i guess this applies to anything artsy but i think if you're actively creating something, it's easier to look at the world around you and take it not just for what it is, but as inspiration, too. i've found that when i go outside, i pay more attention to the sights, smells, sounds (basically all my senses) (excluding taste) (unless i'm eating) and try to put words to it and come up with new ideas. for example, one of my favorite not-that-bad lines i've written for a song was, "the misty air made drops in her hair like pearls on a string," and that's literally just because i saw it happen and worked with that visual info in my mind lol. so i think looking back on memories that inspired lines like that does make life a lot more whimsical :D

Comments (0)

Make an account to reply.
No comments yet

Related Recs

🌅
Basically, that “cathedrals are everywhere” thing— see a rec from Baby from a few days ago haha To be receptive to this, I just have to work at creating things all the time whether I feel inspired or not. Inspiration won’t strike, it’ll seep in from everywhere as long as the practice doesn’t stop. There’s so much to take from the seemingly mundane world that it can actually feel impossible to keep up with all the things I want to try to create.  What excites me is the stuff I can’t explain, but could attempt to convey with art. Inspiration comes as a fragment of an idea that I can’t place or a feeling that’s too wide to grasp all at once. If I understand it instantly, if the idea is complete and I can name it, it might be nice but it is not interesting. If the feeling is open ended, then I can try to recreate that little mystery, like an experiment, or to complete it, and see where that brings me.  I don’t think of the things and people I love as muses, but I guess I’m bound to notice more of what inspires me in the places I frequent the most and people I surround myself with. This is all really vague and rambling, but basically it’s usually little things like the way light hits the branches of a favorite tree or the way someone just picked up a cup.
May 6, 2024
Pull a joni mitchell and engage in arts that differ from your primary to inform it at a later time. If you lean more toward visual arts try poetry, song writing, music making, acting/performances for the self, crochet, clay, claymation, videography, sound collection, whistling, discovering new sounds you can make etc. Often when i want to create but i feel tired or uninspired i try to use still life or my surroundings— BUT If thats boring i ask myself a question and let my train of thought ramble -> connecting that rambling to my pen on paper Honestly setting your inner critic to rest and creating things that are imperfect is actually incredible! More often than not letting first drafts be final for a moment allows you to discover what you crave to create.
Apr 11, 2024
🪄
take a walk, sit in the sun, talk to my friends - idk SOMETHING that is not looking at my phone screen. however, even though i try this, i still fall victim to it often😔. i love my phone; i am not perfect. anyways, if i will just surround myself with real tangible things (the people i love, grass under my feet, a good meal i cooked) i tend to find myself inspired in some way. if you let it, life will constantly inspire you in some shape or form. allow all the ideas to flow! even if they sound silly/cliche! an idea is an idea and no one can take it from you! finding beauty in the mundane is a real life saver for a photographer/writer like myself.
Oct 16, 2024

Top Recs from @transatlanticism

recommendation image
🐭
every single time i read it i end up bawling. it's been my favorite for a long long time
recommendation image
🎶
specifically cad by vita de vie. there are so many rabbit holes you can fall down while trying to do research for a book
💼
need job PLEAAAASEEEEEEEEE