A hobby is a regular activity done for enjoyment, typically
during one's leisure time. Hobbies include collecting themed items and objects,
engaging in creative and artistic pursuits, playing sports, or pursuing other
amusements. Participation in hobbies encourages acquiring substantial skills
and knowledge in that area. A list of hobbies changes with renewed interests
and developing fashions, making it diverse and lengthy. Hobbies tend to follow
trends in society, for example stamp collecting was popular during the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries as postal systems were the main means of
communication, while video games are more popular nowadays following
technological advances. The advancing production and technology of the
nineteenth century provided workers with more availability in leisure time to
engage in hobbies. Because of this, the efforts of people investing in hobbies
has increased with time.
Hobbyists may be identified under three sub-categories:
casual leisure, serious leisure, and project-based leisure. Though, some
hobbyists engage in leisure pursuits that overlap multiple boundaries of the
groups. Hobbies are mostly found within the second category, serious leisure.
History
Hobbies were originally described as pursuits that others
thought somewhat childish or trivial. However, as early as 1676 Sir Matthew
Hale, in Contemplations Moral and Divine, wrote "Almost every person hath
some hobby horse or other wherein he prides himself."[5] He was
acknowledging that a "hobby horse" produces a legitimate sense of
pride. By the mid 18th century there was a flourishing of hobbies as working
people had more regular hours of work and greater leisure time. They spent more
time to pursue interests that brought them satisfaction.[6] However, there was
concern that these working people might not use their leisure time in
worthwhile pursuits. "The hope of weaning people away from bad habits by
the provision of counter-attractions came to the fore in the 1830s, and has
rarely waned since. Initially the bad habits were perceived to be of a sensual
and physical nature, and the counter attractions, or perhaps more accurately
alternatives, deliberately cultivated rationality and the intellect."[7]
The flourishing book and magazine trade of the day encouraged worthwhile
hobbies and pursuits. The burgeoning manufacturing trade made materials used in
hobbies cheap and was responsive to the changing interests of hobbyists.
The English have been identified as enthusiastic hobbyists,
as George Orwell observed. "[A]nother English characteristic which is so
much a part of us that we barely notice it … is the addiction to hobbies and
spare-time occupations, the privateness of English life. We are a nation of
flower-lovers, but also a nation of stamp-collectors, pigeon-fanciers, amateur
carpenters, coupon-snippers, darts-players, crossword-puzzle fans. All the
culture that is most truly native centres round things which even when they are
communal are not official—the pub, the football match, the back garden, the
fireside and the 'nice cup of tea'."[8]
Deciding what to include in a list of hobbies provokes
debate because it is difficult to decide which pleasurable pass-times can also
be described as hobbies. During the 20th century the term hobby suggested
activities, such as stamp collecting, embroidery, knitting, painting, woodwork,
and photography. Typically the description did not include activities like
listening to music, watching television, or reading. These latter activities
bring pleasure, but lack the sense of achievement usually associated with a
hobby. They are usually not structured, organised pursuits, as most hobbies
are. The pleasure of a hobby is usually associated with making something of
value or achieving something of value. "Such leisure is socially valorised
precisely because it produces feelings of satisfaction with something that
looks very much like work but that is done of its own sake."[4]
"Hobbies are a contradiction: they take work and turn it into leisure, and
take leisure and turn it into work."[9]
Hobbies change with time. In the 21st century, the video
game industry is a very large hobby involving millions of kids and adults in
various forms of 'play'. Stamp collecting declined along with the importance of
the postal system. Woodwork and knitting declined as hobbies, because
manufactured goods provide cheap alternatives for handmade goods. Through the
internet, an online community has become a hobby for many people; sharing
advice, information and support, and in some cases, allowing a traditional
hobby, such as collecting, to flourish and support trading in a new
environment.
Hobbyists
Hobbyists are a part of a wider group of people engaged in
leisure pursuits where the boundaries of each group overlap to some extent. The
Serious Leisure Perspective[10] groups hobbyists with amateurs and volunteers and
identifies three broad groups of leisure activity with hobbies being found
mainly in the Serious leisure category. Casual leisure is intrinsically
rewarding, short-lived, pleasurable activity requiring little or no
preparation. Serious leisure is the systematic pursuit of an amateur, hobbyist,
or volunteer that is substantial, rewarding and results in a sense of
accomplishment. Finally, project-based leisure is a short-term often a one-off
project that is rewarding.[11]
The terms amateur and hobbyist are often used
interchangeably. Stebbins[10] has a framework which distinguishes the terms has
a useful categorisation of leisure in which he separates casual leisure from
serious Leisure. He describes serious leisure as undertaken by amateurs,
hobbyists and volunteers. Amateurs engage in pursuits that have a professional
counterpart, such as playing an instrument or astronomy. Hobbyists engage in
five broad types of activity: collecting, making and tinkering (like embroidery
and car restoration), activity participation (like fishing and singing), sports
and games, and liberal-arts hobbies (like languages, cuisine, literature).
Volunteers commit to organisations where they work as guides, counsellors,
gardeners and so on. The separation of the amateur from the hobbyist is because
the amateur has the ethos of the professional practitioner as a guide to
practice. An amateur clarinetist is conscious of the role and procedures of a
professional clarinetist.
A large proportion of hobbies are mainly solitary in nature.[12]
However, individual pursuit of a hobby often includes club memberships,
organised sharing of products and regular communication between participants.
For many hobbies there is an important role in being in touch with fellow
hobbyists. Some hobbies are of communal nature, like choral singing and
volunteering.
People who engage in hobbies have an interest in and time to
pursue them. Children have been an important group of hobbyists because they
are enthusiastic for collecting, making and exploring, in addition to this they
have the leisure time that allows them to pursue those hobbies. The growth in
hobbies occurred during industrialisation which gave workers set time for
leisure. During the Depression there was an increase in the participation in hobbies
because the unemployed had the time and a desire to be purposefully
occupied.[13] Hobbies are often pursued with an increased interest by retired
people because they have the time and seek the intellectual and physical
stimulation a hobby provides.
Types of hobbies
For a more comprehensive list, see List of hobbies.
Hobbies are a diverse set of activities and it is difficult
to categorize them in a logical manner. The following categorization of hobbies
was developed by Stebbins.[11]
Collecting
Collectable Antique Antiquities
Terms
Ephemera Premium Prize Souvenir Special edition
Topics
List of collectables List of hobbies
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Collecting
[additional citation(s) needed]
Main article: Collecting
Collecting includes seeking, locating, acquiring, organizing,
cataloging, displaying and storing.[14] Collecting is appealing to many people
due to their interest in a particular subject and a desire to categorise and
make order out of complexity. Some collectors are generalists, accumulating
items from countries of the world. Others focus on a subtopic within their area
of interest, perhaps 19th century postage stamps, milk bottle labels from
Sussex, or Mongolian harnesses and tack, Firearms (both modern and vintage).
text
A stamp album used in stamp collecting.
Collecting is an ancient hobby, with the list of coin
collectors showing Caesar Augustus as one. Sometimes collectors have turned
their hobby into a business, becoming commercial dealers that trade in the
items being collected.
An alternative to collecting physical objects is collecting
records of events of a particular kind. Examples include train spotting,
bird-watching, aircraft spotting, railfans, and any other form of systematic
recording a particular phenomenon. The recording form can be written, photographic,
online, etc.
Making and tinkering
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Making and tinkering includes working on self-motivated
projects for fulfillment. These projects may be progressive, irregular tasks
performed over a long period of time.[11] Making and Tinkering hobbies include
higher-end projects, such as building or restoring a car or building a computer
from individual parts, like CPUs and SSDs. For computer savvy do-it-yourself
hobbyists, CNC (Computer Numerical Control) machining may also popular. A CNC
machine can be assembled and programmed to make different parts from wood or
metal.
Tinkering is 'dabbling' with the making process, often
applied to the hobby of tinkering with car repairs, and various kinds of
restoration: of furniture, antique cars, etc. It also applies to household
tinkering: repairing a wall, laying a pathway, etc. Examples of Making and
Tinkering hobbies include Scale modeling, model engineering, 3D printing,
dressmaking, and cooking.
Scale modeling is making a replica of a real-life object in
a smaller scale and dates back to prehistoric times with small clay "dolls"
and other children's toys that have been found near known populated areas. The
Persians, Greeks, and Romans took the form to a greater depth during their
years of domination of the Western World, using scale replicas of enemy
fortifications, coastal defense lines, and other geographic fixtures to plan
battles.[citation needed]
At the turn of the Industrial Age and through the 1920s,
families could afford things such as electric trains, wind-up toys (typically
boats or cars) and the increasingly valuable tin toy soldiers. Scale modeling
as we know it today became popular shortly after World War II. Before 1946,
children as well as adults were content in carving and shaping wooden replicas
from block wood kits, often depicting enemy aircraft to help with identification
in case of an invasion.
With the advent of modern plastics, the amount of skill
required to get the basic shape accurately shown for any given subject was
lessened, making it easier for people of all ages to begin assembling replicas
in varying scales. Superheroes, aeroplanes, boats, cars, tanks, artillery, and
even figures of soldiers became quite popular subjects to build, paint and
display. Although almost any subject can be found in almost any scale, there
are common scales for such miniatures which remain constant today.
Model engineering refers to building functioning machinery
in metal, such as internal combustion motors and live steam models or
locomotives. This is a demanding hobby that requires a multitude of large and
expensive tools, such as lathes and mills. This hobby originated in the United
Kingdom in the late 19th century, later spreading and flourishing in the
mid-20th century. Due to the expense and space required, it is becoming rare.
A coffee-table sized model railroad
3D Printing is a relatively new technology and already a
major hobby as the cost of printers has fallen sharply. It is a good example of
how hobbyists quickly engage with new technologies, communicate with one
another and become producers related to their former hobby. 3D modeling is the
process of making mathematical representations of three dimensional items and
is an aspect of 3D printing.
Dressmaking has been a major hobby up until the late 20th
century, in order to make cheap clothes, but also as a creative design and
craft challenge. It has been reduced by the low cost manufactured clothes.
Cooking may be both a hobby or job. is for some people an
interest, a hobby, a challenge and a source of significant satisfaction. For
many other people it is a job, a chore, a duty, like cleaning. In the early
21st century the importance of cooking as a hobby was demonstrated by the high
popularity of competitive television cooking programs.
Activity participation
Activity participation includes partaking in "non-competitive,
rule-based pursuits."[11]
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Main article: Outdoor recreation
Outdoor pursuits are the group of activities which occur
outdoors. These hobbies include gardening, hill walking, hiking, backpacking,
cycling, canoeing, climbing, caving, fishing, hunting, Target shooting
(informal or formal), wildlife viewing (as birdwatching) and engaging in
watersports and snowsports.
Depending on an individual's desired level of adrenaline,
outdoors experiences are considered one type of hobby. While many enjoy an
adrenaline rush or just an escape from reality, outdoor recreational activities
can also be an extremely effective medium in education and team building.[15]
As interest increases, so has the desire for commercial
outdoor pursuits. Outdoor recreational supply stores have opened in large
numbers and are thriving, as have outdoor pursuit journalism and magazines,
both on paper and the Internet.
The increased accessibility of outdoor pursuit resources has
been the source of some negative publicity over the years, with complaints of
the destruction of landscape. An example is the destruction of hillsides as
footpaths are eroded due to an excessive number of visitors.
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Main article: Gardening
Gardening
Residential gardening most often takes place in or about
one's own residence, in a space referred to as the garden. Although a garden
typically is located on the land near a residence, it may also be located on a
roof, in an atrium, on a balcony, in a windowbox, or on a patio or vivarium.
Gardening also takes place in non-residential green areas,
such as parks, public or semi-public gardens (botanical gardens or zoological
gardens), amusement and theme parks, along transportation corridors, and around
tourist attractions and hotels. In these situations, a staff of gardeners or
groundskeepers maintains the gardens.
A variety of flowers and vegetables in an indoor garden.
Indoor gardening is growing houseplants within a residence
or building, in a conservatory, or in a greenhouse. Indoor gardens are
sometimes incorporated into air conditioning or heating systems.
Water gardening is growing plants that have adapted to pools
and ponds. Bog gardens are also considered a type of water garden. These all
require special conditions and considerations. A simple water garden may
consist solely of a tub containing the water and plant(s).
Container gardening is concerned with growing plants in
containers that are placed above the ground.
Liberal arts pursuits
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Main article: Liberal arts education
Main article: The arts
An amateur magician performing.
Many hobbies involve performances by the hobbyist, such as
singing, acting, juggling, magic, dancing, playing a musical instrument,
martial arts and other performing arts.
Some hobbies may result in an end product. Examples of this
would be woodworking, photography, moviemaking, jewelry making, software
projects such as Photoshopping and home music or video production, making
bracelets, artistic projects such as drawing, painting, writing..., Cosplay
(design, creation, and wearing a costume based on an already existing creative
property), creating models out of card stock or paper – called papercraft. Many
of these fall under the category visual arts.
Reading, books, ebooks, magazines, comics, or newspapers,
along with browsing the internet is a common hobby, and one that can trace its
origins back hundreds of years. A love of literature, later in life, may be
sparked by an interest in reading children's literature as a child. Many of
these fall under the category literary arts.
Sports and games
Main article: Sport
Main article: Game
Stebbins[11] distinguishes an amateur sports person and a
hobbyist by suggesting a hobbysist plays in less formal sports, or games that
are rule bound and have no professional equivalent. While an amateur sports
individual plays a sport with a professional equivalent, such as football or
tennis. Amateur sport may range from informal play to highly competitive
practice, such as deck tennis or long distance trekking.
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