Craft craft, the practiced skill of making or doing something well, grows from repetition and attention. You watch. You try. You get it wrong. You try again. Over time, your hands and your judgment learn. The craft lives in you. It is not only a set of steps you can write down. It is a feel for the material, for the right amount of force, for the moment when the thing is done. Craft is knowledge in the body. First, we have a goal—a pot, a loaf of bread, a repaired fence. Then we learn the moves. We practice until we can do them without thinking every second. Then we can adapt. When the clay is wetter than usual, we adjust. When the wood is knotty, we work around it. Craft includes that flexibility. It is not rigid. It responds to the situation. Craft can be lost. If no one practices, the skill fades. If no one teaches, the next generation cannot learn. So continuity of craft depends on masters who are willing to show and learners who are willing to watch and try. Writing down steps can help. But the full craft often needs a living teacher. When we value craft, we value that chain of showing and learning. What is one craft you have learned or would like to learn? Who would teach you?