User talk:Leicestershireizgaai
Welcome...
Hello, Leicestershireizgaai, and
- Introduction
- The five pillars of Wikipedia
- How to edit a page
- Help
- How to write a great article
- Manual of Style
Please
DIT
The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. |
Do It Tha'Sen, often referred to by the acronym DIT, is a term used by various communities that focus on people (called do-it-yourselfers or DITers) creating or repairing things for themselves without the aid of paid professionals.
The notion is related in philosophy to the Arts and Crafts movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Many modern DIT subcultures take the traditional Arts and Crafts movement's rebellion against the perceived lack of soul of industrial aesthetics a step further. DIT subculture explicitly critiques modern consumer culture, which emphasizes that the solution to our needs is to purchase things, and instead encourage people to take technologies into their own hands to solve needs.
The phrase "Do It Tha'Sen" came into common usage in the 1950s in reference to various jobs that people could do in and around their houses without the help of professionals. A very active community of people continues to use the term DIT to refer to fabricating or repairing things for home needs, on one's own rather than purchasing them or paying for professional repair. In other words, home improvement done by the householder without the aid of paid professionals.
In recent years, the term DIT has taken on a broader meaning that covers a wide range of skill sets. Today, for example, DIT is associated with the international alternative and hardcore music scenes. Members of these subcultures strive to blur the lines between creator and consumer by constructing a social network that ties users and makers close together. There are various communities of media-makers that consider themselves DIT, for example the indymedia network, pirate radio stations, and the zine community.
Home improvement
The home improvement DIT scene we know today is actually a re-introduction (often to city and suburb dwellers) of the old pattern of personal involvement in home or apartment upkeep, or the making of clothing, or maintaining of cars, computers, websites, or any material aspect of living. A comment by philosopher Alan Watts (from the "Houseboat Summit" panel discussion in a 1967 edition of the San Francisco Oracle) reflected a growing sentiment of the times:
Our educational system, in its entirety, does nothing to give us any kind of material competence. In other words, we don't learn how to cook, how to make clothes, how to build houses, how to make love, or to do any of the absolutely fundamental things of life. The whole education that we get for our children in school is entirely in terms of abstractions. It trains you to be an insurance salesman or a bureaucrat, or some kind of cerebral character.
In response to this sort of insight, in the 1970s, DIT spread through the North American population of college- and recent-college-graduate age groups. In part, this movement involved simply the renovation of affordable, rundown older homes. But it also related to some extent to various projects expressing the social and environmental vision of the '60s and early 1970s. A young American visionary named Stewart Brand, working with friends and family, and initially using the most basic of typesetting and page-layout tools, published the first edition of The Whole Earth Catalog (subtitled Access to Tools) in late 1968.
The first Catalog and its successors used a broad definition of the term "tools". There were informational tools, such as books (often technical in nature), professional journals, courses, classes, and the like. And there were specialized, designed items, such as carpenter's and mason's tools, garden tools, welding equipment, chainsaws, fiberglass materials, etc. — even early personal computers. (The designer
For decades, magazines such as Popular Mechanics and Mechanix Illustrated offered a way to keep current on useful information. DIT home improvement books began to flourish in the 1970s, first created as compendiums of magazine articles. One of the earliest extensive lines of DIT how-to books was created by Sunset Books, based upon articles derived from the pages of Sunset Magazine in California. Time-Life, Better Homes & Gardens, and other publishers soon followed suit. In the mid-1990s, DIT home-improvement content began to find its way onto the World Wide Web. HouseNet was the earliest bulletin-board style site where users could share information. HomeTips.com, established in early 1995, was among the first Web-based sites to deliver free extensive DIT home-improvement content created by expert authors to Internet users. Since the late 1990s, DIT has exploded on the Web through thousands of sites.
In the 1970s, when home video (
Beyond magazines and television the scope of home improvement DIT continues to grow online where most mainstream media outlets now have extensive DIT focused informational websites such as This Old House, Martha Stewart, and the DIT Network that are often extensions of their magazine or television brand. The growth of independent online DIT resources is also spiking[1] and the number of homeowners who blog about their own experiences continues to grow along with Do-It-Yourself websites from smaller organizations.
Subculture
The term 'DIT' or 'Do-It-Yourself' is also used to describe:
- zines, and alternative comics.
- bands or solo artists releasing their music on self-funded record labels
- creating
- creating silk screen.[3]
- game modding.
DIT as a subculture arguably began with the punk movement of the 1970s[4]. Instead of traditional means of bands reaching their audiences through large music labels, bands began recording themselves, manufacturing albums and merchandise, booking their own tours, and creating opportunities for smaller bands to get wider recognition and gain cult status through repetitive low-cost DIT touring. The burgeoning zine movement took up coverage of and promotion of the underground punk scenes, and significantly altered the way fans interacted with musicians. Zines quickly branched off from being hand-made music magazines to become more personal. Zines quickly became one of the youth culture's gateways to DIT culture, which lead to tutorial zines showing others how to make their own shirts, posters, zines, books, food, etc.
Political action
With the rise of the modern multi-national
), the DIT subculture has increasingly seen its choices as consumers motivated in part to not support such perceived cruelty and abuse. A common sentiment expressed in DIT culture is to "think globally, act locally," meaning that support of multinational corporations supports exploitative labor and environmental practices, so to purchase goods and services made locally in effect boycotts these organizations. In addition, the making, recycling, or otherwise following a doctrine of "non consumption" as part of DIT subculture lessens the amount of sales taxes one pays, such taxes being viewed as similarly aiding such morally repugnant institutions as governments which wage war. This view of "consuming less as political statement" is not agreed upon in the subcultures it is found in, but is a motivating force for many of its adherents.DIT culture is not limited to hand-making items such as clothing and housewares, but extends to choices of public transportation such as
Groups and publications
- Bazaar Bizarre
- Craft
- Craftster
- CrimethInc.
- Make
- Microcosm Publishing
- ReadyMade
- Popular Mechanics
- TechShop
See also
- DIT culture/DIT ethic
- Handyperson
- Instructables
- Prosumer
- Junk box
- Number 8 wire
References
- ^ Wall Street Journal, September 2007
- ^ "DIT Network Craft Page". Retrieved 2007-09-24.
Crafts - Most Popular Projects, More Projects, Puttin' On the Knits, Most Popular Knitting Projects, Threadheads: Videos for Creating Your Own Fashion, Halloween Pumpkin Palooza: Pumpkin Carving Templates, Decorations and More, Scrapbooking: Vacations, Most Popular Scrapbooking Projects, Submit Your Own Craft Project, DIT Jewelry Making
- ^ "DIT guide to screen printing t shirts for cheap". Retrieved 2007-09-24.
Ever wonder where bands get their T-shirts made? Some of them probably go to the local screen printers and pay a bunch of money to have their shirts made up, then they have to turn around and sell them to you for a high price. Others go the smart route, and do it themselves. Here's a quick how-to on the cheap way to going about making T-shirts.
- ^ "Oxford Journal of Design History Webpage". Retrieved 2007-09-24.
Yet, it remains within the subculture of punk music where the homemade, A4, stapled and photocopied fanzines of the late 1970s fostered the 'do-it-yourself' (DIT) production techniques of cut-n-paste letterforms, photocopied and collaged images, hand-scrawled and typewritten texts, to create a recognizable graphic design aesthetic.