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I'm a 50 something "jill of all trades" who has worked in education, publishing, consulting and industry while keeping myself sane with crafting in my...
 
 
 
 

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Joss Whedon on Crafts and Craftiness

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It's the small touches that transmit unique style to something.  Perhaps it's a hand knit hat or lacy shawl that defines a wardrobe.  Maybe it's mid-century flea-market finds that make a home unique.  Sometimes we consciously recognize these items; other times they are simple subconscious cues.  As it is in real life, so it also is make believe.

That's one of the things I learned while I enjoyed CrochetMe's Kim Werker interviewing Joss Whedon.  Whedon is the creator of Buffy, Firefly , Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog and the current Fox program Dollhouse.  Turns out he also knows a thing or two about crafts.

In the interview, Werker asked about the crafty elements in Whedon's sets.  He responded:

The crafty part was more– for me was more Firefly. Because in Firefly we were really trying to evoke the idea of things you make for yourself, of a life that you create with your own two hands. It was all very pioneer spirit, and so it ended up just looking really '70s in the decor, which was not exactly the original intent, but that said, that was very deliberate.

Personally, I was a bit blown away by the thought that Werker scored this. Then I read the story behind the Whedon interview.  Another strong example of the power of the internet and the crafty community:

See, back at the end of July the Wired blog asked Whedon how publicity was going for his new internet short movie, Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, and he replied, "Fact is, there's been some buzz, but it hasn't reached the places it would normally. Where's our write-up in Crocheting Monthly?"

Knowing how much the crafts community loves them some work by Whedon (work including creating the television shows Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly; the movie Serenity; the trailblazing Dr. Horrible; and more), and always up for what seems to be an impossible challenge, I thought it might be fun to see if we couldn't deliver him that crochet write-up. I had no contacts in Hollywood, so I asked the online crafts community to help try to get his attention.

Ask, and ye shall receive. The crafts world erupted in blog posts providing the equivalent of Jayne-hat-wearing fans standing on street corners in sandwich boards reading, "Joss! Do an interview with Crochet Me!", jumping up and down and waving their arms. Additionally, crafters, being everywhere—possibly hiding in your boss's office this very moment—are of course also well connected. By several routes, someone knew someone who knew someone that could pass our formal request to Whedon's assistant.

At the end of August, I heard from said assistant who told me Whedon definitely wanted to do the interview.

Maybe more surprising was learning that Whedon learned how to knit and crochet when a boy, was learning that he understands the often unbridgeable gulf between knitters and crocheters:

I'm aware of the desperate rivalry between the knitters and the crocheters. And, you know, first of all I have to say: can't there be peace?

It's an age-old war. Like the werewolves and the vampires. I think Underworld was actually originally about crocheters and knitters but they thought it would be too controversial so they changed it to vampires and werewolves.

As a Firefly fan, I am well aware of the impact one item from the show had on the knitting and crocheting community.  The iconic Jayne Cobb Hat (worn by mercenary Jayne Cobb, played by Adam Baldwin):

jayne hat
If ever an item from home seemed to conflict with the known character, it was this.  Cobb slept with his favorite gun and often held himself apart from the other characters.  He often acted in a "each man for himself" way-though his thoughts occasionally betrayed his actions.  Whedon explained:

My whole thought was that Jayne was your classic bad-guy mercenary type, and I thought this is the one guy who does not have a tortured past, who has a decent, hard-working family, who just, you know, this was his career choice and the idea of him getting a letter from mom that he struggles to read, and the knitted hat, was— it just felt so right. It felt very, very him and very human and then of course I saw the hat with its flaps and its pom pom,

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Debra Roby 5 pts

When I start getting all "fiber arts are a woman's domain".. in my head, I remember that in the middle ages all of these were guild professions held only by men.

Actually the fine motor control needed for many of these are fabulous skills for both girls and boys (and women and men) to acquire.

Debra
A Stitch In Time ( http://astitchintime.blogspot.com )
Weight for Deb ( http://weightfordeb.wordpress.com )

Debra Roby 5 pts

Kim,

That little bit of the story was so "life is magical..." I'd love to hear more details.

Can't wait.

Debra
A Stitch In Time ( http://astitchintime.blogspot.com )
Weight for Deb ( http://weightfordeb.wordpress.com )

Debra Roby 5 pts

Wanting a Jayne hat is actually what pushed me over the edge of wanting to learn how to knit.

Now that cool! The Jayne hat isn't very hard. I'd probably put it down as a good 3rd project (first scarf, second wrist warmers, third Jayne...).

When you've made it, please send me a pix.

Debra
A Stitch In Time ( http://astitchintime.blogspot.com )
Weight for Deb ( http://weightfordeb.wordpress.com )

kpwerker 5 pts

Thanks so much for this post, Debra! I think it's time for me to finally write up the details of how the interview came about. Good kick in the pants!

---
I also write at www.kimwerker.com ( http://www.kimwerker.com )
Follow me on Twitter ( http://twitter.com/kpwerker ) and Tumblr ( http://kpwerker.tumblr.com )

no_I_am_zoe 5 pts

Great post.  One of these days I'm going to knit a Jayne hat for myself.  I'm still new to knitting though, so it might be a while.  Wanting a Jayne hat is actually what pushed me over the edge of wanting to learn how to knit. 

tinykorean 5 pts

The Jayne hat is freakin' legendary! I really wish I could craft (anything at all), I'd make one in a heartbeat. I have a thing for hats

- Anneli | http://tinykorean.com

shoalswriter 5 pts

 What a great post -- and a wonderful reminder that we women do not have a lock on being crafty. I love reading things that make me take a look at my own misconceptions. Thank you.

Cathy

cathylwood.wordpress.com

Debra Roby 5 pts

Thanks, Megan. Loved Kim's story... and the vampire/werewolf analogy is classic Whedon-like isn't it?

Debra
A Stitch In Time ( http://astitchintime.blogspot.com )
Weight for Deb ( http://weightfordeb.wordpress.com )

Megan Smith 5 pts

Wonderful story Deb!  Congratulations to Kim for being so creative and snagging a great interview.

I especially love the knitters vs. crocheters analogy to vampires and werewolves.

Megan
BlogHer Contributing Editor, TV/Online Video ( http://www.blogher.com/blog/megan-smith )

Megan's Minute ( http://www.megansminute.com/

jmschwabe 5 pts

I have loved Joss Whedon since I started watching Buffy and Angel way back when. Dr. Horrible's Sing Along Blog is fantastic, and Dollhouse has been pretty interesting too, so far. Pretty interesting that he knows his crafts too.

Debra Roby 5 pts

Maria,

Your welcome. I was surprised that Whedon seems to really know his crafts. And I loved that his wicked sense of humor was shining through. Kim did a great job.

Debra
A Stitch In Time ( http://astitchintime.blogspot.com )
Weight for Deb ( http://weightfordeb.wordpress.com )

Maria Niles 5 pts

I had no idea there was a Joss Whedon crafty connection. I love how Kim Werker got the interview and learning the backstory. Thanks for bringing this to us!

BlogHer Contributing Editor ( http://www.blogher.com/blog/maria-niles )
PopConsumer ( http://consumerpop.typepad.com/popconsumer )
Beyond Help ( http://mariax.vox.com/ )