WHERE should Trade School re-open?
Vote here: http://tradeschool.ourgoods.org/2011/

Trade School will open again in early 2011. We are still looking for the perfect space, so let us know if you have any leads. We had generous offers from New Work City, Hester Street Collaborative, and Fork and Pencil, but we’ve decided to look for more space and time than those organizations could offer. As we continue our search, we want to hear your thoughts on the ideal location.
BARTER REPORT from Caroline Woolard: material (leather) for skills (leather bag making)
I met Will Lisak at Trade School in February. He said he found Trade School online and was excited to connect to people who respect craft in NYC. The summer passed before I ran into him (this time at Brooklyn Kitchen). I remembered the leather bags, and that I had a stack of leather from Build it Green that hadn’t been used for a year, so I proposed a barter: teach me how to make bags in exchange for all my leather.

Last week, he showed me the tools and techniques and we both worked on bags. He made a book bag that fits on his belt and I made a jewelery-selling bag that fits on my belt. I watched how he worked and asked for help when I got stuck. We worked all day, from 11-7, and shifted from focused silence to lively discussion about communal lifestyles/business models and the dignity of work.
Later that night, still satisfied and energized with my new skill and product to prove it, I read this moving writing from his website:
“Our attention has not gone into ornament or surface appeal. Our concern is with the spirit and constitution of the thing. Our devotion is in consideration of how our products live with the movements of a life, and how our industry allows our lives to move.”
I hope anyone who wants a bag gets Will to make one! I also think he should host a day-long workshop.

More from his site:
“ETWAS the company, like a bicycle, requires nothing but the human hand to function.
We apply modern reductionist functionality to a craft system. Our bags are made using a portable workbox that contains all the supplies and tools needed for the bag. This system is halfway between bespoke and mass production, and has many of the benefits of each.
We have no buildings and no offices. We use neither electricity nor water nor plastic. We are light. We are mobile. All of our materials are durable, natural and low impact. From our wooden benches, to our steel tools, to our copper rivets- the patina of age and the scars of use will only add richness, texture, and the comfort of familiarity and use. We design everything to be repairable- because things that get ruined are no good. That said, we also believe objects should fade gracefully. The truly well designed thing will last forever if cared for, but if left in the field will rot away quietly and respectfully. That mix of robustness and sensitivity is pleasing. There is poetry in the act of caring for or fixing a thing that you know will be with you forever, if only you love it enough.”

Will’s bag project heads towards a larger business plan for communal living, the draft of which he shared with me:
thoughts on living with others
or, the constitution of the collective house.
This is particularly applicable to youth, transient people.
It is difficult to live together without fellowship. Who is responsible for the maintenance of a place? We all keep our private things in our rooms and are always wanting for larger infrastructure, but will not invest in it as individuals because we would not find sufficient use, I would like to can some beets, but I will not buy a canner because I am only need it for a day and it is too big to justify storing and carrying on my moves. many people in the house may feel this way.
I will not buy a projector, because I do not have a wall, and I am not going to spend a thousand dollars on a place where I will only live for a few months.
Collective houses run in this atomized way will always waste resources and fail to be as strong of a resource in themselves as they could be.
A house must see itself as an independent thing, and that consciousness must arise from fellowship of the inhabitants, talking and thinking together. They must speak, they must have meetings and delegate tasks that benefit the house. The house that provides more must also demand more.
Who should pay for these resources? Certainly not the transient, there for a year or under who just happens to arrive at the time of an expensive purchase. I have seen so many times a house filled with the unemployed, each seeking separate, private low paying jobs. A good house must have a kind of cottage industry, it should be able to pay for it’s own materials an be able to provide for it’s inhabitants to an extent as well.
Houses have space, kitchens, they can store, ship, and produce simple products of all kinds, from soap to hand-woven textiles, to paper. They can serve as the base for a moving, repair or landscaping company, an underground bakery or a bulk food buying co-op.
The income from these can buy projectors, good cookware, sewing machines, canning jars, linens, all the sundries a house needs to properly function, and in return for these added benefits the house must demand discipline and maintaining labor from it’s inhabitants. There must be cleaning and cooking schedules, time to oil wooden counters, to sharpen kitchen knives, to put food by, to wash communal linens, to paint and repair and carry out larger maintenance tasks.
A house run in this way is more comfortable, more efficient, cleaner, costs the inhabitants less, and takes care of it’s own concerns. It can be a powerful resource rather than a tedious and useless expense.
On the few occasions I have seen houses run in this way, they have been truely remarkable and beautiful places, some of the most graceful and thoughtful things I have seen man create.
the house must also interface with the public, it must host. It should be equipped to host travelers, meals, and events. It should run relevant programing, and it should be able to meet the needs of musicians and diners. “

After reading Will’s statements of conviction, I decided to draft a mission statement for OurGoods. Here it goes:
OurGoods runs on mutual respect.
OurGoods.org exists so that creative people can help each other produce independent projects. More work gets done in networks of shared respect and shared resources than in competitive isolation. By honoring agreements and working hard, members of OurGoods.org will build lasting ties in a community of enormous potential.
OurGoods launches in a month!
On October 15th, we’ll open OurGoods to you! I wrote a grant to partially fund this idea in November of 2008. By November 2009, the group of founders (Carl Tashian, Louise Ma, Rich Watts, Jen Abrams and myself) had coalesced and produced the alpha site. We began getting feedback from our peers (called alpha testers). Now, after nearly two years of research and development, the site is about to open up to you! We have a bunch of events coming up (see OurGoods.org) and it’d be nice to see you there.
With the launch of OurGoods a month away, I’m going to post barter stories and other examples of the sharing economy here. To start, we are profiled in this amazing book.
WHAT’S MINE IS YOURS from rachel botsman on Vimeo.
Trade School table @ KS Film Fest
From 6-11pm tonight, we’ll be hosting a Trade School table at a festival of films funded through Kickstarter. Come share your barter stories with us in exchange for basic medical advice from physician Saul Melman, design help from Louise Ma, and foraging advice from me (Caroline Woolard). We’ll take your barter wonders and barter woes at The Old American Can Factory.
Tuesday June 29th: Idea Party at 106th Street
Taller Boricua asked us to do an event this upcoming week, and Erin Marie Sickler agreed to help out with an Idea Party. She held two at Trade School, and they were really dynamic brainstorming events. You can sign up here.
WHAT IS AN IDEA PARTY?
An Idea Party works like this: We’ll set up groups of up to 10 participants who will present their ideas in the following fashion:
“This is what I want to do:_________; here is my obstacle:_________.”
For example: “I want to have a block party; but I don’t know what the procedures are.” Next, the group will brainstorm solutions and offer information. Each participant presents an idea and shares advice with others.
Who? Have you ever had an idea? Good, you are eligible.
How? Enrollment is limited. Please RSVP with your idea/goal and obstacle by June 25th.
This event is co-presented by The Field & Taller Boricua, with support from Senator José Serrano, as part of The Field’s program Economic Revitalization for Performing Artists.
We reached our goal on Kickstarter!
WOW. Thanks to all 239 of you!
We’ll let you know what’s next soon…

Can we make $1,410 in 7 days?

The image above is from a beautiful artwork by Germain Koh. We promise to make Trade School great if we get the chance.
We’ve been humbled again and again by the generosity and hope we’ve received for Trade School. Nearly 200 people were able to donate money so far, and we’ve reached 85% of our goal. The only problem is, we need $1,410 by June 26th to make good on all the pledges! Please help us reach our goal by spreading the word this week about reopening Trade School. If we can make $1,410 or more this week, we’ll begin planning classes!
In case anyone’s wondering what we do as the OurGoods team, I thought I (Caroline Woolard) should start reporting back. What have I been doing? In the past week, I’ve spent way more time talking about OurGoods than developing the website or bartering with people. I was asked to talk about OurGoods.org at The Walker Arts Center, The Renegade Craft Fair, and The Feast on Good Salon for Internet Week. I used laser pointers for a collective drawing and talked about the power of becoming available at The Walker, bartered with people for a Work Dress at Renegade Craft Fair, and told a story about my path from public art projects to OurGoods at Feast Salon.
Thursday: (Minneapolis) The Walker is running a summer long program about The Commons, so I talked about OurGoods as a tool to enrich our cultural commons. I had people make a drawing together with laser pointers to simulate coordinated action. I focused on the potential for diverse connection across disciplines on OurGoods, where barter partners see themselves in relationship to a larger ecology of creative production. They have a video of the whole night online, and you can see me at the 54 minute mark.
Saturday and Sunday: (McCarren Park, Brooklyn) At Renegade Craft Fair, we shared a booth with Burdastyle, a website that offers downloadable sewing patterns. Every other booth at the fair was selling objects, so most people were surprised that we offered sewing tutorials and Work Dresses for barter. Louise and I stood by a Work Dress and talked to curious people about barter. It was hard to get people in shopping mode to slow down and sew! I think Trade School is a nice real-time engagement because everyone who shows up wants to be there, but it was nice to meet some DIY crafters at Renegade.
Monday: (SoHo) The Feast on Good conference is all about social innovation, but The Feast Salon I spoke at focused on internet start-ups like FourSquare and Catchafire. I decided to trace my interest in OurGoods back to public projects I did like making public seating and subway swings, engaging the tech world in projects that act as excuses for interaction and conversation in public space. I think this approach was the most moving because it’s a personal story with physical objects- it’s not too abstract.
Tuesday: (South Brooklyn) We had a 4 hour brunch meeting/eating about re-opening Trade School! Rich, Louise, and I are really lucky because Saul Melman is joining us to help organize Trade School for the fall. If we don’t get enough Kickstarter money, we’re thinking of looking for sponsors so we can pay for insurance, some materials, and 10-30% of our labor. We’d love to get small sums from local businesses, but we’re also going to approach Home Depot and Whole Foods. I’ll let you know what works!
We’re the project of the day!
In 24 hours, Trade School supporters pledged over $1,000! We still need $8,000 by the end of June, but I’m hopeful. Do you think we should re-open Trade School? If 5,000 people donate any amount or if we raise $9,000 or more, we’ll do it. Vote for us here.

About OurGoods
OurGoods is a community of artists, designers, and cultural producers who want to barter skills, spaces, and objects.
OurGoods helps independent projects get done.