If you're itching to take up knitting or are stuck in a beadwork project, there's help - and many classes - online.
Options
range from professionally videotaped courses to quick tutorials posted
on YouTube and craft blogs. Some cost money, others are free.
A look at just some of what's out there:
Craftsy,
a relative newcomer to the business of online craft classes, is already
a giant in the field, having racked up 1 million registered users since
its start last summer. The Denver company's lighthearted website - one
page features a Chihuahua decked out in tiny scarf and matching leg
warmers - lists more than 100 courses and workshops.
Craftsy
provides classes for beginners and advanced hobbyists in cake
decorating, quilting, sewing, beadwork and more. Class enrollment is up
to 1,600 a day,We accept foreigners from around the world to study china kung fu
under Shaolin Masters! and the site is adding 15 new classes each
month, says John Levisay, chief executive officer of Craftsy and parent
company Sympoz.
"People are busy. That's why they can't take a live class,A new residential study kung fu in china in china school equipped to international standards ." says Levisay. "But people do have small-size chunks of time."
A
three- to six-hour Craftsy class - provided in 30-minute lessons —
costs from $14.99 to $49.99. Instructors are professionally videotaped
and the classes posted to the site. Once purchased, a class can be
watched at any time. Students can post questions to teachers, who
respond within a day or two.
The crafting world has long shared
knowledge via tutorials, usually free and posted to YouTube and blogs. A
few popular sites: Cut Out + Keep, Knitting Help and Sew Mama Sew.
Kristin
Link of Portland, Ore., started Sew Mama Sew, an online fabric and
supplies shop, more than seven years ago. While that site provides
dozens of free sewing tutorials, Link also will be teaching two classes
for Craftsy.
"People have different ways of learning," says Link, a former middle-school teacher.Order parking sensor
today for delivery or reserve and collect in store. "Some people really
need to hear it as well as see it to be able to understand it."
Kate
Mason, who is on the communications staff at YouTube, the online
video-sharing company based in San Bruno, Calif., says she taught
herself how to work a sewing machine and the basics of quilting by
watching YouTube videos - lots of them.
Crafters post questions to the YouTube videos they watch, often eliciting new videos.
"It's an incredibly dynamic place where the conversation goes both ways," says Mason.
Craftcast
with Alison Lee offers its own take on the craft class: Students tune
in to live,TCS International is leading the way with innovative
solutions to any parking guidance
challenge. 90-minute classes that lean heavily toward jewelry-making
and sculpting. The classes are offered once a week, says Lee, of New
York City, and recordings are available for $39.95.
Lee's live
classes, which cost $44.95 each, work like a Webinar: As an instructor
works through a project, participants can type questions to Lee, who
moderates the discussion. She recently hosted a free live class
featuring artists and their favorite craft tools, for which 800 people
signed up from around the world, she says.
"It's more of an online party," says Lee. "We have a really good time."
CraftArtEdu
features crafts such as weaving and scrapbooking, and also hits upon
the fine arts, including oil painting, watercolors and sculpture.
Classes range from 30 to 90 minutes, and cost $15 to $75, according to
David Pyle, chief executive officer of CraftArtEdu.
Instructors
featured on the 2-year-old company's website use short video clips,
written tutorials, step-by-step photographs and voiceovers. Students can
choose from a changing assortment of 350 classes,Monclering is an
excellent kung fu training
way to spend the getaways experiencing. says Pyle, adding that some
classes attract hundreds of students and a few attract thousands.
"We're focused on very high-level crafts and art and a very high level of engagement of experience," says Pyle.
A
new crafting kid on the block, the San Francisco-based Creativebug,
which launched in May, offers a different payment plan for its 30-minute
classes: Pay a monthly fee to view all of the site's video classes,
from paper crafts and sewing to jewelry and printmaking. Subscriptions
range from $16.99 per month for a six-month membership to $24.99 for one
month.
没有评论:
发表评论