The popularity of the event is certainly encouraging. In world where the hand production of physical objects is rarely central to worklife, it is exiciting to see that making things is regaining popularity and prestige. Everyday we're surrounded by mass produced goods, often devoid of personal significance. Most of the goods we buy are manufactured half way around the world by people we will never see, and through processes we neither witness or understand. We have little to no connection to way in which it things are put together, the origin of the parts, the place of the contruction, or human lives involved.
We may prize a cheap chair for IKEA or a shirt from Gap for the great deal we found and the amount of money we saved, or because they fit a style we would like to emulate, or because of their inherent functionality. However, due to the low price and the source, we can often replace it with an identical copy. It's not inherently unique and special.
The Maker Faire offers an entirely different way of relating objects, while promoting creativity, innovation, community building, sustainability, dexterity, and PLAY!!! It is so refreshing to see thousands of people interacting with eachother with curiosity, enthusiasm, and pure joy. Closeted craftspeople get their moment in the spotlight to shine and share in open and free flowing environment. Ahh, heaven!!!
Rachel tries a machine that attaches raw wool to fabric with a set of 5 or 6 plunging needles and no thread.
R2D2 shows off
A lobster clock?
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