The Craft Blog is Dead! Long Live the Craft Blog!
by debra roby

Maybe it's just summertime, I think. Posting on craft blogs always slows way down in the summertime. That's the likely explanation.

Except the slowdown began way before summertime.
Except the slowdown includes blogs just going away.
Except the slowdown includes bloggers lowering blog posts because of book deals.
Except the slowdown includes a lack of interesting posts on the blogs that are there.

Which makes some wonder, is the craft blog dead?

Cara Davis of January One, was considering the same thing this weekend when she wrote KnitBlogs. New knitblog webring software was requiring everyone to re-register. From an active ring with firm rules, the ring has now dramatically relaxed its rules: only one knit-related post a month is required. Yet many of the original 1300 members will probably not join the ring or not qualify to join the ring.

But what does this mean?

It might mean that blogging has evolved beyond the "common interest" ring. Early in blogging, the blogrings were a way to find new members, to connect to those with common interest, to build that blog-community that we all rave about. Now, with RSS feeds do we really need blogrings? Is that the part of the formula that's become archaic?

For myself, I've got to say yes. I think I may belong to several rings, though I never click through one anymore. I have my quilting blogs in my BlogLines and Google reader; clicking through a ring to find something new takes too much time.

Davis suspects it's more than our simply outgrowing the "technology" of blogrings. Looking back over the past year, she believes that the dramatic shift away from a blog-based community began with the birth of Ravelry.

There are many many blogs on my bloglines list that post very sporadically and when they do, they blatantly say they've been on Ravelry. It's MY OPINION that the interesting discussions about knitting and projects that used to be on the blogs have moved over there - instead of many in-depth posts about a project we generally get one wrap up post that says the details are over on Ravelry. No doubt, Ravelry is an extraordinary tool in this community, but the social aspects of it have had a huge impact on what I loved about knitblogs.

The same thing has been written about Twitter and Facebook and Fill-in-the-blank-latest-social-media-site.  Yes, it's easier to connect on one of these sites.  On blogs, often we feel alone in the woods or lost among the masses.  There seems to be no inbetween ground anymore.  You write and occasionally get one or two comments, or you write and always get 50 or more.  On a network sites there is the impression that you are always involved in the conversations and the community. 

I'm not certain that this is indeed true, but is it even a valid observation? The comments (68 and still growing) keep the discussion going:

Amber summed up part of my feeling about the decline in craft(knit)-based blogs:

I think you're right that Ravelry has had a huge impact. In some ways though, I think that's good. A lot of blogs were just like here's the specs - and didn't really write about the process or their thoughts. Sort of like what one blogger once referred to as a "Cheese sandwich blog" (Dear Blog: Today, I ate a cheese sandwich. The end.) I felt like the same old big names were always writing the more involved posts everyone would talk about (I think that's still true); there's just fewer basic stats out in blogland.

"Cheese sandwich blogs"... I'm going to have to remember that.  I've admitted that the draw for me in any craft blog is the author explaining their personal process.  What they did, why they chose to do that one thing, how they feel about it's outcome.  (If you need a great example of a knitting process blogger, look no further than Grumperina.  All process.  All the time.  And one of the best damn knit blogs in my reader.)  Many's the day that I click through 50-100 blog posts searching for that one unexpected process post without success.  I used to find them all the time. Now, frequently I find a simple "Here it is.  I finished project XYZ."  No thought, no analysis.  Simple news.

BeadKnitter was the first to state the other main argument, that lives change and blog change with them:

Blogs change because peoples lives change. There are blogs that I used to read religiously that I don't even visit anymore, and new blogs that I new read religiously. It's part of the human condition. Everything changes. Nothing stays the same.

As for Ravelry being to blame for this, I disagree with that. The blogs I stopped reading didn't change because of Ravelry. They changed cos the authors life/interests did.

Alice points out another problem with knit blog successes:

Another factor is purely commercial. A lot of the most popular bloggers have gotten book contracts. Design details that might previously have been discussed on their blogs are now saved for their books.

KnitNut's Wool & Words,took the discussion to her blog with  The KnitBlog is Dead! Long Live the KnitBlog!  She mentioned another factor missing from many knitblog communities that was like ants at a picnic 2 years ago: The Knit A Long (KAL).  I had noticed a decided gap in KALs on blogs, but thought I was just missing them somehow.  Perhaps not. 

However, in one of the clearest distinctions between her interaction on Ravelry and her reading/writing of blogs, however, she states (emphasis, mine):

The blogs I read are the ones where I feel a connection to or have an interest in the personality of the blogger behind it. I go to Ravelry to find the information I'm seeking about projects, yarns, patterns, communities. I go to blogs for people.

So lives change, the internets change, successes change.  It all leads to a decrease in quantity or quality of blogging. We shall see if this is a temporary or permanant change. While Davis acknowledges her own blog has changed dramatically in the last year with a pregnancy and the birth of her daughter, I sense we all believe that eventually she will return to blogging obsessive series of posts on mitred squares and we will check back through our readers for every word.

So what do you think?  Have you seen a decided change in the craft blogs recently?  Do you believe that other social media sites have taken some of the action?  Or is it just life coming between the blogger and the page?  And who are the new bloggers that are replacing those that have left?

Debra Roby blogs her creative life at A Stitch in Time and her journey to fitness at Weight for Deb.Come talk with her at the Birds of Feather breakout session at BlogHer Con, Saturday, July 19, from 10:45 until noon.

Comments

 

There hasn't been any

There hasn't been any decline in the craft blogs.  Perhaps if the Knitting circuit has fallen off, it may be due to the hotter weather.  But if you look at all crafts as a whole (sewing, scrapbooking, etc.) I think they are as strong as ever.  The eclectic mix of crafts seems to be not only a hobby, but in visiting blogs they are more and more leading to avenues of income for mothers who are trying to stay home with families.  Those sites like Etsy.com are bringing women together and revitalizing the "handmade craft" appeal.  There is a new-placed value on creative and handmade items, not only for those who aren't so crafty, but those who are to busy to make them on their own.  Kudos to those who stay strong and use today's technology to reach out and find homes for their crafts.  The competition is growing, almost as quick as the list of items available.  Apron swaps are back!  And women are inspiring one another to tap their inner creative abilities and join in the fun.  Most importantly they are challenging each other to hold dear the value we bring to our families, our communities and our world.

 

a simple elixir to prevent death

I can only speak for myself. But the solution is so simple to me.

I want my readers and my friends to experience my knitting through my blog. So I don't give them any other choice! I'm on Ravelry, but I don't post my projects there, or document my stash (beyond the bare minimum to destash on the forums, hehe). I'm on Flickr, but it only has the photos necessary to run Ravelry. If you want to keep up with me, you have to visit the blog! Come on in!

Similarly, I don't spend a lot of time browsing through projects on Ravelry. It's not my ideal way of communicating, and I don't give in. Maybe I'm just stubborn, digging in my heels, sticking with what got me here in the first place. And maybe one day knitting blogs will no longer exist, and mine will be the only one still regularly updated and I'll be old and crochety and backwards.

Has there been a general decline in blogging? I don't know. I come home every day and have 150 new posts to read, so my eyes and mind are plenty busy. I myself have declined in blogging frequency, but that has to do with a new job (not Ravelry, Flickr, a book deal, or anything else). Well, during February and March I was knitting on commission because I was unemployed, but that's behind me now. I've reluctantly resorted to "FO posts" as of late, but hope to correct that soon. Because there's nothing more I love than a juicy process post!!! (thanks for your compliment!)

I wrote a little post about this topic 6 months ago here. Apparently this was up for discussion back in December!

 

 

See? Eloquent even in responding...

Grumperina,

See? You are eloquent and thoughtful even in responding to a post. Which is why you are one of my top knitting reads.

I remember that discussion back in December, and even thought I'd posted something here about it. (though i can't find it at the moment!) I think this discussion has been popping up every 6 months or so for the past 2 years. I know every summer as things slow down, someone will wonder about the future.

Are you planning on attending BlogHer ReachOut in Boston this fall?

Debra
A Stitch In Time
Deb's Daily Distractions

 

Newbie

I've only been blogging for 5 months but I have no problem finding many many   blogs about crafting of all kinds. Perhaps there are less individual blogs and more people joining neworks like Crafster and Etsy to share info as these sites are extremely busy with detailed posts and pictures, contests , challenges and comments  I wish there were more hours in a day to visit them all.

Candeelady

Raising Tweens to be Fantastic Women and Easy Crafts

http://www.gogogluegunfun.com

 

I don't think that it's knitting blogs alone

I have found that there is a little less action on the blogs I read in general. The posts are a little less frequent, a little less eloquent, and there has been a decline in comments. I used to think that it was me, that people deserted me (in part because I started writing more about knitting) but then I really looked and saw that other people got way less comments too.

Maybe blogs have reached a critical mass, and it's not possible to be as involved as before.

I like ravelry very much and I find it marvelous to see all the projects of somebody. I do write a bit about the knitting process there but only shorthand things, things that are interesting for other knitters who might want to knit the same project. On my blog I try to write about those aspects of the knitting that non-knitters can relate to too. (Or I post pictures of my knitting as eye-candy...)

I'm creativemother on ravelry and I blog at creative.mother.thinking

 

It's not a lack of quantity of blogs.

ScrapHappy, Candleelady, Susanne

The arguments being made are not that there is a dramatic drop in the quantity of blogs that exist. That was not the point. New blogs spring up every day in scrapping, quilting, crafting, and knitting, everywhere!

It was rather that the number of blog posts on individual blogs have declined in number. Instead of writing 4-7 times a week, many only blog 2-3.

It was partly that the conversations do not travel from blog to blog anymore. After Cara's post Sunday, it used to be that half a dozen or more readers would take the discussion to their own blogs, writing posts responding to the original statement. Conversation. Community. As of this morning, KnitNuts post cited above and one other: Ravelry Killed the Knitting Blog Star by Expat Knitter are the only examples of the community carrying the conversation further.

It was strongly that the conversation and community that was built on these blogs (and I've seen it in knitting, quilting and crafting) has nearly disappeared. This is exhibited in declining cross-blog conversations and declining comments on blogs.

It was rather that some of the quality of the writing has declined. Instead of talking about the joys and challenges encountered while creating something, the posts tend to be drier: I finished this; it's for honey bear. I used supplies A, B, C. (BTW, if you don't explain in your side bar, or somewhere who "honey bear" is? I care less about the fact he/she/it is getting it, no matter how precious it is.)

It was rather that many "A" list bloggers have now gotten designing jobs and book deals and blog about "I'm working on project X which you will love when I can show it to you."

It was in part the monetization of the blog post:
"Here are 5 earrings I finished for my Etsy shop. Click here to buy them."
"This is my latest scrap lay-out, to download the specifics click on the paypal button at the end of the post. "
Again these are not posts that lead to community building or conversation. If they do, I'm not seeing it.

Debra
A Stitch In Time
Deb's Daily Distractions