Taking action against convention harassment

Author, John Scalzi, recently posted his new policy on attending conventions: If they don’t have a clear anti-harassment policy, he won’t be going! (Anyone can co-sign it here.)

An acceptable policy includes:

  • A clear definition of unacceptable behavior
  • Where to find convention staff who will help you
  • Making the policy obvious via the website, program, flyers, or opening events. (Preferably all of the above)

I was happy to  co-sign it!

As a fantasy jewelry artist, I will, as early as this fall, be looking to sell my jewelry at at as many conventions as I can reasonably attend.

But it’s immature and unacceptable for a convention to sell out victims to keep their customers happy. Also, as a 24-year-old woman, I’m not enthusiastic about trapping myself behind a table for a weekend unless the convention will assure me I’ll be reasonably safe from people bothering me.

That’s not the end of it, though. This will be my personal approach when a convention’s policy is unacceptable:

  • When I approach a convention about becoming a dealer, I will absolutely commit to having a jewelry showing on that weekend in that town.
  • If the convention policies aren’t acceptable enough for me to attend, I will instead have my showing at library, community center, women’s shelter, or similar organization committed to making the world a safer, more respectful place. (With a percentage of sales donated to the organization.)
  • Promotional materials and press releases for this alternate event will highlight the convention’s poor approach to keeping guests safe.

Personal experiences:
(Every convention I consider attending, and the state of their policies.)

-Dragon Con:  Bright shiny new anti-harassment policy this year!

 

Do you go to conventions? Is the statement something you would co-sign? Why or why not?
(Disrespectful comments will be deleted, and I reserve the right to do the same toward debating that gets too intense.)

 

July/August Contest: Collaborate with another artist

Welcome to my blog, the future home of my monthly contests. Hosting my contests here has two distinct advantages:

1. You can enter even if you don’t have a DeviantART account.
2. I can feature entries on this page directly. (Unlike DeviantART, WordPress lets me add images to my posts without buying a membership!)

July’s Contest: (Extended through August)

Work with another artist to make art from two different mediums, inspired by my jewelry. Both artists of the winning entry will win these puzzle piece friendship necklaces.  

P1040469

All entries win free US shipping until October. ($5 off international shipping.)

1. Both of you must be subscribers of my newsletter. At least one of you must be a new subscriber.
(What’s in the newsletter and what are the perks of subscribing?)

 2. Work together to make a piece of art inspired by my jewelry style, each contributing a different art medium.

Examples:

writing, poetry / illustration
lineart / adding colors
beads, focals / jewelry
handmade paper / drawing, painting
photos / photomanipulation
physical art / Photography of art

3. Each of you, post a photo of the part you contributed to one of the following places 

  • DeviantART
  • instagram
  • imgur

 4. If possible, link to this page and any jewelry pieces you were inspired by.

5. Each of you, message me on that site with your contribution.

General rules

  • Keep it G-rated
  • Contest ends September 1
  • I get permission to copy/paste every entry onto my computer and use them to promote my jewelry for as long and as often as I want. (I won’t change anything or sell your work directly. If I use your work at all, I will link to you on my website.)

Rules for entering more than once:

  • Each entry must have at least one new subscriber.
  • Someone can only count as “the new subscriber” for one entry.
  • Someone can only contribute to three entries.

Suggestions for finding someone to work with:

  • What kinds of art do you like to make?
  • What kinds of art can you make your art out of?
  • What artists can make their art out of your art?

 Feel free to add questions and comments.

Was the book better?

Usually I don’t pass judgement on movies based on books. For example, Lord of the Rings may not have been an awesome adaptation, but that’s partly what made it an awesome movie series. I mean, as much as I lament the change to Faramir’s characterization, the ending of Two Towers wouldn’t have been very suspenseful if he hadn’t gone ring-crazy and dragged Frodo and Sam through a war zone. (In the book, they all just hung out in his secret waterfall base for a while. Before the hobbits leave, Faramir reassures them that he wouldn’t even try to take the ring if it was the only way to save Gondor.)

Here are a few exceptions off the top of my head…

The book was better

Eragon had it’s moments as a movie, but the book was so much richer and more detailed.

The Wizard of Oz was one of my favorite books growing up. Especially with all the hype that’s surrounding the prequel, I encourage people to check out the original book. Did you know that the events in the movie only cover the first half of the book? Glinda doesn’t just show up after the wizard flies off in the balloon. Dorothy and her friends have to journey to her realm before she can reveal the secret of the ruby slippers.

Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy was an awesome movie that tried to be just as awesome as the book, but failed.

(Speaking of Hitchiker’s Guide movie, anybody recognize Arthur Dent?

The movie was better

Speaking of Martin Freeman, I’m going to risk offending literature fans by admitting I’d rather watch an episode of BBC’s Sherlock than read one of the original Sherlock Holmes stories.

V for Vendetta. No offense to Alan Moore, but the movie left out the slow parts and boiled the original graphic novel down to all the good stuff.

Extra: There was a book?

In most cases, if a movie is based on a book, I have at least a casual interest in reading the book first. Or soon after seeing the movie. Or someday!

Because of this, I’ve noticed a lot of movies that were surprisingly based on books. “Day the Earth Stood Still” for example.  Sure the 2008 movie was based on the 1951 movie…but the 1951 movie was based on a short story called Farewell to the Master. (I liked the 1951 movie the best out of all of them.) Other movies based (or inspired) by books: Meet the Robinsons, How to Train your Dragon, and does anybody else remember The Last Mimzy?

Extra 2: There wasn’t a book?

Not all movies were inspired by the book they’re marketed with.

After years of being disgruntled with an I, Robot that didn’t seem to care much for the original collection of short stories by Isaac Asimov, I realized it started as an original screenplay called Hardwired, and not too many changes were made after they got the rights to call it I, Robot.  And of course it languished in development until Hollywood found something popular to market it with. I guess it all turned out better than their original plan, which was to edit it beyond recognition with an action plot and space marines.

 

So when was the book better, and when was the movie better? And when were they both equally good according to each unique art form?

My top 3 links for writer’s resources

A brainstorming tool, a name generator, and a blog filled with useful articles. (No particular order of preference)

1. Telescopic Text

I was moved to write today’s post when this site helped me dramatically revitalize my artist statement a few hours ago. The link opens in a new tab, but I’m happy to describe the site if you’d rather stay here.

The site is very minimalistic. The most prominent feature on the mostly blank page is a simple sentence. “I made tea.” But each word is highlighted in light gray. Clicking on highlighted words will expand them into more words, some of which may also be highlighted. “I made a cup of tea.”  A few clicks later: “Yawning, I made myself a nice cup of strong tea.” When there are no more clickable words, the page will be covered in words.

At the bottom right corner is a link to make your own telescopic text. Type a sentence. Click on a word.  Type the text that it will expand to. Click on another word.

My artist statement makeover

When I first found Telescopic Text, I played with the tea story, bookmarked the site, and forgot about it…until I realized how much it could help me with my artist statement.

I arrived with two things: My tagline and my old artist statement. My tagline, “Fantasy-inspired art jewelry”, is pretty solid, but my artist statement was a scattered, disjointed collection of an otherwise decent way to describe my artistic vision and mission statement.

I typed “fantasy inspired art jewelry” into Telescopic Text and expanded it phrase by phrase, using all the material from my scattered artist statement. Once all the pieces had been put back together, I went from this:

Using wire and small objects, I give form to 
imagination and daydreams. I express the beauty 
of spontaneity. I find magic and awe in 
everyday objects and scenes…
and then I highlight it.

I’m inspired by magic and high-fantasy.
I like calm, analogous color schemes and
twisting, spiralling lines.

…to this!

Magic and high fantasy inspire me to find 
beauty and awe in everyday objects and scenes.
Capturing that wonder, 
strengthening it, 
and adding chaos and spontaneity, I create 
abstract art jewelry, hoping to inspire you 
toward imagination and reverie.

2. Fantasy Name Generator

The basic generator lets you pick typical options such as “short”, “long”, “vowel-heavy”, but the advanced generator not only shares how it generates such specific names, but invites you to customize your own.

It’s a little confusing at first, but if you have the time to figure it out, it will quite possibly become your most useful name generator for getting the perfect name from very specific instructions.

Example:

Let’s see… how about a name beginning with “Lo” that starts out soft, but ends on a harsh or abrupt syllable.

So I type  “(Lo)VcVC” which is composed of:

-Letters in parentheses, which will stayconstant
-V stands for a random vowel or vowel combination
-Lowercase c stands for just one random consonant
-(Another random vowel or vowel combination)
-Uppercase C stands for a random consonant or combination.

Then I browse through the results, looking for particularly abrupt ending consonants. Out of over 100 names on the page, only three look really good:

Lousit
Loerok
Loeadoc

I discard “Lousit” because it sounds like “lose it” and refresh the page a few times to get hundreds more results.

Loaecod
Loaelig
Loelerd
Loilauv
Loeeyiac (Interesting, but how do you even pronounce that?)
Loanit (Nope, sounds like I just smushed “Loan it” together and tried to pass it off as a name.)
Loavek

I like the last one. Also Loerok or Loedoc from the first round.

 

3. Superhero Nation

Novels and comics about superheros aren’t my artistic calling, even if I wanted to be a writer or comic artist, but when I first found this website, I couldn’t stop reading it! The advice and tips are so helpful and well-reasoned, that they can apply to any kind of writing. Even artist statements! (My decision to use the word “you” instead of “people” in my new artist statement came from a guest post I browsed while stopping by for the link.)

Unlike a lot of blogs, they have a nice big list of their favorite/most useful posts on the left sidebar.

I really want to go into more detail and list a few of their most awesome posts, but there’s so much good material there, I’d barely be scratching the surface.

 

Did you explore any of the sites? Share your telescoped text, generated names, and writing breakthroughs in the comments.

Unconventional Fans 3: Cliff Notes Fandom

This is my third post in what has become a series about non-traditional ways of participating in fandoms.

Do you have to read/watch all of a series to call yourself a fan?

Very few people who like the Avengers have actually read all the comic books. Not many Doctor Who fans have seen all 26 seasons of the classic series. Do you know any Skyrim fans who have played Elder Scrolls #1?

But fans get less of a break when the fandom has a smaller time investment.

I usually have to read/watch a story to completion, but here are some exceptions (besides Avengers and Doctor Who of course

Stopped midway:
-Naruto (Gave up when it refused to end)
-Dune (Does it count that that I read everything by the author, but not any of the later books?)
-Ender’s Game (I finished reading Bean’s series, but not Ender’s)

Started midway:
-Doctor Who (I started with the new series, but I actually recommend people with only a casual interest start at season 5. It’s a good introduction, and you’ll catch up sooner.)
-Blade (I started with the third one first and still haven’t seen them all yet.)

 

What about you? Did you start watching Star Wars with the prequel trilogy? Did you only play Mass Effect 3? Share your unconventional fandom experiences in the comments.

Unconventional Fans 2: Fandoms don’t have expiration dates.

A few days ago I started watching Fullmetal Alchemist. (An anime about two crippled brothers who travel the world, trying to heal themselves after their attempt to ressurrect their mother went horribly wrong.)

It aired almost ten years ago.

Yesterday I was watching a hilarious YouTube video that combined “Trouble with Tribbles” with Taylor Swift’s “I Knew You Were Trouble”. A commenter lamented the spoiler because they were in the middle of watching the original Star Trek for the first time and hadn’t gotten to that episode yet.

Star Trek aired almost fifty years ago.

I still haven’t read Game of Thrones or played Mass Effect, but I expect to adore both of them.

And I’m sure that’s the case for a lot of people…more than we usually realize. Which fandoms have you arrived “late” to? Did you manage to enjoy the fandom and still finish the story relatively spoiler-free? 

My biggest frustration about discovering “ancient” fandoms is that I usually have very few people to share it with. Plenty of people will acknowledge that it’s awesome, but they’ve already experienced it and moved on years ago.

Unconventional Fans 1: Fandom and the Imminent Unknown

I was on Netflix yesterday, and saw that Sherlock (BBC) was still on my instant queue…which of course gave me a strong pang of  “Geez I miss this show–hurry up and film season 3 already!”

After thinking about it for a while, I thought of all the shows/books/games/etc. I’m currently most interested in (Doctor Who, Sherlock, The Hobbit, Dragon Age) and then I realized that what they all have in common is that I haven’t experienced the end of the story yet.

Stories I like just as much but have “finished” already  (such as Firefly and Deep Space 9) just can’t seem to capture my imagination as vividly as they used to.

Is this because “ongoing” stories are more fresh in my mind? Or is it because a corner of my mind is just desperate to know what happens? Am I not really affected by either, but since the rest of the online community is, I’m more drawn to active fandoms?

What are your experiences watching/reading/playing the end of a favorite story? What happens when you become less interested in a favorite story? 

Do those questions answer each other?

Fanfiction…Do you write it? Do you read it?

What are your thoughts and experiences with writing and reading fanfiction?

Writing

I write fanfiction (mostly short stories) whenever I’m inspired with an idea–either a parody or an interesting scenario. Most of my recent stories have been inspired by a jewelry piece. And I don’t plan most of those stories–they appear suddenly and demand that I wait to post the jewelry until I’ve finished writing the story.

    

The Loki staff necklace was a birthday present for my sister, so I was inspired to write a story where Loki steals the flying aircraft carrier as a birthday present for himself. For the evil snitch necklace, I wrote a few paragraphs about Draco Malfoy learning of a deadly change to the rules of Quidditch. The last one was mostly for myself. I was miffed at how the Star Wars Old Republic franchise took the storyline from the last game to the MMORPG. So I fixed it.

 Reading

I occasionally read fanfiction if I have an idea it will be good–either from a recommendation or a well-written pitch from the author.

Two I’m enjoying right now:

Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality
Aunt Petunia married a math professor instead of Uncle Vernon, and Harry Potter is raised as a scientist by a loving family. When he gets to Hogwarts, he brilliantly combines magic and science while lamenting the lack of rational thinking among wizards…and that’s not nearly half the reason this is one of the best stories I’ve ever read.

Ensign Sue Must Die
The origin of the term “Mary Sue” was a character in a Star Trek fanfiction. So this fancomic starts with Old Spock warning Reboot Spock about Reboot Mary Sue. Once she shows up, the exasperated crew tries to figure out how to get rid of her. (As an added bonus, the sequel features the Tenth Doctor and Benedict Cumberbatch’s Sherlock.)

 

Speaking of Mary Sues, what are your thoughts? (I can hardly blog about fanfiction without mentioning them, right?)

I think an overpowered character with an overdramatic past/origin can be redeemed if they’re given flaws, an interesting personality, and if they’re challenged properly. If the average superhero appeared in a novel, he/she would probably be classified as a Mary Sue if , but what makes comic books balance out is the addition of the supervillain.

Elements of Your Ideal Fantasy World

-Have you ever read (or watched) a story with various fantastic species, and suspended your disbelief for some more than others?

“Okay they’re teaming up with the elves….to negotiate with the goblins, and then…hey wait, there’s unicorns in this world? Why??”

-Have you ever been at odds with the various theories and workings of magic described?

“Since when do tears bring anybody back to life?? It would be much more interesting if she bought a DIY necromancy kit, or traveled to the celestial plane to bargain for his soul.”

-Or maybe your ideal fantasy world is more like the real world than a fantasy world, except for a few shy, ancient beings who dabble in minor nature magic.

 

I’m still in the process of discovering what my ideal world would be. My jewelry designs help with that a lot. (Or does my vague idea of what I like best in fantasy help me design jewelry better??) Some of my jewelry designs interest me more than others, or I’ll feel more connected with one backstory than another. I even think there are more kinds of worlds I like than just one. These designs are the closest to the style of the one I would call ideal:

Relic on the Writing Desk  ecium_earrings_by_starlit_sorceress-d566lz7  the_dreams_of_trees_unfold_by_starlit_sorceress-d574eaw

In fantasy worlds, I like advanced technology just short of gunpowder. Magic is advanced, and has clear rules.
Races would definitely include elves and dwarves, though I’m kind of neutral on the specifics of the guttural race of savage humanoids that’s always supposed to be making trouble. It’s more interesting when the details of their culture are developed enough that you can root for them or at least respect their side.  (Dragon Age did this really well with the Qunari.)
Speaking of dragons, I can’t decide whether I prefer them to be friendly or evil. I guess I just don’t like the extremes. Not singing with children and puppies, but not brutal animals either.

No anthropomorphic animals, and as you might have guessed by my earlier examples, I like unicorns, pixies, and fairies to be shy and rare. (And by “rare” I mean hard to find, not cooked medium-rare!!)

Slightly off-topic, but I’m not a fan of insect-based races in sci-fi….although I haven’t experienced Mass Effect, Starcraft, or any of the Ender’s Game sequels. (I only read the Ender’s Shadow series.)

What elements make up your ideal fantasy world?

Sorceress Council Welcome and Mission Statement

So I’m a jewelry artist. Not a lot of blog topics that I don’t already talk about.

-My inspiration? I share that when I post new jewelry to DeviantART.
-Behind the scenes photos and stories? Those go on Facebook.
-Unrelated snippets from real life?  I’m on Twitter too.
-Detailed tutorials on making jewelry and running a business? Not very interesting unless you’re another jewelry artist.

So I decided to step out of the spotlight just a little bit. This blog is for discussions!

Once a week–let’s say on Thursday nights–I’ll post a topic, talk a little bit about it, and then step back to let conversations happen. Topics will be similar to my many inspirations for making jewelry, and what (I hope) everyone else is interested in too:

-Fantasy
-Sci-fi
-Books
-Movies
-Games
-Art
-Writing
-Geek culture
-Etc

It’s not Thursday yet, but why wait? I’ll leave this up as a permanant suggestion box. 

What topics do you want to see?
Should I post at a different time than Thursday night?
Anything else?