Not long ago I had a conversation with a
writer friend (I’m looking at you, Heather Petty) about the book I’m
currently revising. Okay, mostly it was me despairing about my ongoing
revisions and her listening patiently. And then she said this:
“If you are slogging through the writing,
it will read like slog. You need to find the fun again.”
A few weeks later I stumbled across a
post on author Jennifer Crusie's blog in which she described using
collage to brainstorm her books.
As a costume designer, part of my process
included creating a concept board (also known as a mood board, inspiration
board or design board)- a collage of images and fabrics that could be used to
communicate my design ideas/concept to the rest of the production team.
The concept board for my thesis project. Can you guess what show I designed? |
It made total sense to me to use this process to explore my ideas for my
book. And, more importantly, it sounded FUN!
First, I needed a few supplies:
A foundation- foam core, cardboard,
posterboard, scrapbook pages, etc.
Adhesive- glue stick, repositionable
tape, glue dots
Scissors
Stuff- images (from magazines, catalogs, printouts, etc.), embellishments/ephemera
I set off for the craft store in search
of one of those science project triptych foam core boards, repositional glue
dots and inspiration. I was there for two hours. Partly because I have two
small children and any chance to go shopping by myself is like a vacation on a
tropical island completely devoid of chattering monkeys, and partly because I
was having so much FUN! I let “the Girls in the Basement,” as Crusie calls
them, take over and they went a little crazy.
Next, I pulled out all my old magazines
and started flipping through, pulling out anything and everything that caught
the attention of the Girls. I ended up with a giant pile of stuff.
Fully armed, I cleared off the dining
room table and went to work. You know when you lose yourself utterly in your
story and time passes and you don’t even notice? I stayed up until 3am building
my collage.
I included images and items that spoke to
me about my characters, settings, backstory, overall mood, themes or specific
moments in the story. When you’re making a collage you’re not necessarily
trying to find images that look exactly like your characters, setting, whatever.
You’re looking for things that represent them in some way, that express
something you want to try to capture when you're writing your story.
It's all in there. |
Although I ended up collaging everything
on one board, there are no rules with collage. You can work big or small. If
you’re using a board with three sections you can use the sections as act
breaks, or to focus on different elements of your story. Instead of foam core
you can use scrapbook pages as your foundation to make individual collages for
your characters (as YA author Tera Lynn Childs explains here), settings, scenes, etc. Once
you're finished, you can lay them all out where you can see them while you’re
writing, or you can bind them together and flip through them as needed. You can
even make color copies and reduce them in size so you can carry them around
with you for instant inspiration.
If gluing things down seems too permanent you can try pinning
images to a corkboard or tucking them into a ribbon board. There are also lots
of ways to create digital collages (Turbo Monkey Ellen will be talking about
Pinterest in an upcoming post!), although I encourage you to try stepping away
from the computer not only to give yourself a break from staring at the screen
but because it’s easy to get overwhelmed when searching for images online if
you don’t know exactly what you’re looking for, and at the same time, it’s
harder to stumble across the stuff you don’t even know you need.
For some of you, once you’ve made your
collage, you’ll be ready to tuck it out of sight and move on. For others, the collage can serve as a touchstone, a cheat sheet you can use to get
yourself into the world of your story whenever you have a few spare moments to
write. If this works for you, consider using a picture of your collage as your
desktop wallpaper so it’s waiting for you as soon as you turn on your computer.
However you go about making your collage,
remember you’re not trying to create a work of art. You’re creating a visual representation
of your ideas for your story. You can use collage at any point in your process.
And if you’re like me, it might just help you find the FUN as you rediscover
the magic of your story. Or, to borrow from Julie’s excellent post, if
you’ve lost that lovin’ feeling for your WIP, collage might just help you get
it back!
-Kristen Crowley Held
-Kristen Crowley Held
Love this, Kristin! I'm going to have to try this myself.
ReplyDeleteOoh, I would love to see a collage of your WIP, Sarah!!
DeleteKristen, this is really helpful. I'm going to try it with my next story.
ReplyDeleteKnowing what you can do with words, I'd love to see what you create with collage, Marilyn!
DeleteBrilliant! I'm going to collage my life, cuz I no know where it's going!
ReplyDeleteYes! Make a dream board, Cowboy!
DeleteI love this idea. It reminds me of the scrap books Gloria Skurzynski makes for her books. I should totally do this for 'Nowhere.'
ReplyDeleteI'll have to check out her scrapbooks! And I would love to see a collage for 'Nowhere."
DeleteI'm headed for Micheal's today, Kristen, because you have inspired me. I'm going to create a collage to hang in my writer's cave, to enjoy, yet also help me express with pictures what I am trying to put into words. Well done!
ReplyDeleteYay! Can't wait to see what you create!
DeleteI meant "Michaels" :)
ReplyDeleteWow! I can't wait to do this! Your board is awesome--just looking at it inspired me to want to write NOW!
ReplyDeleteYay! Thanks, Julie! It does that to me too :).
DeleteI actually use Pinterest to form "collages." This is mostly due to the fact that I suck at crafting. But it's awesome to put together images and quotes that make me think of my books, and also cool when it makes other people excited to read them.
ReplyDeleteAh, the woman who started it all! I believe I could spend hours and hours and hours on Pinterest (and I'm going to go check out your "books" right now!), but there's something about wandering around a craft store and physically cutting and pasting things that refills the well for me...
DeleteI love your collage, Kristin! I'd totally put that on my wall.
ReplyDeleteAww, thanks, Beth! You can see everything we brainstormed in there, right? :)
DeleteIronic: collage is "my" medium and yet I have never thought to do this for my MGs. Hmm and thanks Kristin!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Linda! I'd love to see some of your collages!
DeleteWow, what a cool idea! I am no artist, but I'd sure like to give this a try!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Susanna! I promise you will get way more out of collaging than you expect!
DeleteWhat fun, Kristen! I'm going to collage our cabin! What a surprise for the bears.
ReplyDeleteHi Pat! We should have a collage-a-thon at our next writeapalooza :)!
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