Does anyone here have any experience running or even just attending a community space that's a kind of drop-in art studio/creative workspace? Like somewhere that has a bunch of different art and craft supplies and tools, you can take your own project, you can speak with people there, learn new skills, try the stuff they've got, etc.

I'm interested in knowing what activities went on there, how you ran it or what you got from it as a participant, etc.

 

#AskFedi

I've had loads of great replies to this, thank you everyone who took the time - I'm going to need to sit down and look through all the links I've been sent ^.^
@welshpixie not me but @pastagang @TodePond and @yaxu been talking a lot about this kind of stuff of late
Alex McLean (@[email protected])

I've been thinking a lot about what a friend pointed out - that mixed gendered spaces often quickly become male-exclusive because men tend to have much higher tolerance for arsehole behaviour than women, so it only takes one dodgy person to destroy a community as all the women basically leave. Once such a community has heavy male bias it can hardly recover, and its lack of representation means it can hardly succeed in any social, cultural or technical aims. Rings true for the extraordinarily bad gender balance in free/open source software in the context of the Stallman report.

post.lurk.org
@junklight @pastagang @TodePond @yaxu very true - the space I'm at, all the volunteer and paid staff are fem, the one guy at the top is masc but takes his cues from the others