




I recently had the opportunity to hear from ID Locke about her process of art and writing and how they go together. I’m excited to share her interview with you!
KK: Tell me a little more about what crafts you do. What do you like to make?
IDL: Generally, I do a lot of knitting and hand sewing. Knitting is whatever strikes my fancy at the moment or something that I “need” to do. Currently, my “need” project is a baby blanket for my soon-to-arrive grandbaby #2. I have another project that I’ve only gotten as far as casting on the required stitches before I realized that I had a month to knit said baby blanket.
I have a collection of BJD’s (ball-jointed dolls) that are physical representations of the characters in several of my stories. I mostly sew clothes for them, but also knit sweaters and travel blankets to provide additional protection when I take them out somewhere. Doll sweaters are fairly quick to knit even if you need to use baby/fingerling yarn and 2.5mm needles.
I typically knit and sew while watching TV as I can’t just sit there and do nothing. Long car rides are a challenge as I’ve found I can’t knit while in a car because it makes me feel queasy.
One of my favourite things to do is pick up random balls of yarn at second-hand shops and see what I can make with them. I like the challenge of taking a ball of one colour/texture/weight and mixing it with something else to see what happens. Quite a few of the things I knit are one of a kind as I often have no idea where the yarn came from and can’t get more of it.
KK: When did you learn to do crafts?
IDL: My mom got me started on sewing. She’s a wonderful seamstress and had me using a sewing machine by the time I was 6. I saw a friend knitting when I was about 8 or 9 and thought it looked neat so I decided to try it.
KK: Have you ever given a craft to a character? How did you go about it? What research did it require?
IDL: I have. I have one that actually knits and another who is a face-up artist for BJD’s on the side. The knitting aspect… well, I already do quite a bit of that so it was easy. The details about face-up work I asked face-up artists some basic information and browsed through a doll forum for info. I have a character that is a glass blower as his job and I researched that as well as spent some time watching some local glass blowers at work.
KK: What effect does your writing have on your crafting and vice-versa? Does one fall off when the other is stronger, or do they synergize?
IDL: I have to make time for each thing since they can’t be done at the same time. Generally, I’ll knit/sew after supper for an hour or two then switch to writing. On the weekends, depending on what is most pressing for me to get done is what gets worked on the most. For a while I focused exclusively on writing and learned the hard way that wasn’t a smart thing to do. I try to be more balanced now. I also find that if I’m working a simple pattern, my mind will go off on little day trips and either take a WIP into new territory or give me something completely new to work on.
KK: What do you dream of making when you have the time or skills?
IDL: I’d love to make a tree of life sweater but the idea of following a chart pattern to that degree turns me off. If I had the money, I’d love to make a sweater out of quivik yarn but at nearly $100/1 oz ball (and it’s a lace weight yarn)… yeah, not gonna happen unless I win the lotto.
KK: Where do you get ideas for your crafts?
IDL: I usually see something I like and want to make that for myself or somebody I know who’d really like it. When it comes to doll things, I generally need to make the various clothes as they’re typically created species of mine and their cultural clothes doesn’t really exist outside of my head.
Gallery
2 wigs for Jolen and a pair of boots I made. The outfit he’s wearing I also made out of a pair of dress socks.
I sewed Dakvir’s outfit and modded his wig to add the silver-white hair
Kysmirhea’s wig was made out of dyed fox fur and I sewed his cat ears to it. The white top he’s wearing is made out of a mesh glove and I also sewed the quasi military jacket, too.
Biography
ID Locke is an obsessive/compulsive writer who often ignores things like the need to eat and the fact she’ll be even later for work if that document isn’t closed right this minute. Writing has been a life-long obsession for her, and people have commented that she appears to get twitchy if she doesn’t do it on a regular basis.
ID Locke has been married for more than twenty years, has a grown son and is now a grandma. She has an exceptionally dirty mind filled with kinky possibilities and enjoys writing hot man-on-man sex (with Plot no less) for her own amusement and the entertainment of others. She works, writes, and knits, squeezing reading and some anime/TV watching in there somewhere. She also enjoys creating clothes and jewellery for the ball-jointed-dolls she has turned into many of the characters from her novels. She’s blunt, sarcastic, and not afraid to speak her mind. Music is one of her loves, and she often listens to her rather eclectic collection while writing to help the creative juices flow.
Welcome to The Noonhour, a new Podcast featuring essays, children’s stories, and other items I find interesting. It’s an experiment that I’m enjoying, so sit back, relax, and listen to
This is a story about a writer who wanted to have some fun. She wanted to use her spiffy new-to-her iMac to create a Podcast to the world and play with the M-Audio keyboard (piano keyboard, folks, not typing keyboard) that she’d bought mumble-something years ago and actually make some music, like, man.
Therein lies the story, see, because technology, well, technology is an ugly bitch that never got picked at the high school dance and now wants to take it out on anyone walking by whether or not they were at the dance dancing or wallflowers too. So our writer, who will remain silent on the whole dancer/wallflower thing, decided to do the simple task of taking a microphone and speaking some words into it and doing a podcast. Simple, right? Even a monkey can do it.
Apparently, our writer is not a monkey.
Four DAYS later, the software update started is done and installed and all the new whizbang instrument sounds are available, she has recorded her first (cheesy and corny but fun) podcast – but then couldn’t figure out how to post it to Blogger because apparently Blogger doesn’t yet host podcasts – dude, Blogger, get with it, will ya? – and posted it to YouTube and…
Therein lies the story, see, because you can’t upload an audio-only file to YouTube.
Sigh.
So, Google search revealed the secret – that one must first make a movie on iMovie.
You with me on this? Our poor writer, who JUST WANTED TO HAVE SOME FUN, decided to record herself in GarageBand, which then uploaded to iTunes, which then uploaded to YouTube but wouldn’t work, now is in iMovie to add the audio to a still image, and then upload that back onto YouTube…
For a four second clip.
Huh? IT’S SUPPOSED TO BE 10 MINUTES LONG!
Turns out, iMovie defaults four seconds of audio when you have an image. You have to change the duration of the image from four seconds to the duration of your audio. Still with me? Come on, drink some coffee, you can do it… I know it’s confusing, but it’s almost done.
So. GarageBand-to-iTunes-to-YouTube-to-iMovie-to-YouTube and FINALLY success.
I just looked and…
My image is too wide for the space alotted for YouTube and cuts off the words in the bottom right of the frame.
I officially give up and call it…
MY FIRST DRAFT.
The others being… well… firster.
G’night.
When I went to Wisconsin’s Sheep and Wool Festival a couple years ago, there was a highly peculiar sheep.
One of the most obvious ways to ground is to work IN the ground, by gardening. What I’ve discovered about gardening is that weeding is like laundry – it never ends. As you keep working in your garden, the weeds keep growing.
The best part about gardening is the results of the growth. I love seeing tomatoes turn red, and peppers finish growing. We have chard that is getting huge and beautiful. It’s almost a shame to eat, since they’re so pretty. My lilies are opening and my curry plants have lots of yellow seeds that scent the air.
Weeds remind me that daily maintenance yields positive results and that there is serenity in the everyday.
Do you garden? What do you like to grow?
Publishing and writing are two different parts of the puzzle. They’re not the same thing and shouldn’t be approached as the same thing.
Writing is a creative art. It’s image-intensive, using the imagination to create stories and poetry. Even non-fiction is as much art as science, as connections are made between facts and figures. There are many tools to help us keep the channel clear as we create.
Publishing is a business. It’s about producing product that customers want to buy. It’s changed a lot in the last fifteen years, from the consolidation of traditional publishing houses to the explosion of ereaders and ebooks. Genre definitions have blurred and fractionated because the internet allows authors to give readers many different tags for a particular book that would be impossible to duplicate in a brick-and-mortar store.
It’s important to remember that these two “jobs,” if you will, aren’t the same and that they require different skills. Luckily, there are many places to learn the skills that will help you succeed at both, but the firs step is to recognize the differences between them.
LGBT Fantasy Fans and Writers has launched. From the “About Us” page: “Welcome to our little corner of the ‘net. This is going to be a blog that appreciates LGBT fantasy in all its forms and incarnations- books, movies, games, art, whatever! Dark, light, urban, epic, romantic, sword and sorcery, classic… We love it all.”
Together with Alex Beecroft, Jennifer Thorne, Kay Barisford, Melanie Tushmore, and Violetta Vane, I’ll be talking about one of my favorite subjects – the fantasy genre in all its wonderful variety, and specifically looking at the GLBT subset within it. We will offer flash fiction, essays, and excerpts from our own works. I hope you enjoy!
My first entry is up today, “Worldbuilding – M/M Style.” I talk about some of the unique challenges presented to authors of M/M romance as they venture into creating worlds of their own. Stop on by!
Today is also my day at the Writer’s Retreat Blog, where I talk about new beginnings.
In addition, I start a new job today. I’m very excited. Wish me luck!
I’m at the Writer’s Retreat today, sharing some thoughts on working and writing. Come on by!
Write on!