Monday, May 31, 2021

NFTs... and Knitting Patterns??

 I quite honestly never imagined the two things in the same sentence, but here we are. 

For those who don't know what's putting them together here's some background. On Friday, May 28th, a tweet went out from the official Ravelry account. I'll quote it here for you:

If you are a fiber artist who has interest or experience in decentralization, please take a look at the manifesto in my Rav profile (ravelry.com/people/cassidy) & get in touch if it lights you up!


I know that there must be folks out there & I'd like to make some connections -- Cass

Not an overly exciting tweet, although it seems Jessica's assurances that Cassidy wouldn't be communicating over official channels any longer have come to an end. That's actually the least worrisome part if the whole thing.

This tweet welcomes engagement from fiber artists. Ironically questions about the tweet and/or the manifesto in the For The Love of Ravelry (FTLoR) forum were locked and individuals were told that Cassidy wouldn't be responding in the forums. Good to know information requests are still on lockdown in the Big Six! 

An aside: a crafter on Twitter who posted a question about the manifesto in FTLoR not only had her thread locked and archived, but was also banned from the Big Six (!) and removed from all of her other groups! Can you say overkill?! Like wow, don't ask for information of the wrong type because you'll be isolated in a snap.

Ok, so what is an NFT and where do they come into this?

This is one of the best explanations of NFTs, or Non Fungible Tokens, that I've read: đź”—link to BBC article on NFTs

Or as Twitter account DaveTheScwede replied to George Takei:

A pyramid scheme built expressly to steal from artists and basically sell things that A] Aren't yours B] Never were yours C] You have no right to sell

It's in Cassidy's manifesto on her Ravelry profile, which she linked to in the tweet. Now there are a lot of people who've deleted their Ravelry accounts or can't safely access the site due to all of the effects of NuRav, so disaster_march copied the manifesto into a document and screenshot it to safely share it on Twitter so that anyone who wanted to read it could. I've retyped it here for you rather than trying to alt caption the screenshots:

a manifesto 

The initial spark that lit Ravelry was the idea our community needed an index, a database, to tie together all of the projects and patterns that people have shared and spread across the Internet and social media.

 Ravelry was developed with this idea at its core. We work hard to be responsible stewards of the community’s data and we walk a line between limiting contamination from commerce/money and trying to help small designers and yarnies be successful. We are filling a void but we aren’t the end of the story.

no_entry_signmoneybag It’s just a start. It’s not enough. The community needs an independent, not for-profit, decentralized, community owneddatabase of patterns, yarns, and their connections to projects. Rav should be just one of many interfaces to this API and one of many ways of searching patterns and yarns, creating projects and stash that are linked to this database, and so on. The data that forms the heart of Ravelry was contributed by everyone and it belongs to everyone. We need to build this and we can’t do this alone.

We’ve intentionally kept the company/team small and limited commercialization and the amount of money and resources that we consume. sparkles I’m proud that we’ve kept space for this community to own its own infrastructure, prioritize its own needs, and connect designers to makers without being exploited by an intermediary.

The yarn community’s digital history and future infrastructure should not be controlled by a for-profit entity.


The need to create a liquid market of human attention influences the architecture of the web … We’ve lived for so long in an online social universe built for advertising that it is difficult to imagine what an alternative might look like.

quote from “Subprime Attention Crisis” by Tim Hwang

nerd_face hi nerds!

Did you know that all of Ravelry’s pattern and yarn data, advanced search, and more is available via the Ravelry API? https://ravelry.com/api

If you work in yarn tech - say hello! We are not competitive and will happily support and work together with anyone in this space. I would love assist in fostering an open and supportive ecosystem of businesses any way I can.

Ravelry’s backend is built with MySQL, Redis, Ruby and Manticore Search.

thinking_face As the crypto ecosystem matures, might we be able to use NFTs to create “ownership” of digital patterns that is not tied to a platform? Points of sale like Ravelry could provide buyers with the downloads as well as a token, blessed by the designer, that could be used to transfer or exercise ownership of a digital pattern across a variety of platforms and formats.


link links

So there you have it. It starts off pretty good actually. A decentralized database sounds like a dream after so many of us have been effectively shutout of the largest one for the knitting and crochet community; oh the irony. It burns.

But then NFTs are mentioned.

If you've talked to any artists lately, the subject of NFTs has probably come up. And most are not in favor of them. For all the money being "made" by them the actual artist is usually not the person getting any of it. So, what would be different in the case of patterns? Probably not a thing. Someone pointed out on Twitter that the designer might get the original $5, but it would be the one posting it as an NFT that would collect all the $5 payments afterward. This is worse for a designer than the websites (many of these are from Eastern European countries that have very different ideas about copyright) that post paid patterns for free. They're making money from the ads on the site, which is no different than most websites, rather than the patterns. 

The other worrisome aspect of NFTs is the substantial waste of resources they are. These things suck down energy, making them incredibly eco-non friendly. I read some tweets by kariebookish for an idea of how much energy we're talking about: 

But NFTs use a massive amount of energy. And it's not just a one-off. Every time you sell on an NFT (like you'd sell on a painting, say), there's another power surge. Meh, you say?

And: 

 I forgot to put ALT text on image above. So, let me type it out. 


The sale of ONE (1) NFT used as much energy as an artist's studio used in TWO (2) years. 


And remember every time an NFT is sold on, that's another two (2) years' worth of energy.

And then she gave the link to this article from Wired.com: đź”—NFTs are hot. So is their effect on Earth's climate

Many of Knitting Twitter's regular voices are more than a bit dismayed at what could be Ravelry's next avenue of reinvention. There have been several requests for help in how to download pattern libraries. Whether this is the precursor to another exodus of crafters leaving the site or not, if they're either bit smart they'll pay attention to all of those quote tweets. But then if it was about business smarts, would they have alienated so many crafters by not rolling back NuRav and failing to take the accessibility help that was offered last year?

One thing's for certain, we in the fiber craft community are going to continue to feel waves from Ravelry for a longtime to come, no matter why those waves are happening.

Next post I'll be showing off my latest FO. You can get a sneak peek by going over to my notebook blog (link in the sidebar).

Yours in yarn and way too much technospeak for my brain,

SĂ­le

Addendum: I have just read two excellent blogposts, one by Victoria Marchant breaking down the technospeak, and the other by Kathleen Sperling showing how Ravelry's own terms of service for using their API makes the manifesto impossible.

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Well Did You Ever...

 What a swell party this is! 

Yes, I once again have song lyrics stuck in my head :) Hard not to some days, especially when you learn you hit "save" on a post but not "publish" *facepalm*. So today you can read two posts that are new to you!

I meant to write this earlier this month, but life has a funny way of derailing plans. 

Are you familiar with Germander Cottage Crafts? It's a blog and shop run by Hanna, and she's been running featured indy designers every month. I'm so pleased to be May's featured designer!! Be sure to pop over and have a look see at both the blog and shop :) 

Speaking of Off-Rav Designers, one of my personal projects right now is Aoibhe NĂ­'s Finola (link is directly to the pattern page on Aoibhe's website, YarnTowers.com). I hadn't ever done more than a square in Tunisian crochet before and look at this beautiful shawl I'm in the midst of!
Tunisian crochet shawl spread out on the floor for a photo. The shawl is being worked in a gradient yarn in shades of blue, ranging from turquoise to navy, and purples, ranging from deep purple to lilac. The shawl is worked in long narrow wedge shaped panels ended with fan-shapes. The panels are offset, joined while working, giving the shawl an asymmetrical shape with the wider ends and fans forming the left side, and the narrow ends forming the right.

If you've ever considered trying Tunisian crochet, I highly recommend Aoibhe's patterns. Not only are they well written, she also has fantastic videos showing exactly how she does the various steps of the pattern. And I'm not normally someone who finds videos helpful! You can find my project notes for this, and my other projects, over on my other blog here.

How's your weather? We're having a cold rainy snap to end out May. Really hoping weatherman Eddie is right and warmer temps are coming to start off June!

Speaking of June, how is that next week already?? They say time flies when you're having fun but I haven't had much fun lately, and it's still zooming by!

That's it for today! Be sure to checkout the hashtag #WIPWednesdayOffRav on Twitter and Instagram today for all kinds of inspiring projects, patterns, and yarns! Wednesdays are so nice with all the photos :)

Your's in yarn and a warm sweater (I told you it's cold here! lol),
SĂ­le



Sunday, May 9, 2021

Well That Was Certainly a Week!

I don't know about you, but last week was one I don't care to ever repeat the like of again. Between personal changes, my own health stuff, and an emergency with a feline household member I have no nerves left. Poof! Gone!

Less said the better on the first point, I think. I will say the timing couldn't have been worse seeing as how I was finally staring down the final hours to the specialist appointment on Thursday that was kicked off by my October of last year overnight trip to Town. Talk about your emotional rollercoaster!

The appointment/procedure on Thursday could've been worse. I was thinking it would be. Not something I care to repeat mind you, but it wasn't as bad as it could've been and I'm really trying hard not to look on the bad side. Now it's a hurry up and wait situation to get back the results, roughly 6 weeks. In that time I need to get bloodwork done (I might be anemic again. Talk about your throwback moments! I was on iron a lot of high school because my body liked to throw that at me on top of everything else), and the Drs (I saw a tandem team; both were great to talk with so that was a definite plus) were going to book me for an ultrasound, which I'll probably get a letter in the mail about as that's SOP for our health region.

So enter Thursday evening, and I'm sore and tired and already emotionally wrung out, when my precious feline nephew comes up from the basement and howls. And then only eats a few licks of his canned food that night, and barely has any water. And already tired Auntie slept in fits and starts to keep a watch on the poor little guy.

Long story short (for probably the first time ever!), he had a scab from his surgery site migrate, and block off the new opening causing him to react the same way as the first blockage. His vet had never seen the like happen before! Thankfully, after another overnight at the vet's and a catheter in place for another week, Jakey has been perfectly fine. He's even been trying to steal food! Not his usual modus opperendi but he's so cute so it's tough not to give in.

This has really been a week for comfort knitting and I've turned back to a shawl design I call Hap-Hazard. It's my go to when everything around me goes completely haywire, like the last 5 days! I'm hoping to have it in testing this summer. It involves a garter stitch center and picked up stitches with lace borders. I think you'll really like it. It's "moose lace" (and doesn't that conjure up a funny picture in your head!), that is I've used worsted weight wool (Briggs & Little Heritage for my sample) on 6.5mm/ US 10 ½ needles. It's big and squooshy, and feels like a woolly hug around you. Stay tuned for more on this one!

Here's hoping for things to go more quietly than this week from here on out!

Yours in yarn and sleeplessness,
SĂ­le

Sunday, May 2, 2021

Anyone Have Any Bubblewrap?

I've gone and done it this time. Guess who has sprained their back. If you thought "SĂ­le" you're bang on.

How did it happen? I was doing the exercises my physiotherapist gave me to help (oh the irony) strengthen my back and core. Yes, really. Boggles the mind, doesn't it?

This happened Tuesday evening (April 27th). I was in enough pain to go up to the hospital on Thursday night and there we are. 

Thankfully I have the crack medical team of Jakey and Silver here to ensure I don't move around too much. Their technique is quite unique; you talk about bedside manner? These two have mastered on-bed manner!

A black and white fluffy cat curled up sleeping on the photographer, while a silver tabby cat is curled up sleeping next to the photographer's legs, effectively pinning the blankets down making it near impossible for the photographer to move.

That's the latest with me. How are you? Anything exciting going on where you are? I've started a new project, Killeany by Alice Starmore. Lots of yummy cables once I get this ribbing out of the way. What's on your needles?

Yours in yarn and back pain,

SĂ­le