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Six days. Six simple projects you can finish in an afternoon, using supplies you probably already have.
No skill-building. No pressure. Just one fun week of making things.
Camp begins July 20 | Lifetime access | Money-back guarantee
Sound familiar...
Your supplies are in a drawer. Your sketchbook is half-finished. There's a half-done project on the craft table from two months ago. You keep meaning to get back into it. The week gets away from you.
When you do try, everything feels heavy. Every piece has to mean something. Every project has to look good enough to post. You open Instagram, see everyone's polished work, and close the app.
It's not a willpower problem. Everything you've tried still asks you to be good at it, to finish something impressive, to build toward something. That's the thing that's gotten heavy.
☑️ Pick a technique and get better at it
☑️ Refine your style
☑️ Make something portfolio-worthy
☑️ Build toward something bigger
☑️ Commit to 12 weeks of lessons
☑️Buy specialty supplies you'll use once
✅ Show up and make something just for fun
✅ Follow along, no experience needed
✅ Finish one project per afternoon
✅ Commit to one week. Defined start. Defined end.
✅ Grab the yarn and glue from your junk drawer
✅ Enjoy the doing, not just the result
No blank canvas paralysis. Each day a counselor hands you a project and walks you through it start to finish.
Every session is about 30 minutes. One sitting. One completed thing. That feeling of finishing something? It matters more than you think.
Yarn, paper, glue, popsicle sticks. Nothing fancy. Nothing you need to order online. The simplicity is the point.
No critique. No posting required. No one grading your glue gun work. Just you, making something, because it's fun.
An optional Facebook group where everyone is having a great time sharing their "bad" art.
Can't keep up during camp week? No problem. Come back to any session whenever you're ready.
❓ Sitting down to make something and feeling nothing
❓ Supplies in a drawer you haven't opened in months
❓ Every project feeling heavy before you even start
❓ Scrolling other people's work instead of making your own
💡 Finishing something with your hands every day
💡 Remembering what it feels like to make things just for fun
💡 Loosening up in a way that carries back into your regular practice
💡 End the week with six finished projects and the reminder that you're still a creative person
Early bird price only $47
Early bird price ends in:
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Full-length, start-to-finish video lessons from 6 experienced artists.
Watch each artist begin, build, adjust, and resolve a real piece — not just talk about it.
Rewatch anytime. Revisit when you hit a new creative block. Learn at your own pace.
Ask questions, share work, & get feedback in a focused environment without distractions.
Each instructor was intentionally selected for their unique approach to crafts.
Early bird price ends in:
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Susan H.
I live in Cincinnati with my partner Greg and our schnauzer Fred. I've been making and teaching art for over 25 years. I host the Gel Printers Summit, the Collage Makers Summit, and the Digital Artists Summit. Those summits are about getting better at one thing, and they're great for that.
Summer Craft Camp is different. It's personal. I started it because I wanted an excuse to make the kinds of crafts we did at summer camp as kids. Crepe paper. Yarn. Glue on my fingers. That stuff. I think a lot of us forgot how good that felt, and I wanted a week to remember.
So I called some friends who teach craft, asked them to film one project each, and that's Summer Craft Camp.
I'd love it if you came.
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I’m Cheryl. A mum of two who is obsessed with arts and crafts. I love to share nature craft ideas, animal crafts, fun play ideas and recycled projects that are super simple and easy to try out!
Cheryl's SCC26 lesson: Create a recycled giraffe using mixed media and recycled materials
Natalya is a New York-based artist who reclaims and repurposes materials. A Pratt Institute graduate, her work spans site-specific installations, fiber art, and mixed media, and has been exhibited in Quilt National and featured in Surface Design Magazine and Fiber Art Now. She teaches widely, founded the REPURPOSER COLLECTIVE, and hosts SALVAGE, a podcast on repurposed art practices.
Natalya's SCC26 lesson: Butterfly Effect... A Hands-On Collage & Stitching Workshop
Larrie King, known as Mister Larrie, is an arts and crafts content creator and designer based in Orlando, Florida. With twenty years of experience teaching fine and graphic arts, his projects focus on bright colors, bold patterns, and budget-friendly materials that make creativity accessible to everyone. His brand partnerships include Tulip, Adobe, Michaels, and Amazon.
Larrie's SCC26 lesson: Rainbow Tulle Pom Pom Tutorial
Timm is a creative content creator, illustrator, and author who shares colorful, easy-to-follow art and craft projects for kids and adults. His uplifting content inspires creativity, confidence, and kindness while building an engaged, positive community. He is the author of The Happiest Kids Crafts in the World! and partners with brands to create authentic, high-quality content that makes creativity feel fun and accessible.
Timm's SCC26 lesson: Any Occasion Cardboard Ribbons
Lisa Solomon is a studio artist, college professor, and illustrator/author whose mixed-media work explores domesticity, craft, and personal histories. Rooted in her Hapa heritage, her work fuses unexpected materials and ideas, questioning the line between art and craft. She holds a BA from UC Berkeley and an MFA from Mills College.
Lisa's SCC26 lesson: An adulting friendship bracelet
Drew is a full-time artist based in Cincinnati who works in collage, printmaking, digital mixed-media, and fiber. He also enjoys traveling, knitting, watching soccer, and landscape photography. Drew hosts online art summits that inspire and equip fellow artists to explore monoprinting, collage, digital art, and crafts.
Drew's SCC26 lesson: Ojo de Dios (God's eyes) and yarn mandalas
We want you to pay only if you find value at camp. That's why Drew offers a money-back guarantee.
If you truly don't find value in the event, email Drew and we will refund 100% of your money.
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✅ You used to love making things and you can feel it slipping
✅ You have supplies you haven't touched in months
✅ You're tired of the "find your style" content
✅ You want one short, low-stakes thing on the calendar this summer
✅ You like the idea of finishing something in an afternoon
✅ Your art practice has gone stale and heavy
✅ You don't think of yourself as an artist anymore, and that's fine too
❌ You're looking for a fine art skill-building program
❌ You want feedback, critique, or portfolio coaching
❌ You only feel good about a piece if it could go in a gallery
❌ You're allergic to the words "popsicle stick"
❌ You prefer a long-term commitment over a defined one-week event
❌ You don't have 30 minutes a day to devote to being creative
❌ You need your creative work to mean something right now
If you're somewhere in between, that's the whole point of camp. Come anyway.
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When does camp run?
Camp week runs July 20-25. All sessions are pre-recorded, so you can watch live during camp week or catch up later.
I don't have time during camp week.
That's ok- you have lifetime access. The seven days is a suggested rhythm, not a deadline. Watch whenever the week opens up for you.
Do I need a lot of art supplies?
No. The whole idea is inexpensive, familiar materials. You'll get the full supply list a few days before camp. Most of it you can get at low cost, and a lot of it is probably already in a drawer somewhere.
Is this for beginners or experienced artists?
Both. Practicing artists come for the creative reset. People who haven't made anything in years come to remember what it felt like. The projects are simple enough that nobody's lost, and low-stakes enough that nobody's bored.
Is this for kids?
It's for adults, specifically adults who loved making things as kids and forgot how good it felt. Kids are welcome to join alongside a parent, but the content, the pace, and the whole spirit of camp are designed with grown-ups in mind.
How is this different from your other summits?
My other summits are technique-focused. You go to those to get better at a specific medium. Summer Craft Camp is the opposite- you come to distract yourself from your art practice. Different vibe, different goal.
What if I hate it?
Email us and we'll refund every cent. No questions, no hoops. You don't even have to finish a project.
When does the $47 early bird price end?
The early bird price ends July 19, 2026 at 11:59 PM EDT. After that, the price goes up to $67.
Have other questions?
Send us an email ... we’re happy to help.
Early bird price ends in:
Virginia C.
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Early bird price ends in: