More of My Favorite Creativity Blogs


It’s that time of year again. Yes, the time time where I recommend my favorite creativity blogs to read. I hope you’ll check them out and grow to enjoy them as much as I do. Also, have a look at my lists from 2009 and 2010 for further inspiration.

The Artist’s Road
I am so glad I discovered this blog and even more so, it’s wonderfully creative author. Patrick delves deep into the creative experience and topics that other blogs just gloss over.

Cup of Creativi-Tea
Another kindred spirit I found this year is Thien-Kim or you can just call her Kim – I do! Her creativity blog covers everything from inspiration to food to crafts. Truly one of the most well-rounded blogs on creativity.

Creative Instigation
I am not sure why it took me this long to add Jan’s blog to this list, because it’s probably one of the first creative blogs I started reading. Jan’s brevity is something I really admire, as well as her creativity tips, which are inspired by everything and anything and are (in my opinion) pure genius.

Creative Liberty
The best part of Liz’s blog is her interviews with artists and creators, and I am not saying that just because I was once featured. Her interviews really give you an inside glimpse into the various creative processes out there.

The Creative Practice
Kira’s blog is relatively new to me, but her content is outstanding and worth checking out. She dives into expression and creativity with a sense of thoroughness like no one else.

  • What creativity blog(s) are you reading?

More of My Favorite Creativity Blogs


Last year I created a compilation of the creativity blogs that I read and enjoy. Now, I’d like to share a few more blogs that I’ve discovered since that last post.

Creative Something
This blog is written for the creative person in all of us. Tanner Christensen covers a wide range of creative ideas and specializes in inspiration and motivation.

Creative Every Day
Leah Piken Kolidas is the creator of the Creative Every Day Challenge and Art Every Day Month Challenege. An artist, who inspires readers to live a more creative life, Leah encourages readers to join her in her Challenges.

ABCcreativity
A whimsical blog filled with tips, inspiration and motivation for anyone on a creative journey. Andrea Schroeder is a multi-talented artist with a passion for the spiritual side of creating.

Brainzooming
The brain child behind this blog is innovator extraordinaire Mike Brown, who takes a practical approach to creativity, focusing on it from an implentation and strategic perspective.

Jamie Ridler Studios
A creative self-development coach based in Canada. Jamie Ridler’s blog is filled with creative inspiration. Also check out her amazing Creative Living podcasts.

  • What’s your favorite blog on creativity?

My Favorite Creativity Blogs

People always ask what creativity blogs I read on a regular basis. So I’ve put together a brief list to answer that question.

Creative Perch
Dee Wilcox is the author of this blog that has the simple goal to inspire creativity and encourage innovation. I love Dee’s ability to balance practical creativity tips with real life examples of public art, especially guerrilla art.

The Fertile Unknown
This blog written by creativity consultant extraordinaire Michelle James explores the process of creative emergence and what that looks like in life and work, especially business.

Applied Imagination
This is the blog I go to when I want to know what’s new in creativity. Steve Dahlberg does a wonderful job of sorting through the latest news on creativity and posting some of the most interesting ideas out there.

Creativity at Work
Looking at the intersection, or interplay, as author Linda Naiman refers to it, between art, science and business is the focus of this informative blog.

Life Unfolds
Jennifer Lee is a self-described Certified Coach, Writer, Leader, Artist, Yogini and Musepreneur. Her colorful and always creative blog chronicles her personal journey of creative expression.

  • Check out my bookshop for more of my favorite creative reads.