CC Circulations: Difference between revisions
Created page with "Category: Workshop <onlyinclude> === CC Circulations === Workshop @ Kulturverein zur Schießhalle</br> Friday 28 Nov </br> & Saturday 29 Nov </br> 14:00 ‑ 17:00 </br> ====Project Description==== How can we produce publications collectively? And how does this not only transform our modes of production, but also our understandings of how we can world our worlds? How can we practice publishing from the middle of communities of practice, always in flux? For a coupl..." |
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Workshop @ Kulturverein zur Schießhalle</br> | Workshop @ Kulturverein zur Schießhalle</br> | ||
Friday 28 Nov </br> | Friday 28 Nov </br> | ||
& Saturday 29 Nov </br> | <del>& Saturday 29 Nov </br> | ||
14:00 ‑ 17:00 </br> | 14:00 ‑ 17:00</del> </br> | ||
====Project Description==== | ====Project Description==== | ||
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For a couple of years we've been running CC (Creative Crowds), a shared server to learn and explore how experimental design tools can be shared with a network of trusted peers, which has grown into a place for us to extend our curiousities in experimenting with collective publishing workflows. At the centre is a question about "who" our tools and practices are tangled with and how we navigate these relations. | For a couple of years we've been running CC (Creative Crowds), a shared server to learn and explore how experimental design tools can be shared with a network of trusted peers, which has grown into a place for us to extend our curiousities in experimenting with collective publishing workflows. At the centre is a question about "who" our tools and practices are tangled with and how we navigate these relations. | ||
During the Design Week, we will host two | During the Design Week, we will host <del>two</del>one workshop<del>s</del> to dive into these questions together. During the<del>se</del> workshop<del>s</del>, we will start with a hands-on exploration of <del>two</del>some collective publishing tools we have been working on, and with: octomode (on Friday) <del>and wiki-to-print (on Saturday)</del>. These tools are part of collaborative workflows that use web-to-print techniques to make zines, funding applications and reports, portfolios, slides, academic journals, bulletins, newspapers, etcetera. We'd like to introduce our practices, these two tools and how they are situated in collective work and a network of networks of practitioners across (but not limited to) Rotterdam, Brussels and Amsterdam. | ||
Bring a laptop! | Bring a laptop! | ||
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[[File:CC Circulations (3).jpg|400px]] | |||
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</onlyinclude> | </onlyinclude> | ||
{{:Creative Crowds CC}} | {{:Creative Crowds CC}} | ||
Latest revision as of 23:06, 17 December 2025
CC Circulations
Workshop @ Kulturverein zur Schießhalle
Friday 28 Nov
& Saturday 29 Nov
14:00 ‑ 17:00
Project Description
How can we produce publications collectively? And how does this not only transform our modes of production, but also our understandings of how we can world our worlds? How can we practice publishing from the middle of communities of practice, always in flux?
For a couple of years we've been running CC (Creative Crowds), a shared server to learn and explore how experimental design tools can be shared with a network of trusted peers, which has grown into a place for us to extend our curiousities in experimenting with collective publishing workflows. At the centre is a question about "who" our tools and practices are tangled with and how we navigate these relations.
During the Design Week, we will host twoone workshops to dive into these questions together. During these workshops, we will start with a hands-on exploration of twosome collective publishing tools we have been working on, and with: octomode (on Friday) and wiki-to-print (on Saturday). These tools are part of collaborative workflows that use web-to-print techniques to make zines, funding applications and reports, portfolios, slides, academic journals, bulletins, newspapers, etcetera. We'd like to introduce our practices, these two tools and how they are situated in collective work and a network of networks of practitioners across (but not limited to) Rotterdam, Brussels and Amsterdam.
Bring a laptop!
Creative Crowds CC

Artist Bio
Creative Crowds (CC) is a shared server for FLOSS publishing experiments to explore how different ways of working are shaped by (and shape) different realities. CC is currently maintained by Simon Browne(AU) and Manetta Berends(NL) from Rotterdam.
Online Links
web: https://cc.practices.tools
fedi: https://post.lurk.org/@simoon