Creative Insights
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Read more: The Pages That Misbehaved
The Pages That Misbehaved
They didn’t follow rules.
They rewrote what a magazine could be.
Underground mags from the 60s and 70s used chaos as fuel for creativity.
They experimented with layout, language, and purpose.
They were loud, political, strange — and unforgettable.Sayonara Seventy Nine selects 7 standout titles that shaped counterculture through design and disruption.
These weren’t just publications.
They were creative acts of resistance.Read more -
Read more: First, the Idea
First, the Idea
Many still value the “thing” more than the “idea.” But everything—from axes to ladders to fashion—was first imagined before it was ever made. In this week’s Sunday Blooming Reading, Blithe Ernst reminds us that ideas are the real origin story behind everything tangible. A playful meditation on imagination, animals, and the unseen beginnings of everything we hold in our hands. First the idea. Then the world.
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Read more: Improvisation Is Not a Strategy
Improvisation Is Not a Strategy
Improvisation is brilliant—when it’s the last resort. In this Sunday Blooming Reading, Blithe Ernst unpacks the myth of improvisation as a creative method. While being able to improvise is a gift, relying on it as your only tool is reckless. True creativity is not about waiting for inspiration to strike, but about training, weaving, building. Improvisation can save the day—but it should never be the plan.
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Read more: The Power of the Inadequate
The Power of the Inadequate
What happens when you reach for the “wrong” tool, wear the “wrong” thing, or say the “wrong” words? You open doors. In this Sunday Blooming Reading, Blithe Ernst explores the power of the inadequate as a creative disruptor. It doesn’t guarantee brilliance, but it pulls us off the beaten path—and into the unknown, where originality hides. Adequacy maintains. Inadequacy invites novelty. And novelty is half of creativity.
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Read more: Creativity Is Tennis
Creativity Is Tennis
Creativity doesn’t thrive in isolation—it needs impact, resistance, and response. In this Sunday Blooming Reading, Blithe Ernst explores the essential role of collision in the creative process: not just between inner desire and outer limits, but between minds. Ideas grow sharper when they bounce off others. Like a tennis match, creativity comes alive when it’s played with someone else. Lucid, collective, and always better with a rally.
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Read more: Creativity and Madness
Creativity and Madness
Creativity has nothing to do with madness—and everything to do with sharpness, clarity, and real-world usefulness.
It’s not reserved for “geniuses” either. That old myth only served to scare people away from their own creative power.
The truth?
You’re creative because you’re alive.
No special permission needed.
Tradition, your fear is showing. Time to move on.Read more