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In this episode I explore what it really means to “think with your hands” in miniature work. Rather than treating ideas as something that appear fully formed before we begin, this episode looks at how thinking often unfolds through contact with materials, scale, tools, and space.
Miniature work makes this process unusually visible. At small scale, every adjustment matters, feedback happens quickly, and perception often leads explanation. Ideas often don’t announce themselves as plans; they take shape through movement, resistance, balance, and response.
This episode reflects on embodied thinking, tacit knowledge, and why uncertainty at the bench isn’t a failure of preparation but a normal stage of creative work. If you’ve ever felt stuck even though nothing seems wrong, this conversation offers a different way of understanding what the work might be asking for next.
By hershrinkrayeye5
88 ratings
In this episode I explore what it really means to “think with your hands” in miniature work. Rather than treating ideas as something that appear fully formed before we begin, this episode looks at how thinking often unfolds through contact with materials, scale, tools, and space.
Miniature work makes this process unusually visible. At small scale, every adjustment matters, feedback happens quickly, and perception often leads explanation. Ideas often don’t announce themselves as plans; they take shape through movement, resistance, balance, and response.
This episode reflects on embodied thinking, tacit knowledge, and why uncertainty at the bench isn’t a failure of preparation but a normal stage of creative work. If you’ve ever felt stuck even though nothing seems wrong, this conversation offers a different way of understanding what the work might be asking for next.

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