Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
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Creative Constraints: Going to Jail to Get Free
Merlin Mann | Mar 24 2008
A Brief Message: No Resistance Is Futile Paul Ford has been posting six-word Twitter updates for a few weeks, and now he's also created the magnum opus of six-word criticism: sexological reviews of the 763 mp3s in this year's SxSW torrent. Writing on (the 200-words-or-less site) A Brief Message, Paul talks about how the constraint changed his approach and his thinking:
Yes. Constraints. As Paul shows, constraints get you thinking about the creative process in a whole new way. Me? I ♥ constraints. 30 seconds. 5 things. Less than 140 characters. In fact: Twitter's making me a stronger writer. I think harder about how to say more using fewer and shorter words. Nothing beats hitting the Twoosh. (140 chars) Let's close with a favorite quote on creative constraint from Anne Lamott's wonderful Bird by Bird. She explains that she keeps a one-inch-square picture frame on her desk to remind her of "short assignments:"
Well put. (And only 17 characters north of the Twoosh.) The Question to YouGot a good example of a creative constraint at work? 23 Comments
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Time as a constraintSubmitted by beloit08 on March 25, 2008 - 5:49pm.
I think it depends on how well you use time. As Communicatrix said, when you have 1 minute to deliver 5 minutes worth of speech, you're going to get creative. Whether or not it's internally or externally imposed, a distinct time frame will force a person to do things he might not even have thought possible. That's the way I use it, and I've found it especially helpful with creative projects that don't seem to be going anywhere. "All right. You've got 12 minutes. Go!" Then whatever happens, happens. Often, though, I'm not displeased with the results. I'm talking here mostly as a writer. As a design professional, I think other constraints work well. Size is a great restraint--canvas size, for example. If you have to paint on 6" * 6" canvases, that's going to force you to do things. Or let's say you decide to give yourself a constraint in photography and spend the next week photographing only things that primarily yellow (I've done it, with mixed results). These are good constraints for the visual artist. But writing? Be it nonfiction, fiction, or even code--that deadline can do amazing things to the mind. » POSTED IN:
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