Jacobson just 'Can't Stop Making Things'

CORNWALL — Gail Jacobson’s creativity and craftsmanship are already well-known, here and on the World Wide Web.

The new show of her work at the Cornwall Library brings home projects that are as inspiring as they are surprising.

The term “added value†applies here. The artist is more than willing to share her ideas and techniques. The exhibit is named after her blog, Can’t Stop Making Things, where the focus is on passing along her project ideas. She promises they can be made with basic skills and tools most people already have.

A year after firing it up, the site is pulling in up to 10,000 “hits†per month. It proves Jacobson’s theory that there are others out there who want simple, straightforward, “workable†sites.

Despite Internet journeys that took her around the world and linked her to astonishing Web sites, she was unable to find one that she felt met her needs and her vision.

“Most of the blogs I found had these women who were talking about everything going on in their lives. It would be a daily journal where every once in a while you could find a tutorial for a recipe or something they had made. I finally decided that if I started my own blog, I would be found by others doing the same thing as me.â€

She was right. They found her (and she, in turn, provides links to other sites).

For Jacobson, who founded Art at the Dump 10 years ago, there is no ego involved. But as much as she likes to share her ideas, she admits the blog is partly a way to archive everything she likes to make. It is also gives her a reason — as if she needed one — to do projects all year long.

“I make a lot of holiday gifts, and I’m doing so many projects right around that time. Now it’s about more than ‘just because I want to.’â€

The name of the Web site seems a perfect description of Jacobson, but it was not her first choice. She wanted to stay away from anything that sounded negative. Ultimately, it was about getting as close to the head of the alphabetical order to achieve an advantage on search engines.

The artist also recognizes the need for boundaries. Having restrictions when it comes to things like materials is a place to start.

All that said, she promises her blog will always have a simple design, with no ads or extraneous information and photos.

She will post a new project weekly; that’s not a lot of pressure for Jacobson, who has published about 72 projects and has another 157 waiting (not to mention the yet-to-be-tested ones that regularly pop into her head).

All materials will be things one can either find in a crafting scrapbox, around the house or “for cheap†at a local store. One of her favorite places to cruise is the hardware store. Expanding foam is incorporated into various projects, for example.

The only tools that are needed are common ones found in most households, and ones that can be used with relative safety.  “No  welding torches!†she promises.

Skill levels are also kept to a reasonable expectation.

Her projects are aimed at producing “high-end†items, not the retro-style projects she found in abundance on the Internet. Ideas are original, although she says that as any craft project goes, inspiration may come from seeing a lot of other projects.

Items produced will be usable. Her latest post bears this lead-in: “Do you know those times when you need something more than a card but less than a gift or when your gift sucks so you need to have a really neat something extra? This may fill the bill.â€

The blog can be translated, at the click of a button, into eight different languages.

Projects often have witty names, some that seem to bear no resemblance to the end product. It’s part of the fun, and sort of Jacobson’s philosophy.

“I love using something to make something that bears no resemblance to the original.â€

One of her favorite projects, which became Christmas gifts for friends: slices of PVC pipe, heated (in a toaster oven), shaped, etched, stained and embellished into beautiful bracelets.

At cantstopmakingthings.com you can find everything from wall murals and twig chairs to jewelry and cupcake decorations. Some come with short stories. When Jaocbson comes up with a recipe she and husband Jeff particularly enjoyed, she shares that, too.

There are also quite a few manipulated photography projects. Anyone who has ever wanted to try Photoshopping but was afraid of the process can pull an end run by following Jacobson’s simple instructions.

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