So, let me get off my soapbox and we’ll talk about thinking creatively. While a Google search would yield multiple definitions of creativity. I tend to use the one that’s easiest for me to understand and remember. Something is creative if it is both novel and appropriate. Initially, I was bothered by the word “appropriate”; however, I appreciate the fact that, particularly in jewelry making, a piece that is appropriate will likely be enjoyed and worn by someone.
Other definitions of creativity discuss problem-solving. You likely use this form of creative thinking many times in your jewelry work. You’re happily stringing along on a necklace and run out of a particular bead you need for your symmetrical necklace. Now what? We usually go through multiple possibilities of how to solve this problem and this exercise helps encourage creative thinking. The best solution usually comes after the consideration of many possibilities. It may be the first thing we thought to do, but exploring other options helps assure us we chose the right one for the situation. Let’s think further about this in a future article when we talk about brainstorming. What other jewelry-making problems have plagued you causing you to problem solve and think creatively?
Something that is creative for you may be more commonplace for someone else. In early childhood, we recognize an action or a product as creative if the child has never done or made it previously. It is creative for that child. I choose to believe this works for adults as well. Perhaps you have been excited to make a new piece that was “out of the box” only to see something similar on Pinterest or other social media. The worst is when a friend, perhaps a fellow jewelry maker, says “Oh, I’ve seen that before”. Keep your chin up; it WAS creative for you at the time you made it. See yourself as creative!
Some of us may be using creative thinking as we figure out how to make something when we don’t have the right tools. I call this the “instead” principle of jewelry making. I don’t have a _____, so instead, I can use a ______. For example, you don’t have the right diameter bail making pliers; instead you might use a knitting needle. If you thought of this yourself, you were thinking creatively. My friend has a bag of cylinders with her jewelry supplies. Each has a different diameter and the bag contains medicine bottles, plastic caps from non-aerosol hairspray containers, small bits of copper tubing and other things. She may have had more fun gathering these than actually using them and she was certainly thinking creatively as she solved a problem.
Preparation for creative thinking involves gaining expertise or technique in an area. Since I don’t know anything about car engines, I’m not likely to come up with a creative way to fix one. I need some basic understanding and expertise first. Although I had made jewelry for some time and thought I was pretty creative, it took me a long time to learn to think creatively about my torch enameled pieces. This was a new technique and at first, it was all I could do to just get the enamel heated on the piece of metal without dumping it on the floor. I could hardly design a creative piece at that stage. I did, however, continue to practice and quit dumping so much enamel on the floor. (Yes, I still do once in a while.) As I persevered and progressed, I began to see more creative options for my pieces.