Shop local on Etsy

Local Resolutions Part 19 of 29

This is the nineteenth in a series of 29 ways to help your local community online in 2010. If you missed it, you may wish to read the introductory post.

In this post, I suggest that photographing or videoing local art galleries, performances, and businesses is a great way to help strengthen your community while you’re online. This series has included recent posts about sharing certain photos, staying in touch with your legislators, and connecting with people different from you.


Sometimes national/international websites make it easy to shop local.

If you follow links to books from this blog, you’ll notice they take you to IndieBound, not Amazon. That’s a suggestion I got from Aaron’s Books in Lititz.

EtsyMy favorite example of a big site that lets you shop local, though, is Etsy.

It’s so easy that I could make this resolution entry one line: Shop local on Etsy.

Etsy is extraordinary even just for browsing. Everything is handmade, and there is no shortage of ideas of things that can be beautifully made by hand—knit scarves (or just the hand-spun yarn), jewelry, business card holders, framed art, clothing, furniture, dolls.

If you search the local section for Lancaster, PA, you’ll find no fewer than one hundred shops, including the inspired jewelry of Mio Studio, drawings by Dan McEwen in Drawing Blanks, and the yarny things of KnittyDirtyGirl. Other Etsyists, please share a link to your shop in the comments below.

What I love most about Etsy’s shop local function is that it gives me all the convenience of shopping online with the satisfaction that I’m supporting local talent.

Photograph a gallery, video a performance

Local Resolutions Part 18 of 29

This is the eighteenth in a series of 29 ways to help your local community online in 2010. If you missed it, you may wish to read the introductory post.

In this post, I suggest that photographing or videoing local art galleries, performances, and businesses is a great way to help strengthen your community while you’re online. This series has included recent posts about staying in touch with your legislators, connecting with people different from you, and taking regular breaks from digital media.


It’s time for these resolutions to go multimedia.

We live in an area rich in the visual and performing arts, as well as bustling with business. It’s hard to capture instances of that in words. Photos and videos help.

Three instances of photos and video at work

This past April the Lancaster Museum of Art presented an extraordinary exhibit of portraits by illustrator Barry Moser. I knew of his work, and asked if I could sneak in before opening night to snap a few photos of the exhibit and get enough information to write a blog entry about it. The curators were thrilled to show me around. These sorts of things deserve attention, and they don’t get enough. I’m really glad I took photos of that exhibit (limited as they are) and shared it here on my blog.

Derek Lau recently shot a video at Progressive Galleries of Isaac Gillespie performing a song he wrote in memory of our friend Ben Carr, who drowned in September 2007. That video has already meant a lot to the many people who still grieve at our loss of Ben. It’s also a great capture of a musician’s talent as he performed in Lancaster.

If you look up Rachel’s Cafe on Google, you’ll find photos pulled from Urban Spoon, including one of the menu. What you won’t find (yet) are any photos of the restaurant itself, from either the inside or the outside. I’ll return to the subject of writing restaurant reviews in an upcoming entry, but for now the point is that sharing photos of businesses is a way of providing useful information to others.

The resolution

So, my recommended resolution for today: Take photos and shoot video. Then share them. Use what you’ve captured to let other people know about what they might otherwise miss in your community.

Of course, be sure to ask permission when dealing with works protected under copyright (like stage performances and the art in galleries). People are usually happy for the publicity.

If you’re taking photos of a restaurant, Urban Spoon and Yelp are great places to upload them. If you’re taking photos of an event or of another sort of business, you can’t go wrong uploading them to the Facebook event or page—and the same goes for video.

Don’t forget Google, or your own business

Business owners—be sure that you have claimed your listing in the Google Local Business Center. When you do so, you will have the opportunity to upload up to 10 photos. Do it. Include shots of the exterior of your business (so people can find it more easily) and the inside, too (so people know what to expect).

Where else would you recommend for sharing photos and videos of performances, galleries, restaurants, and businesses?

Take a technology Sabbath

Local Resolutions Part 15 of 29

This is the fifteenth in a series of 29 ways to help your local community online in 2010. If you missed it, you may wish to read the introductory post.

In this post, I suggest that taking regular breaks from technology is a great way to empower yourself to help others when you’re at your keyboard later. This series has included recent posts about commenting intelligently on local news sites, appearing as a guest on local blogs and podcasts, and bookmarking others’ content.


No one wants to hear from someone who doesn’t know how to shut up.

If all you do is talk, you never have time to listen. If all you do is converse, you never have time to think.

Technology shapes us

It goes deeper than that, though. If you spend most of your time in front of an electronic screen (computer or TV), it begins to shape how you think, talk, and act. The effect is particularly noticeable when you compare your inner life after spending days at a computer or TV to your inner life after spending much of your time reading books, or in the wilderness. Media studies genius Barry Sanders details this difference in his fantastic A is for Ox: The Collapse of Literacy and the Rise of Violence in an Electronic Age. Given the title, it may come as a surprise that even as a digital marketing professional, it’s one of my all-time favorite books.

Another author who looks at the impact of the digital screen on our personhood is Bill McKibben, whose book The Age of Missing Information is powerful, but amazingly balanced and wise. He compares the experience of watching 1,700 hours of recorded television to living in Thoreau-like contemplation in the Adirondacks, and winds up seeing stuff to like and stuff to hate about both.

No matter how you look at it, the experts affirm what we all know to be true: spending too much time at a computer is bad for us. I believe that, in today’s society, spending no time whatsoever at a computer is neither possible nor a good idea for almost everyone. I’m hoping to demonstrate from this series of posts that a lot of good can come from online activity. And yet, I think it’s important to give it a rest.

A digital media Sabbath

Some thinkers have come to call the practice of taking regular breaks from our computer screens a technology Sabbath. I think it’s a great term. Pick a day of the week (or, more realistically to start, a day of the month) to avoid anything with a digital screen. Radios, cars, books, face-to-face interaction, sports, dinner and drinks are all fair game.

The reason we rest is so that our labor may be better guided and more productive. The reason we step back is so that we can see the broader implications of what we’re doing through our work. The reason we take time to say “no” is so that our “yes” may be stronger.

It’s easy to get caught up in discussion threads, Facebook games, tracking website analytics, uploading photos, and keeping up with the latest news the moment it’s reported. You’re doing no one any good if you’re “caught up” in things online, rather than being in control of what you’re doing, saying, and choosing.

So, to serve your local community better in 2010 through online means, take time to go offline. Recenter, refocus, refuel. The Internet will still be here when you get back.

And, if you’re interested in delving deeper into the complex, rich, subtle, and wonderful Jewish tradition of observing Sabbath, Abraham Joshua Heschel’s book The Sabbath is a must-read.