steal-like-an-artist-kleon
Apply Austin Kleon creative practice for idea theft, remixing, starting
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/simbajigege/book2skills /tmp/steal-like-an-artist-kleon && cp -r /tmp/steal-like-an-artist-kleon/skills/steal-like-an-artist-kleon ~/.claude/skills/steal-like-an-artist-kleonSKILL.md
# Steal Like an Artist — Creative Practice Skill **Knowledge source:** *Steal Like an Artist* by Austin Kleon. ## Overview Use this skill to help creators start, unblock, remix influences ethically, build a daily practice, and share work without waiting for identity, originality, or perfect readiness. It supports writers, designers, founders, artists, and makers turning influences into original work. ## When to Use This Skill Use this skill when the user asks: - "I don't know what to create." - "How do I find my style?" - "Is this inspiration or copying?" - "How should I share my work?" - "How do I stay creative while busy?" - "Give me constraints for this project." ## Core Principle Originality is not purity; it is selective collection, transformation, and recombination through consistent work. Start by studying what you love, make with your hands, share the process, and use constraints to turn influence into something recognizably yours. ## Workflow Inventory | Workflow | User question pattern | Inputs | Steps | Output | Independent trigger? | Distinct references? | Triage score | Should be subskill? | Reason | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---:|---:|---|---| | Influence map | "What should I study?" | Heroes, taste, domain | Build genealogy, swipe file, learning path | Influence map | Yes | Yes | 3 | No | Feeds the same creative-practice workflow. | | Ethical remix diagnosis | "Am I copying?" | Source, draft, transformation | Compare study, credit, transformation, voice | Remix verdict | Yes | Yes | 3 | No | Same originality framework. | | Start/create plan | "I feel stuck" | Project, constraints, time, tools | Lower identity pressure; choose analog start; set daily step | Action plan | Yes | Yes | 3 | No | Core execution mode. | | Share process | "How do I get discovered?" | Work stage, audience, platform | Pick process artifacts; share wonder; invite response | Sharing plan | Yes | Yes | 3 | No | Uses same do-good-work-and-share principle. | ## Architecture Justification The book offers ten principles, but they form one creative practice loop: collect influences, make work, share process, and sustain routine. Separate modules would obscure the way influence, action, constraints, and sharing reinforce each other. ## DIMENSION 1: Selective Influence and Genealogy **The Rule:** Steal only what you genuinely love, then trace where it came from and transform it through study. ### Key questions to ask: - What work does the user repeatedly return to? - Which heroes influenced those heroes? - What exactly is worth stealing: structure, method, question, attitude, palette, or rhythm? - Has the user credited and transformed the influence? ### Decision criteria / Checklist: - Build a short influence genealogy. - Keep a swipe file of specific patterns, not whole works to duplicate. - Study the thinking behind the surface style. - Combine multiple sources so 1 + 1 becomes a third thing. ### Warning signals: - Copying one source too closely. - Borrowing surface style without understanding the method. - Trying to be original before collecting raw material. ### Agent instruction: When the user asks for creative direction, first identify what they love and convert that taste into a study-and-remix plan. ## DIMENSION 2: Start Before Identity Is Clear **The Rule:** Identity emerges from making; do not wait to know who you are before beginning. ### Key questions to ask: - What is the smallest thing the user can make today? - What hero can they copy as practice without publishing it as original work? - What project would they want to exist as a fan or audience member? ### Decision criteria / Checklist: - Start with imitation as private study. - Move from imitation to emulation by noticing where the copy fails. - Create what the user wants to read, watch, use, or hear. - Treat uncertainty as the entry condition, not a blocker. ### Warning signals: - Waiting for a fully formed personal brand. - Confusing impostor feelings with evidence of inability. - Asking for permission before practicing. ### Agent instruction: For blocked users, prescribe a concrete starter exercise that turns admiration into a draft within one sitting. ## DIMENSION 3: Physical Process and Constraints **The Rule:** Creativity improves when ideas pass through hands, limits, and deliberate subtraction. ### Key questions to ask: - Is the user generating or prematurely editing? - What analog tool or physical motion can loosen the idea? - What constraint would force focus? - What can be left out? ### Decision criteria / Checklist: - Use analog tools for ideation and digital tools for editing/publishing. - Create two workspaces if possible: one for mess, one for refinement. - Add constraints around time, materials, word count, audience, or format. - Remove nonessential elements. ### Warning signals: - Opening the computer too early and editing before ideas exist. - Too many options causing paralysis. - Treating limitations as excuses instead of design material. ### Agent instruction: When a project feels vague, impose a useful constraint and suggest a hands-on first move. ## DIMENSION 4: Share Process and Build a Sustainable Life **The Rule:** Do good work, share it, and protect the boring routines that make work possible. ### Key questions to ask: - What part of the process can be shared without overexplaining? - Who is the user inviting into their wonder? - What daily routine protects creative energy? - What side project or hobby is feeding the main work? ### Decision criteria / Checklist: - Share process artifacts, questions, sources, experiments, and lessons. - Use obscurity as a low-risk laboratory. - Keep routines, sleep, money, and calendars stable enough to create. - Keep side projects alive when they generate energy. ### Warning signals: - Sharing only polished outputs and hiding process. - Chasing external approval instead of doing the work. - Burning life energy on chaos and calling it creativity. ##
Restructures a chaotic or overgrown MEMORY.md into a clean 2-layer architecture based on how Claude Code's autoDream system organizes memory — a lightweight pointer index (always loaded) and topic files (loaded on demand). Stale or superseded memories are deleted or corrected in place — not archived. Use this skill whenever the user says \"clean up MEMORY.md\", \"reorganize my memory files\", \"MEMORY.md is getting too long\", \"fix my memory structure\", or when you observe that MEMORY.md exceeds 200 lines, contains full paragraphs instead of pointers, or mixes index entries with topic content.
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