Social:Outline of crafts
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to crafts:
Craft – skill, involving in many cases but not always, practical arts. It may refer to a trade or particular art. Crafts as artistic practices are defined either by their relationship to functional or utilitarian products, such as sculptural forms in the vessel tradition, or by their use of such natural media as wood, clay, glass, textiles, and metal.
What are crafts?
A craft is a work of physical expression drawn from imagination or existing culture, largely by using hands. A craft is typically birthed by creativity and intentional design, through the application of skill(s)/ techniques and can extend across a wide range of areas from dance, embroidery to photography. Good 'craftsmanship' is marked by dexterity and experience.[1][2]
Crafts as a whole can be described as all of the following:
- One of the arts – as an art form, crafts are an outlet of human expression, usually influenced by culture and which in turn help to change culture. Crafts are a physical manifestation of the internal human creative impulse and typically involves the use of hands to create the artform.
- One of the visual arts – visual arts is a class of art forms, including painting, sculpture, photography, printmaking and others, that focus on the creation of works which are primarily visual in nature.
Types of crafts
Ceramics and glass crafts
Ceramics and ceramic arts include:
- Azulejo
- Cameo glass
- Earthenware
- Glass and glass art
- Bubblegram
- Glass beadmaking
- Glass etching
- Glassblowing
- Glassmaking
- Stained glass and lead came and copper foil glasswork
- Glassware
- Mosaic
- Porcelain
- Pottery
- Stoneware
Fibre and textile crafts
See also Needlework below
- Bobbin lace
- Felting
- Knotting
- Chinese knotting
- Macramé
- Rope-making
- Rug making
- Spinning
- Stitch
- Tatting
- Weaving
Flower crafts
- Bouquet
- Floral Design
- Ikebana
Leatherwork
- Boiled leather making
- Leather carving
- Leather crafting (including dyeing, painting, and stamping)
Houseware
- Basket weaving (also called basketry, basket making)
- Cooper
Fashion
Cloth
- Dyeing and Printing
- Batik
Jewelry
- Beadwork
Needlework
- Applique
- Crochet
- Embroidery
- Canvas work
- Bargello
- Berlin wool work
- Needlepoint
- Counted-thread
- Blackwork
- Cross-stitch
- Whitework
- Surface embroidery
- Brazilian embroidery
- Candlewicking
- Couching
- Crewel embroidery
- Goldwork
- Ribbon embroidery
- Sashiko
- Stumpwork
- Canvas work
- Knitting
- Nålebinding
- Needlelace
- Patchwork
- Quilting
- Broderie perse
- English paper piecing
- Trapunto
- Sewing
- Spool knitting
Paper crafts
Paper crafts include:
- Bookbinding
- Calligraphy
- Cast paper
- Decoupage
- Iris folding
- Origami
- Paper embossing
- Paper marbling
- Paper model
- Papercutting
- Papermaking
- Papier-mâche
- Parchment craft
- Quilling
- Scrapbooking
- Paper burning art
Wood and furniture crafts
- Cabinet making
- Carpentry
- Intarsia
- Lacquer art
- Marquetry
- Spoon carving
- Timber framing
- Upholstery
- Wood burning
- Wood carving
- Woodturning
- Woodworking
- Green woodworking
Stone crafts
- Flintknapping
- Mosaics and inlaying
- Stone carving
- Stonemasonry
Metal crafts
- Blacksmithing
- Casting
- Clockmaking
- Cloisonné
- Coppersmith
- Enamelling
- Farrier
- Jewellery
- Knife making
- Locksmithing
- Metalworking - metalsmith
- Pewter
- metal wire art
- Silversmith
- Tinware - tinsmith
- Watchmaking
- Weaponsmith - sword making, armorer, gunsmith, fletching
General crafts concepts
- American craft
- Artisan
- Arts and crafts
- Handicraft
- Master craftsman
- Sloyd
- Studio craft
- Studio pottery
See also
- Rural crafts
- Stagecraft
References
External links