Information about Do It Yourself
“DIY” redirects here. For other uses, see DIY (disambiguation).
Do it yourself, often referred to by the acronym DIY, is a term used by various communities that focus on people creating things for themselves without the aid of paid professionals. The notion is largely made possible by living in a modern industrial society, and is related in philosophy to the Arts and Crafts movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Many modern DIY subcultures take the traditional Arts and Crafts movement's rebellion against the percieved lack of soul of industrial aesthetics a step further. DIY 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 actual activity of DIY goes back through the ages: since the beginning of time, people have used their own abilities and available tools and technologies to take care of their own needs, make their own clothing, and so on.
The phrase "do it yourself" 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 DIY 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 DIY has taken on a broader meaning that covers a wide range of skillsets. Today, for example, DIY is associated with the international alternative and punk 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 DIY, for example the indymedia network, pirate radio stations, and the zine community.
DIY home improvement in North America
The home improvement DIY 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, DIY 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 '70s.
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 J. Baldwin acted as editor for the inclusion of these items, writing many of the reviews himself.)
The Catalog's publication both emerged from and spurred the great wave of experimentalism, convention-breaking, and do-it-yourself attitude of the late 1960s. Often copied, the Catalog appealed to a wide cross-section of people in North America and had a broad influence.
For decades, magazines such as Popular Mechanics and Mechanix Illustrated offered a way to keep current on useful information. DIY home improvement books began to flourish in the 1970s, first created as compendiums of magazine articles. One of the earliest extensive lines of DIY 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, DIY 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 DIY home-improvement content created by expert authors to Internet users. Since the late 1990s, DIY has exploded on the Web through virtually thousands of sites.
In the 1970s, when home video (VCRs) came along, the potentials in demonstrating processes audio-visually were immediately grasped by DIY instructors. As with television programs, presentation could be dynamic and was not limited in the ways that still photos and written text might be.
The DIY industry has grown markedly since the 1980s as DIY has become a popular weekend pastime for people wanting to improve their living conditions (and the value of their house) without the expense of paying someone to do it. There are many DIY stores to supply materials and tools.
In 1994, the HGTV Network cable television channel was launched in the United States and Canada, followed in 1999 by the DIY Network cable television channel. Both were launched to appeal to the growing percentage of North Americans interested in DIY topics, from Home Improvement to Knitting. Such channels have multiple shows showing how to stretch one's budget to achieve professional-looking results ("Design Cents", "Design on a Dime", etc.) while doing the work yourself.
Common DIY home-improvement tasks
Common DIY home-improvement projects include:- putting up shelves
- painting and decorating
- plumbing work, e.g.:
- replacing washers
- replacing sink, bath or basin taps or fitting an outside tap
- fitting a shower
- extending or installing central heating
- decking
- building an extension
- extending or replacing electrical wiring
- motor repairs, e.g.:
- changing engine oil
- changing spark plugs
- fitting or replacing a car radio/audio system
- Modifying or upgrading computer equipment, known as modding or tweaking.
- DIY audio/video equipment.
- building/restoring cars, boats or aircraft
DIY as a subculture
The term 'DIY' or 'Do-It-Yourself' is also used to describe:
- Self-publishing books, zines, and alternative comics.
- bands or solo artists releasing their music on self-funded record labels
- creating crafts such as knitting, sewing, handmade jewelry, ceramics, etc.[1]
- creating punk, indie, or hipster musical merchandise through the use of recycling thrift store or discarded materials, usually decorated with logo art applied by silk screen.[2]
With the rise of the modern multi-national corporation, North American and European DIY culture has increasingly become a social and political ideology as well as hobby and fashion aesthetic. As a response to the reputation of large multi-national companies being accused of exploiting labor in developing countries, such as Gap, Nike, and Coca-Cola, the DIY subculture has increasingly seen its choices as consumers motivated in part to not support such perceived cruelty and abuse. A common sentiment expressed in DIY culture is to "think global, act local," meaning that support of multinational corporations supports exploiting labor and environmental abuses, so to purchase goods and services made locally in effect boycots these organizations. In addition, the making, recycling, or otherwise not consuming as part of DIY subculture lessens the ammount of sales taxes one pays, which are viewed to similarly aid such morally repugnant institutions as governments waging 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.
DIY culture is not limited to hand-making items such as clothing and housewares, but extends to choices of public transportation such as biking and bike repair, walking, taking public transportation, driving electric, hybrid or bio-diesel vehicles and modifying existing vehicles, to avoid supporting traditionally amoral car companies. Listening to and making community radio, pirate radio, and watching and making community television instead of advertising-filled traditional media is also common.
Groups and publications associated with DIY subculture
- Microcosm Publishing
- Distros of zines and music, such as Cometbus
- Craft
- Make
- ReadyMade
- Bazaar Bizarre
- Church of Craft
See also
Notes
1. ^ DIY Network Craft Page. Retrieved on 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, DIY Jewelry Making"
2. ^ DIY guide to screen printing t shirts for cheap. Retrieved on 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."
3. ^ Oxford Journal of Design History Webpage. Retrieved on 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’ (DIY) production techniques of cut-n-paste letterforms, photocopied and collaged images, hand-scrawled and typewritten texts, to create a recognizable graphic design aesthetic."
2. ^ DIY guide to screen printing t shirts for cheap. Retrieved on 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."
3. ^ Oxford Journal of Design History Webpage. Retrieved on 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’ (DIY) production techniques of cut-n-paste letterforms, photocopied and collaged images, hand-scrawled and typewritten texts, to create a recognizable graphic design aesthetic."
DIY may refer to:
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- Do it yourself, a term used by various communities that focus on people creating things for themselves without the aid of paid professionals.
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Industrial may refer to:
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- Industry, a segment of the economy
- A type of land use
- Industrial Revolution, the development of industry in the 19th century
- Industrial society, one that has undergone industrialisation
- Industrial music, a genre of music
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Arts and Crafts movement was a British and American aesthetic movement occurring in the last years of the 19th century and the early years of the 20th century. Inspired by the writings of John Ruskin and a romantic idealization of the craftsman taking pride in his personal
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Arts and Crafts movement was a British and American aesthetic movement occurring in the last years of the 19th century and the early years of the 20th century. Inspired by the writings of John Ruskin and a romantic idealization of the craftsman taking pride in his personal
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Fabrication may refer to:
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- Various processes in arts, crafts and manufacturing:
- Fabrication (metal)
- Semiconductor fabrication
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For the 1990s television show, starring Tim Allen, see .
Home improvement is the process of renovating or making additions to one's home. Often, a professional handyperson is hired to perform the improvements but, typically, most improvements are
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neutrality is disputed.
* It may contain original research or unverifiable claims.
* It is missing citations and/or footnotes. Please help improve this article by adding inline citations.
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* It may contain original research or unverifiable claims.
* It is missing citations and/or footnotes. Please help improve this article by adding inline citations.
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The term Pirate Radio usually refers to illegal or unregulated radio transmission. The term is most commonly used to describe illegal broadcast for entertainment or political purposes, but is also sometimes used for illegal two-way radio operation.
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A zine—an abbreviation of the word fanzine, and originating from the word magazine[1][2]—is most commonly a small circulation, non-commercial publication of original or appropriated texts and images.
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Alan Wilson Watts (January 6, 1915 – November 16, 1973) was a philosopher, writer, speaker, and expert in comparative religion. He was best known as an interpreter and popularizer of Asian philosophies for a Western audience.
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The Oracle of the City of San Francisco, also known as the San Francisco Oracle, [1] was an underground newspaper published from September 20, 1966 to February 1968 in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood of that city.
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Stewart Brand (born December 14, 1938 in Rockford, Illinois) is an author, editor, and creator of The Whole Earth Catalog and CoEvolution Quarterly. His intent with the Whole Earth Catalog
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The Whole Earth Catalog was a sizeable catalog published twice a year from 1968 to 1972, and occasionally thereafter, until 1998. Its purposes were to provide education and "access to tools" in order that the reader could "find his own inspiration, shape his own
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James Tennant Baldwin (born 1934) (whose books and articles have been published under the names J. Baldwin, Jay Baldwin, and James T. Baldwin) is an American industrial designer and writer.
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Popular Mechanics is an American magazine devoted to science and technology. It was first published January 11, 1902 by H.H. Windsor, and has been owned since the 1950s by the Hearst Corporation There is also a Latin American edition that has been published for decades and a
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Mechanix Illustrated was an American magazine founded in the first half of the 20th Century to compete against the older Popular Science and Popular Mechanics.
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tool or device is a piece of equipment which typically provides a mechanical advantage in accomplishing a physical task, or provides an ability that is not naturally available to the user of a tool. The most basic tools are simple machines.
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Availability
Satellite
DirecTV Channel 229
Dish Network Channel 112
Channel 9461 (HDTV)
Cable
Bright House Channel 58
AMNET Digital El Salvador Channel 69
Home & Garden Television
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Satellite
DirecTV Channel 229
Dish Network Channel 112
Channel 9461 (HDTV)
Cable
Bright House Channel 58
AMNET Digital El Salvador Channel 69
Home & Garden Television
..... Click the link for more information.
Availability
Satellite
DirecTV Channel 230
Dish Network Channel 111
Cable
Available on most cable systems Check Local Listings for channels The DIY Network is a channel owned by Scripps Howard which focuses on do it yourself projects at home.
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Satellite
DirecTV Channel 230
Dish Network Channel 111
Cable
Available on most cable systems Check Local Listings for channels The DIY Network is a channel owned by Scripps Howard which focuses on do it yourself projects at home.
..... Click the link for more information.
For the 1990s television show, starring Tim Allen, see .
Home improvement is the process of renovating or making additions to one's home. Often, a professional handyperson is hired to perform the improvements but, typically, most improvements are
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Knitting is a craft by which thread or yarn may be turned into cloth. Similar to crochet, knitting consists of loops called stitches pulled through each other. Knitting differs from crochet in that multiple stitches are 'active', or in use, at the same time, and crochet uses a
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Central Heating may mean:
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- Central Heating (Grand Central album)
- Central Heating (Heatwave album)
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deck is a flat surface capable of supporting weight, similar to a floor, but typically constructed outdoors, often elevated from the ground, and usually connected to a building. The term is a generalization of decks as found on ships.
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Electricity (from New Latin ēlectricus, "amberlike") is a general term for a variety of phenomena resulting from the presence and flow of electric charge. This includes many well-known physical phenomena such as lightning, electromagnetic fields and electric currents,
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A spark plug (also, very rarely nowadays, in British English: a sparking plug) is an electrical device that fits into the cylinder head of some internal combustion engines and ignites compressed aerosol gasoline by means of an electric spark.
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Modding is a slang expression that is derived from the verb "". The term can refer to the act of modifying a piece of hardware or software to perform a function not originally conceived or intended by the designer.
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Tweaking refers to fine-tuning or adjusting a complex system, usually an electronic device. Tweaks are any small modifications intended to improve a system.
In electronics, it is a synonym for "trimming.
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In electronics, it is a synonym for "trimming.
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DIY Audio means "do it yourself" audio. Rather than buying a piece of (expensive) audio equipment, such as a high-end audio amplifier or cable, a person makes it himself. The benefits of doing so include economic concerns, the satisfaction of creating something enjoyable, and the
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CAR is a three-letter acronym that can stand for:
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- Central African Republic
- Action Committee for Renewal, a political party of Togo
- Canadian Airborne Regiment
- Canadian Atlantic Railway
- Canadian Aviation Regulations
- Canonical anticommutation relation
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A boat is a watercraft designed to float or plane on, and provide transport over, water. Usually this water will be inland (lakes) or in protected coastal areas. However, boats such as the whaleboat were historically designed to be operated from a ship in an offshore environment.
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