Thank you so much for registering for the Collage Vision Board Gathering!
Here’s the replay of our Zoom session:
NOTES & RESOURCES:
Your Vision Board
It doesn’t have to be beautiful, it just needs to be functional.
You can sketch out a rough draft, or you can create intuitively.
Where to start?
Picture your “best life” – what would it look like if ALL your dreams were to come true?
Be flexible – things change. Even priorities change. Go easy on yourself, especially when outside forces get in the way.
There are a few different styles to create your vision board. You can mix and match and improvise. Make it your own. Use your own style.
1 – basic vision board with words, images, colors, patterns
2 – all words, inspirational phrases, etc
3 – grid
4 – quadrants – if you like to work seasonally, or quarterly
5 – start with word of the year, embellish
Can also break down into MONTHLY FOCUS Board – use Cheap Dollar Store Calendar.
Vision boards can:
- Motivate
- Inspire
- Keep you on track
- Help you prioritize
Possible areas to include:
- Health
- Career
- Relationships
- Creativity
- Financial
Size/durability/usability
- Laminate and keep handy on wall or desktop
- Crop sections and color copy
- Reduce size and color copy for portable reminder
- Frame it
Remember that your vision board doesn’t have to be pretty – just functional. Make it something that you want to look at! No one else has to see it!
If you are having trouble getting started, try to picture your “best life” – what would it look like if ALL your dreams were to come true?
Remember to be flexible – things change. Even priorities change. Go easy on yourself, especially when outside forces get in the way.
Once you’ve created a vision board, don’t just stick it in a drawer. Find a way to keep it handy.
You could get it laminated at an office supply store.
You could crop different sections of it and print color copies.
You would reduce the side and make a small color copy for a portable reminder.
You could frame it and hang somewhere that you will see it.
Additional Resources:
Steal Like an Artist by Austin Kleon
Find Your Artistic Voice by Lisa Congdon
Your Inner Critic is a Big Jerk by Danielle Krysa
DAILY CHALLENGES AND OTHER CREATIVE HABITS – work best when they are simple, achievable, and you have a way to stay accountable.
- Februllage – every February, series of collage prompts, sponsored by Edinburgh Collage Collective
- #365somethings – see hashtag for ideas
- ICAD – Daisy Yellow Index Card A Day Challenge – June and July each year
- Treasure #Trovember – sponsored by Collage-Lab, a series of daily prompts that result in one completed mixed media collage at the end of 30 days – each November
- The 100 Day Project
BOOKSHELF RECOMMENDATIONS:
- Most Creative Year Ever Planner & Organizer
- Creative Sprint by Noah & Mica Scalin
- 365: Daily Creativity Journal by Noah Scalin
- Imagine Out Loud by Jane Davenport
- Create Your Life Book by Tamara LaPorte
- Quirky Prompts – books
BOOKS TO INSPIRE:
Here are a few suggestions from a previous Collage-Lab Book Club meeting:
Alphabetica: An A-Z Creativity Guide for Collage and Book Artists by Lynne Perrella
An A-Z of Visual Ideas by John Ingledew
Collage Techniques by Gerald Brommer
Drawing in Black & White by Deborah Velasquez
If You Can Cut, You Can Collage by Hollie Chastain
If You Can Doodle, You Can Paint by Diane Culhane
Launching the Imagination by Mary Stewart
Once Upon a Piece of Paper by Andrea D’Aquino
Print with Collage and Stitch by Val Holmes
Project Collage by Bev Speight
Steal Like an Artist by Austin Kleon
Tack Down Tuesdays by Laura Lein-Svencner
The Collage Ideas Book by Alannah Moore
The Collage Workbook by Randel Plowman
The Collages of Jonathan Talbot by Deborah K Snider
The Reluctant Artist by Karen Kinney
True Colors: A Palette of Collaborative Art Journals by Kathryn Bold
Urgent 2nd Class by Nick Bantock
What to Give Up for Lent That’s Not Chocolate by Brenda Bogart
PREP:
Now is the time to start preparing yourself for the Zoom. Start reflecting on what you learned about yourself in 2022 and start thinking about how you envision 2023. Think about goals, dreams, wishes, desires, and how you can make 2023 your best year ever. (I’ve included a worksheet to help you organize your thoughts.)
Start collecting magazine images and text for the vision board projects.
Here’s what I look for (you can just pull entire sheets from a magazine, or cut out images and text). I look for:
- WORDS
- PHRASES
- IMAGES THAT INSPIRE
- COLORS AND PATTERNS THAT YOU ARE DRAWN TO
- ANYTHING WITH SPECIAL MEANING THAT YOU WANT TO INCLUDE
Download the suggested supply list and the worksheet. You will also be able to watch the replay here.
Here’s to a creative start to 2023 – I can’t wait to meet with you all on National Vision Board Day!