264 episodes

I released my first podcast in 2009. I was hooked and have been recording deep-dive conversations with interesting and creative people about what they do and why they do it ever since.I like to think of these shows as three aspects of a larger conversation around creativity. In Process Driven, I talk with creators from a wide range of disciplines to discuss what they do and why. Deep Natter offers purposeful conversations with a variety of co-hosts that explore both the philosophical and practical sides of creativity and making art. Iterations is centered around solo observations and reflections, mostly around visual arts and my own creative process—like an inner monologue caught on tape.

Jeffery Saddoris - Almost Everything Jeffery Saddoris

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.8 • 38 Ratings

I released my first podcast in 2009. I was hooked and have been recording deep-dive conversations with interesting and creative people about what they do and why they do it ever since.I like to think of these shows as three aspects of a larger conversation around creativity. In Process Driven, I talk with creators from a wide range of disciplines to discuss what they do and why. Deep Natter offers purposeful conversations with a variety of co-hosts that explore both the philosophical and practical sides of creativity and making art. Iterations is centered around solo observations and reflections, mostly around visual arts and my own creative process—like an inner monologue caught on tape.

    Iteration 122: Let It Incubate

    Iteration 122: Let It Incubate

    They say that one of the best ways to solve a problem—at least a creative one—is actually not to think abut it. After all, how many times have you been doing something like taking a shower or going for a long walk and you find yourself having one of those eureka moments where suddenly the solution to a problem you’ve been wrestling with forever seems so clear? It happens to me a lot and it’s one of the reasons that taking walks in the forest behind our house has become a daily ritual. Trying to be present in something other than active problem solving allows our brains to continue working in the background without us trying to consciously force a solution. The act of stepping away from a problem is called the “incubation period” and it’s been studied for decades. In his book The Art of Thought, Graham Wallas proposed that the creative process is made up of four stages: Preparation (the acquisition of knowledge to some task), Incubation (the background process that occurs when conscious attention is diverted away from the task), Illumination (the moment the creative idea flashes into sight or being), and Verification (when the creative idea is subjected to evaluation)." While there have been dozens of studies documenting and validating the importance and effectiveness of the incubation period, last week I experienced another example of it firsthand.

    CONNECT WITH ME
    Website: https://jefferysaddoris.com 
    Twitter: @jefferysaddoris 
    Instagram: @jefferysaddoris

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get more conversations like this. You can find the full written version of this Iteration on Substack.

    MUSIC
    Music For Workplaces by Jeffery Saddoris

    • 7 min
    Iteration 121: Revisiting My Infrastructure

    Iteration 121: Revisiting My Infrastructure

    As I was working through the recent redesign of my website—which you can read about or listen to in the last Iteration—I started to look at some of the other software I was using to see whether what I was using still made sense for the projects I’ll be doing in the coming year. I think it’s sometimes easy to get into a routine of using tools that are “good enough” that we just don’t look for potentially better options. I know that’s been true for me. 
    About eight years ago, I ditched Photoshop completely and started using the Affinity suite of Photo, Designer, and Publisher, which by and large have been great. There are a few features I miss, but nothing that’s really kept me from doing the work that I needed to do.

    CONNECT WITH ME
    Website: https://jefferysaddoris.com 
    Twitter: @jefferysaddoris 
    Instagram: @jefferysaddoris

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get more conversations like this. You can find the full written version of this Iteration on Substack.

    MUSIC
    Music For Workplaces by Jeffery Saddoris

    • 6 min
    Iteration 120: Go Forward, Move Ahead

    Iteration 120: Go Forward, Move Ahead

    Last week I did a soft-launch of my newly redesigned website, which in an of itself isn’t all that unique since I’ve resigned my website dozens of times over the years. What is unique—or at least different—is the overall focus of the site and the process I went through putting it together this time around. I started by asking myself a relatively simple question: do I even need a website? The most common answer is “Yes, of course,” which is often followed by “especially because you’re an artist.” But I actually know quite a few “creatives” who don’t have their own websites. Some rely on a strong social media presence, some have gallery representation that drives sales of originals or prints, and others just have a storefront, so that a dedicated personal site isn’t really necessary. 

    CONNECT WITH ME
    Website: https://jefferysaddoris.com 
    Twitter: @jefferysaddoris 
    Instagram: @jefferysaddoris

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get more conversations like this. You can find the full written version of this Iteration on Substack.

    MUSIC
    Music For Workplaces by Jeffery Saddoris

    • 8 min
    Iteration 119: The Time I Designed a Dog Backpack

    Iteration 119: The Time I Designed a Dog Backpack

    Next month is the tenth anniversary of my dad’s death, so naturally I’ve been thinking about him a lot. Last year, I completely forgot about it, which I tried to tell myself was actually healthy, but I just ended up feeling guilty about forgetting. If you’ve been following me for a while, or you’re an OTP listener, you know that my relationship with my dad was often difficult, to say the least. But as I’ve been thinking about him lately and how I’ve talked about our relationship in the past, I feel like maybe I’ve been a little incomplete in how I’ve portrayed him. I loved my dad, no matter how close or how far we were in the moment, and the truth is that he’s just as responsible for my creativity and to an extent my curiosity as my mom and my stepmother were.

    CONNECT WITH ME
    Website: https://jefferysaddoris.com 
    Twitter: @jefferysaddoris 
    Instagram: @jefferysaddoris

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get more conversations like this. You can find the full written version of this Iteration on Substack.

    MUSIC
    Music For Workplaces by Jeffery Saddoris

    • 8 min
    Iteration 118: Objects in Motion

    Iteration 118: Objects in Motion

    Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about inertia and motion and how it applies to my creative practice. We know that Newton’s First Law of Motion says that an object in motion tends to stay in motion unless some sort of external force acts against it. Conversely, an object at rest will tend to stay at rest. But I would argue that the Fist Law also applies to intangibles like thoughts and ideas. For example, this week has flown by. Actually, the past couple of weeks have and I think it’s because I’ve been working through so many ideas and potential projects—and I’ve been working on them differently than I have in the past, which I think is what’s making all the difference. And to be clear, when I say “working,” sometimes that means just letting an idea go until it needs to be addressed. For some things that means now, but for others, that may mean next year. 

    CONNECT WITH ME
    Website: https://jefferysaddoris.com 
    Twitter: @jefferysaddoris 
    Instagram: @jefferysaddoris

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get more conversations like this. You can find the full written version of this Iteration on Substack.

    MUSIC
    Music For Workplaces by Jeffery Saddoris

    • 6 min
    Iteration 117: A Bunch of Potential Somethings

    Iteration 117: A Bunch of Potential Somethings

    Are you overwhelmed? Do you ever get overwhelmed? Man, I do. All the time. My brain is always on and processing—either trying to process existing ideas or trying to figure out where to put all of the new ones that I haven’t had time to really think about. And it doesn’t stop. It’s all day, every day. There’s always a bunch of potential somethings bouncing around my head. And let me be clear—I love it and I’m grateful for it, but it is overwhelming and exhausting trying to keep track of it all and figure out where to put all of those ideas.

    CONNECT WITH ME
    Website: https://jefferysaddoris.com 
    Twitter: @jefferysaddoris 
    Instagram: @jefferysaddoris

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to Jeffery Saddoris: Almost Everything in your favorite podcast app to get more conversations like this. You can find the full written version of this Iteration on Substack.

    MUSIC
    Music For Workplaces by Jeffery Saddoris

    • 7 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
38 Ratings

38 Ratings

Rdswinford ,

Process

Have you had ideas you knew where great - maybe even one image that starts the idea? But can’t move beyond that? I ‘ve decided it’s to ward off disappointment. Potential versus reality. R

Sgrynd ,

Love this podcast

Love Jeffery, Love Sean, great podcast, always something interesting.

FlyCaster_1 ,

essential listening for anyone interested in making

I’ve said it elsewhere, but this is hands down the most important podcast I listen to. All of Jeffery’s work is excellent, heartfelt, and honest and the Deep Natter conversations with Sean Tucker aren’t to be missed. I play them when I’m out searching for pictures to take for a photo book I’m working on. Their conversations put me in the right headspace, are upbeat and positive, but cut through to the essentials of living a creative life. It’s like having two sincere friends encourage you every step of the way. Not sure I can say thanks enough.

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