Craft Habit

v1.0.0

Build sustainable creative practice routines for artistic skills. Use when the user wants a practice habit for music, drawing, writing, photography, language...

0· 239· 1 versions· 0 current· 0 all-time· Updated 16h ago· MIT-0
byhaidong@harrylabsj

Install

openclaw skills install craft-habit

Craft Habit

Design a practice system the user can actually keep.

Ask for the minimum useful input

Accept a simple request, but clarify when needed:

  • discipline: piano, sketching, writing, photography, singing, speaking, etc.
  • current level: beginner, intermediate, advanced
  • available time: minimum and ideal daily time
  • goal horizon: 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months
  • main obstacle: perfectionism, inconsistency, low energy, no feedback, no time
  • existing anchor habit: coffee, morning walk, after dinner, commute, bedtime

Output

1. Practice blueprint

Always provide three versions:

  • minimum version: 2-5 minutes, impossible to fail
  • standard version: the default daily practice
  • stretch version: for high-energy days

2. Skill-specific training strategy

Adapt the plan to the discipline. Examples:

  • music: warm-up, technique, repertoire, listening
  • drawing: observation, gesture, copy study, composition
  • writing: freewriting, scene work, revision, idea capture
  • photography: daily capture, framing drills, theme practice, editing review
  • language expression: shadowing, retelling, monologue, recording

3. Habit stack

Write the habit in this form:

  • “After I [existing habit], I will [small practice].”

If useful, read references/habit-stack-template.md and tailor one pattern instead of dumping many templates.

4. Warm-up and shutdown ritual

Include:

  • how to start quickly
  • how to end while setting up the next session

5. Progress tracking

Recommend a very small tracking system:

  • streak
  • minutes
  • reps/pages/sketches/shots
  • weekly reflection questions

6. Obstacle playbook

Provide “if-then” responses for likely failure points. Examples:

  • if tired, do the minimum version only
  • if perfectionism spikes, use a quantity-first drill
  • if bored, switch to a variation day

7. Starter plan

Include:

  • what to do tomorrow
  • what the first 7 days should look like
  • what tools or setup to prepare in advance

Quality bar

Plans should feel:

  • realistic
  • specific
  • low-friction
  • tailored to the art form

Prefer a plan the user can sustain over an ideal plan they will abandon.

Boundaries

Do:

  • design habit systems and training rhythms
  • help reduce friction and improve consistency
  • give practice structures and reflection prompts

Do not:

  • pretend habit design replaces technique coaching
  • promise measurable improvement without practice quality
  • give bloated schedules that ignore the user’s energy and life constraints

Version tags

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