Gathering thoughts


Our post-it note research meeting in Brixton Market

It’s been a busy month for Makerhood. Just a couple of days before the fabulous Xmas card making extravaganza that Kristina wrote about earlier this week we held a small workshop with potential sellers and buyers about the Makerhood website. The website will be the heart of Makerhood and we’re keen to make sure it reflects and fits with the local community. With this in mind we asked Aoife and Anne (our friendly usability professionals) to help us organise a meeting to gather thoughts on different aspects of the website. The three areas we were especially interested in finding out about were:

What do you understand by local?
What kinds of items do you imagine will be sold on Makerhood? How do you imagine they would be organised?
How would you like to buy/sell items on the website?

Being the creative girls that we are we didn’t want to put these questions directly to our participants so we came up with some drawing and post-it note activities to help us collect participants’ ideas in a more conversational way. The meeting was held in Cornercopia’s lovely new dining room heated by wood-burning stove so we could all sit round the long table, stick our notes on the window and talk happily together about south west London, online shopping and making.

For the first activity we created a communal map of our ‘local’ areas. These reached much further than I imagined they would – from Camberwell to Dulwich, down past Clapham to Balham and Tooting and up to Vauxhall and the river. Interestingly, people described their ‘local’ area in terms of people and places they knew – places they had lived, shops they used and familiar routes to work.


Thoughts about local

Next we asked our participants to write down all of the items they would like to see sold on Makerhood. Once again, my expectations were completely wrong (which just proves the value of doing research..) Alongside the craft and gift and homewares products I expected participants also told us that mostly they shop local for services such as bicycle maintenance, plumbing and classes. The main reason for this seemed to be that you don’t want to have to go too far to find these services because many of them centre around the home.


OK, people did mention some products..

Finally, before we moved to the Dogstar and drinks and chat, we asked participants to draw a timeline of how they imagined a sale would take place on Makerhood either from the point of view of a buyer or a seller. In this activity we were interested in what participants thought would encourage them to make a purchase or, alternatively, what would put them off doing so. People talked about the importance of ratings and reviews from both the buyer and the sellers perspective, for instance, sellers may have concerns about biased reviews while buyers are interested in a sellers reputation. We will definitely be thinking more about this as we develop the website.

Thanks to Zoe from SW Craft Club, Fiona from Oh Sew Brixton, Maya, Anne and Aoife for taking part.

Last Sunday we gave it away…

Our annual Christmas card making gathering took place last Sunday. I say annual because we’ve been having one for the past three years at home. This year we  invited anyone who fancied it to come along…

I have never organised a large party of this kind. But in truth, there was little organising involved. It kind of just happened. Which is what was so special about it, and for me this goes right back to why Karen and I started Makerhood earlier this year.

Making things has a very social, creative and fun part to it. We all enjoy it, but we rarely get to do it. Humans did this kind of thing for thousands of years. It is only in the last hundred or so that industrialisation made it “unviable” while also making us too busy with other stuff. Our economic lives are now based on considerations of competition and efficiency – rather than relationships, sociability and lived experience. It’s the latter that makes something meaningful.

I felt last Sunday that we were together recovering some of these things. We made cards for people we cared about, and those we didn’t know, in local nursery homes, shelters and prisons. There was a lot of sharing of ideas and materials going on, and so many different ways of making cards. Each one was beautiful and unique, and no doubt will be very special for people who get them.

And everyone chipped in on the fun. Stanley played great acoustic versions of his reggae songs, DJ Prophane of Rat Records did amazing things on the turntables (getting a 6 month old baby involved somehow..) and Bleak, en route from Berlin, put on a death.blues extravaganza (the most unusual version of “Last Christmas” by far!).

The improvised panto was definitely a highlight. I was very pleased that Michael Brunstrom wanted to work on this slightly insane idea with us. I am not a specialist in improvisation, but I have been lucky to see Brixton Village Idiots perform many times over the past year. To me, it’s one of the most creative ways of being – magical for both the participants and the audience. It opens up bits of us that are hidden as we go about following rules and figuring out the right thing to do or say. Impro principles make a lot of sense in life as well as on stage: be open, go with the flow, say yes to offers that come your way, and play!

We did not really plan more events but as we all enjoyed it so much we think we should do it. Some of you suggested great themes, from upcycling unwanted Christmas presents  to spring cleaning workshops. If you’d like to help organising drop us a line at makerhood@gmail.com.

Have a playful pre-Christmas week! 🙂