Behind the Shop with S11DJ – Craft Service

Meet the owner behind Portland’s unique art and music shop called Craft Service, “a playground for creative exploration and inspiration.” He is more than a collector and admirer of art and music. He is an educator and collaborator seeking to bring together a curious and creative community. He is intentional in his craft and selections. He views playing records as a way to help slow down in this rapid-paced world and to be more intentional with the music playing in your ears.

Tell us about yourself.

My name is Steven Kasprzyk. I have been in Portland for 11 years and am originally from Wisconsin. I have a degree in Design and Printmaking and that’s my background. For the last 15 years, I’ve worked in design and I started my career at Apple, which is kind of crazy since it was right out of the gate. I have a strong interest in education so I moved out here to work for PNCA (Pacific Northwest College of Art). When that job fell through during my drive out here, I got thrown into the design advertisement field and I worked at a few advertisement agencies and design studios. In the last 8 years, I switched from being a designer to being in business development and later it became apparent that my heart wasn’t in it anymore.

I’ve always had this idea to do an art and music general store and that is Craft Service. It’s a space where if you love art and know a lot about it, you can find something you will like or if you’re new to it, it is going to be very welcoming. I want to push for the education side of it, such as having workshops and anything to make art and music more inviting and accessible to people. I believe everyone has creativity and artistic curiosity within them and I’d like to encourage people to explore them.

Photos by DJ AuteurPop

Do you run Craft Service full-time?

Yes! My wife and I had our baby in January, and I want to do something that when my daughter sees me at work, she doesn’t wonder why her dad hates his job. I want to preface that I love the folks at my last design agency but I simply wasn’t into it anymore. My wife, who is also my business partner, said to me, “Just do Craft Service. You talked about this for years and now is the time to do it!

What is your favorite thing about running Craft Service?

Owning my own business! I did not expect to not be stressed and I thought I was going to be stressed 24/7. I found that although there is a lot on me to get things done, I enjoy the work much more. It pushes me to make sure I’m doing things right, such as working with the right artists, finding the right manufacturers, and holding myself accountable.

Is there a surprising challenge when it comes to running Craft Service?

My personal taste. *laughs* I like so many different types of music so maybe having a pop-punk album that I listen to all the time in high school isn’t the best thing to have on the shelf. Also, I’m a collector and I love the chase of the limited editions, and just because I like a limited-edition art toy that costs $300 doesn’t mean the customers will. It’s a balance.

Craft Service isn’t your typical online music store and pop-up shop. Your customers can find a variety of things and not just vinyl. From art books to effect pedals to modular synths. How do you go about curating and deciding what to showcase given your wide range of products?

It’s tough! There are companies that do certain products very well and I admire them. For example, 4ms in Portland is a nationally known modular synth company, and their products are amazing and I love the people who work there. I think if I don’t showcase some of their stuff, I would be doing Craft Service and customers a disservice.

I want Craft Service to be a specialty in a way that people know they can find something that is unique and high-quality. I want the products to push them to learn more about their creative side. I am sure some things will sell better than others and I might stop carrying certain things. With this pop-up at Baerlic Brewing, it’s a great way to see what people are into and have interesting conversations about their tastes.

I noticed earlier posts on Craft Service’s Instagram page have a nostalgic, retro advertisement aesthetic. What was the reason behind that?

Thanks for noticing that! I remember reading this magazine called ‘Boys Life’ when I was much younger and advertisements in the back are that of which I mimicked in those Instagram posts. Other magazines’ ads, comic books’ ads, and some catalogs had so much random stuff, and I don’t think anyone looked through and thought, “Of course, I need x-ray glasses! Finally, there is a place I can order them from.” That’s basically the idea of Craft Service. People may come in because they know we carry records but they may find something they didn’t expect we’d carry and be excited enough to buy it.

How did you get into collecting records and how would you describe your collection?

I was afraid to start collecting records because I love the limited editions, the cool vinyl variants, and the chase to find that one vinyl that it’s hard to get. When I finally started, I was buying records that I was illegally downloading as a kid. My first design job in Portland was located right around the corner to 2nd Avenue Records and during my lunch breaks, I would walk over and buy a record every week. It got dangerous. *laughs*

My wife and I have a room where the record collection is in and a turntable. Nothing else. It’s our chill out zone. Now the collection varies across the board. What you see in Craft Service’s crates is a good indicator of what is on my shelf at home.

Do you remember the first record that you purchased and where?

I do! I bought a record by Rainer Maria, an old emo band. I got it in Baltimore, MD at a store called The Sound Garden that I believe is still around. I still have that record and it’s beat to hell. *laughs*

If someone is just getting into record collecting, what are some tips that you wish you had known earlier?

Honestly what I wished I would’ve done earlier is go into shops and talk to the people behind the counter. I understand that it may be intimidating, say if you don’t know the shop or if it’s an older shop, you might get a grumpy vibe. If you’re in Portland, go to Specks Records in Kenton because Mike is the person to ask for recommendations and can curate something amazing for you.

Second tip would be to find a label that you like. If you like a certain band/artist, find out which label they’re with because more than likely, you will like the other bands/artists that are also with that label.

If there was a fire/natural disaster and you have enough time to save just one record, what would it be?

I was given The Promise Ring record by the lead singer of The Promise Ring when I was young. It has a lot of meaning for me.

Describe your perfect day of shopping for records or a ‘record store crawl’ in Portland. Where would you start and where will you end? You can squeeze in coffee spots, bars/breweries, food places.

Ah, I love this question. I will start my day at Either/Or for coffee. From Either/Or, I will go to Speck’s. After Speck’s, I will need another coffee so I’ll go to Barista in Alberta. Then I will head down to Tomorrow Records. I’ll grab lunch at Rollin’ Fresh, get some poke. Now it’s the afternoon so I need another coffee so I’ll stop at Prince Coffee. I will end at Music Millennium because I feel like that is my all-encompassing shop that probably would have records that I wasn’t able to find at the other shops. Well, to be honest, I’ll probably end the day back at Speck’s again because Mike is such an amazing dude with so much knowledge. I do need to give a shout-out to Future Shock in Burnside though.

What would you do if you didn’t own and run Craft Service?

If money wasn’t an object, it would be teaching to some capacity. I also love coffee and have a lot of friends in coffee so maybe working coffee. I think the coffee community is just as cool as the vinyl community.

Any next big plans for CS?

We are currently looking for a space and that’s number one on the agenda. I’m super thankful for Baerlic Brewing and Ben for letting us do this pop-up for Craft Service for the next few months (until Jan. 31st). Once we find the space, we want to design it to be where everyone is welcome, it doesn’t matter if you are super into music and art or are brand new, just come in and let’s talk about the things we love.


Visit Craft Service pop-up Baerlic Brewing (SE location on 11th Ave), operating Mon-Fri from 3pm to 9pm and Sat-Sun from 1pm to 8pm, until January 31st, 2022. Or visit http://crftsrvc.com/.


Places Mentioned:

1.      Baerlic Brewing

2.     2nd Avenue Records

3.     Speck’s Records & Tapes

4.    Tomorrow Records5

5.    Future Shock

6.     Either/Or

7.    Barista

8.    Rollin’ Fresh

9. Prince Coffee

10.    Music Millennium

11.  The Sound Garden

S11DJ hosts Into The Night every other Saturday at 6 pm.
AuteurPop hosts Across Medium every other Sunday at 6 pm.

Station Top 30 – Week of 11/16

1. Marissa Nadler – The Path of the Clouds (Sacred Bones)
2. Nation of Language – A Way Forward (PIAS)
3. Parquet Courts – Sympathy for Life (Rough Trade)
4. Mia Doi Todd – Ten Views of Music Life (City Zen)
5. Emma Ruth Rundle – Engine of Hell (Sargent House)
6. Helado Negro – Far In (4AD)
7. Black Marble – Fast Idol (Sacred Bones)
8. Curtis Harding – If Words Were Flowers (Anti-/Epitaph)
9. Fire-Toolz – Eternal Home (Hausu Mountain)
10. Colleen Green – Cool (Hardly Art)
11. Patrick Shiroishi – Hidemi (American Dreams)
12. Longboat – Basically Blue, Vol. 2 (AchduliebeZeit!)
13. Valida – Mixed Signals EP (HRMNX / Create Music Group)
14. Mo Douglas – Fry The Onion Gently (Ten Dollar Recording Co.)
15. illuminati hotties – Let Me Do One More (Snack Shack Tracks / Hopeless Records)
16. Said the Whale – Dandelion (Everything Forever)
17. Margo Cilker – Pohorylle (Fluff & Gravy)
18. Pepe Deluxé – Phantom Cabinet Vol. 1 (Catskills)
19. Dark Leaves – Laid under leaf, under branches (Ramble)
20. SPECTRES – Hindsight (Artoffact)
21. Dummy – Mandatory Enjoyment (Trouble in Mind)
22. Extinction AD – Chaos, Collusion, Carnage & Propaganda EP (Unique Leader)
23. Myriam Gendron – Ma délire – Songs of love, lost & found (s/r)
24. Roy Montgomery – Rhymes of Chance (Grapefruit)
25. Geese – Projector (Partisan / Play It Again Sam)
26. Alda – A Distant Fire (Eisenwald)
27. Hand Habits – Clean Air (Saddle Creek)
28. Amyl and The Sniffers – Comfort to Me (ATO)
29. Gustaf – Audio Drag for Ego Slobs (Royal Mountain)
30. RÜFÜS DU SOL – Surrender (Rose Avenue/Reprise)

Station Top 30 – Week of 11/9

1. Black Marble – Fast Idol (Sacred Bones)
2. Fire-Toolz – Eternal Home (Hausu Mountain)
3. Marissa Nadler – The Path of the Clouds (Sacred Bones)
4. Anz – All Hours EP (Ninja Tune)
5. Parquet Courts – Sympathy for Life (Rough Trade)
6. Amon Tobin – How Do You Live (NOMARK)
7. Clinic – Fantasy Island (Domino)
8. The Pop Group – Y in Dub (Mute)
9. Mia Doi Todd – Ten Views of Music Life (City Zen)
10. Lala Lala – I Want the Door to Open (Hardly Art)
11. Mo Douglas – Fry The Onion Gently (Ten Dollar Recording Co.)
12. Patrick Shiroishi – Hidemi (American Dreams)
13. Low – HEY WHAT (Sub Pop)
14. Deerhoof – Actually, You Can (Joyful Noise)
15. Pepe Deluxé – Phantom Cabinet Vol. 1 (Catskills)
16. Ronan – Reflections on Intrinsic Value (Eternal Ocean)
17. MONO – Pilgrimage of the Soul (Temporary Residence Ltd.)
18. Said the Whale – Dandelion (Everything Forever)
19. La Luz – S/T (Hardly Art)
20. Space Afrika – Honest Labour (Dais)
21. Roy Montgomery – Rhymes of Chance (Grapefruit)
22. Valida – Mixed Signals EP (HRMNX / Create Music Group)
23. Little Simz – Sometimes I Might Be Introvert (Age 101)
24. Syl Johnson – Foxy Brown (Numero Group)
25. Raja Kirik – Rampokan (Nyege Nyege Tapes)
26. Xenia Rubinos – Una Rosa (Anti/Epitaph)
27. Colleen Green – Cool (Hardly Art)
28. Bryan Rahija – Timber (Ramseur)
29. d’Eon – Rhododendron (Hausu Mountain)
30. Ross Goldstein – Chutes and Ladders (Odd Cat)

Station Top 30 – Week of 11/2

1. Fire-Toolz – Eternal Home (Hausu Mountain)
2. Lala Lala – I Want the Door to Open (Hardly Art)
3. Clinic – Fantasy Island (Domino)
4. Black Marble – Fast Idol (Sacred Bones)
5. ONETWOTHREE – s/t (Kill Rock Stars)
6. Dummy – Mandatory Enjoyment (Trouble In Mind)
7. V/A – Sound Wonders: A Series of Epics (Touchtheplants)
8. Amon Tobin – How Do You Live (NOMARK)
9. Little Simz – Sometimes I Might Be Introvert (Age 101)
10. MONO – Pilgrimage of the Soul (Temporary Residence Ltd.)
11. Explosions In The Sky – Big Bend (An Original Soundtrack For Public Television) (‎Temporary Residence)
12. Reb Fountain – Iris (Flying Nun)
13. La Luz – S/T (Hardly Art)
14. Colleen Green – Cool (Hardly Art)
15. Suss – Night Suite [EP] (Northern Spy)
16. Deerhoof – Actually, You Can (Joyful Noise)
17. Mega Bog – Life, and Another (Paradise of Bachelors)
18. Snapped Ankles – Forest of Your Problems (Leaf)
19. Jordana & TV Girl – Summer’s Over (Grand Jury)
20. Yola – Stand For Myself (Easy Eye Sound)
21. My Morning Jacket – S/T (ATO)
22. Low – HEY WHAT (Sub Pop)
23. King Woman – Celestial Blues (Relapse)
24. HearThuG – Planet Rhythm X (Banofee Pies)
25. SiP/Prezzano – S/T (Moon Glyph)
26. Disimperium – Malefic Obliteration (Sentient Ruin)
27. Darkthrone – Eternal Hails…… (Peaceville)
28. Cando – Clutch EP (Le Chatroom) 
29. Church Girls – Still Blooms (Anchor Eighty Four)
30. Aquaserge – The Possibility Of A New Work For Aquaserge (Crammed Discs)

Station Top 30 – Week of 10/26

1. Fire-Toolz – Eternal Home (Hausu Mountain)
2. Lala Lala – I Want the Door to Open (Hardly Art)
3. Little Simz – Sometimes I Might Be Introvert (Age 101)
4. V/A – Sound Wonders: A Series of Epics (Touchtheplants)
5. Amon Tobin – How Do You Live (NOMARK)
6. ONETWOTHREE – s/t (Kill Rock Stars)
7. Deerhoof – Actually, You Can (Joyful Noise)
8. Ada Lea – One Hand On The Steering Wheel The Other Sewing A Garden (Saddle Creek)
9. Explosions In The Sky – Big Bend (An Original Soundtrack For Public Television) (‎Temporary Residence)
10. Reb Fountain – Iris (Flying Nun)
11. Colleen Green – Cool (Hardly Art)
12. Angel Olsen – Aisles (Jagjaguwar)
13. Suss – Night Suite [EP] (Northern Spy)
14. Yola – Stand For Myself (Easy Eye Sound)
15. Bria – Cuntry Covers Vol. 1 (Sub Pop)
16. Catbells – Wilderness EP (SQFT)
17. Wavves – Hideaway (Fat Possum)
18. King Woman – Celestial Blues (Relapse)
19. The Lyonz – Change in Colour (E. 47 Records)
20. Aquaserge – The Possibility Of A New Work For Aquaserge (Crammed Discs)
21. Sufjan Stevens & Angelo De Augustine (Asthmatic Kitty)
22. Disimperium – Malefic Obliteration (Sentient Ruin)
23. HearThuG – Planet Rhythm X (Banofee Pies)
24. SiP/Prezzano – S/T (Moon Glyph)
25. Low – HEY WHAT (Sub Pop)
26. Other – Sacred & Profane (s/r)
27. Syz – Du Rong EP (Bokhari Records)
28. Snapped Ankles – Forest of Your Problems (Leaf)
29. Laura Jane Grace – At War with the Silverfish (Polyvinyl)
30. The Shivas – Feels So Good // Feels So Bad (Tender Loving Empire)

Station Top 30 – Week of 10/19

1. Amon Tobin – How Do You Live (NOMARK)
2. Little Simz – Sometimes I Might Be Introvert (Age 101)
3. Xi – Xi (Riot Material)
4. Tirzah – Colourgrade (Domino)
5. Brett Naucke – Mirror Ensemble (American Dreams)
6. Ducks, Ltd. – Modern Fiction (Carpark)
7. Efterklang – Windflowers (City Slang)
8. Jose Gonzalez – Local Valley (Mute)
9. Sufjan Stevens & Angelo De Augustine (Asthmatic Kitty)
10. 박혜진 Park Hye Jin – Before I Die (Ninja Tune)
11. Maurice Louca – Saet El-Hazz (The Luck Hour) (Sub Rosa/Northern Spy)
12. Illuminati Hotties – Let Me Do One More (Snack Shack Tracks/Hopeless)
13. Myriam Gendron – Ma Délire – Songs of Love Lost & Found (Feeding Tube)
14. Moor Mother – Black Encyclopedia of The Air (Anti-)
15. Devin Hoff – Voices From The Empty Moor (Songs Of Anne Briggs) (Kill Rock Stars)
16. V/A – Sound Wonders (Touchtheplants)
17. Baligh Hamdi – Modal Instrumental Pop of 1970s Egypt (Sublime Frequencies)
18. The Shivas – Feels So Good // Feels So Bad (Tender Loving Empire)
19. The Body & BIG|BRAVE – Leaving None But Small Birds (Thrill Jockey)
20. Full Of Hell – Garden Of Burning Apparitions (Relapse)
21. Nala Sinephro – Space 1.8 (Warp)
22. Film School – We Weren’t Here (Sonic Ritual)
23. Machinedrum – Psyconia EP (Ninja Tune)
24. Maston with L’eclair – Souvenir (Innovative Leisure)
25. Cindy – 1:2 (Mtn.St.Mtn.)
26. Ashley Shadow – Only The End (Felte)
27. Blod – Missväxt (Grapefruit)
28. Buffalo Daughter – We Are The Times (Anniversary)
29. Low – HEY WHAT (Sub Pop)
30. Astrid Sonne – outside of your lifetime (Escho)

Station Top 30 – Week of 9/28

1. Low – Hey What (Sub Pop)
2. Buffalo Daughter – We Are the Times (Buffalo Ranch/Anniversary)
3. Marisa Anderson & William Tyler – Lost Futures (Thrill Jockey)
4. Turnstile – GLOW ON (Roadrunner)
5. Brian Rahija – Timber (Ramseur/Thirty Tigers)
6. Dot Allison – Heart-Shaped Scars (SA Recordings)
7. Native Soul – Teenage Dreams (Awesome Tapes From Africa)
8. Moor Mother – Black Encyclopedia of the Air (Anti-)
9. Durand Jones & The Indications – Private Space (Dead Oceans)
10. Little Simz – Sometimes I Might Be Introvert (Age 101)
11. Jesse Marchant – Antelope Running (AntiFragile)
12. Negativland – NO BRAIN (Seeland)
13. V/A – Anthology of Exploratory Music from India (Unexplained Sounds)
14. Norman W. Long – BLACK BROWN GRAY GREEN (Hausu Mountain)
15. Botany – Portal Orphanage (Western Vinyl)
16. Dry Cleaning – New Long Leg (4AD)
17. ToiToiToi – Vaganten (Ghost Box)
18. black midi – Cavalcade (Rough Trade)
19. Japanese Breakfast – Jubilee (Dead Oceans)
20. Shannon & the Clams – Year of the Spider (Easy Eye Sound/Concord)
21. Connor Kissel – The Forest Of Things Lost And Found (Somewherecold)
22. Mark Tester – Oblivion Rhythms Revisited (Moon Glyph)
23. Brett Ratliff – Whitesburg, KY (June Appal)
24. TRAKA – Maktub (YUKU)
25. Charles Brown – Circles (Numero)
26. The Muslims – Fuck These Fuckin Fascists (Epitaph)
27. Sermon of Flames – I Have Seen the Light, and It Was Repulsive (I, Voidhanger)
28. Nueen – Circular Sequence (Quiet Time)
29. Space Afrika – Honest Labour (Dias)
30. Cando – Clutch EP (Le Chatroom)

Why We Listen

This summer, our Freeform Portland DJs took time to reflect on what the radio station has meant to them. Here’s what they said (and drew)…

Sweet Jane
Every day we find ourselves just inundated with noise, and FreeForm Portland has become my haven from the static. The DJs here put so much time and thought into the music they bring to our community, and their love for the station can be felt on every show. We are so lucky to have this station to tune into rather than yet another thing to tune out.

Random Citizen (she/her)
This image was created not long after putting together songs I wanted to play on a future show. It also shows the accessibility of hearing Freeform Portland from your laptop. While technology changes, there’s still something awesome about coming across a song you didn’t know you needed to hear. It’s one of the reasons I love being part of the Freeform Portland fam. There’s no must-play list from a corporate headquarters — the songs you hear on different shows are selected by that DJ. Every time you tune in to Freeform Portland, you increase the chance of hearing your new favorite song.

Dj Aquatina  
I love listening to Freeform because there is always something on that’s new and funky! Discovering new music and not the same old 50 songs from 2007. Thanks for helping me discover and grow my love of music! Keep bringing the jams!

Ansible
Some music inspires active listening. It may make you want to burst grin giggle bliss skip jump and sing and shout. It could be provocative, unsettling, unnerving, or challenging. It might make you think and feel. It isn’t always easy. Other music is more passive. You’ll put it on in the background as a pleasant hum during your busy day. It doesn’t distract. It lets you focus. Comforting. Present. Some music is immersive. You want to sink into it like a warm bath, a cozy bed, a luxurious rug. Freeform surprises with the unexpected. You’ll hear things you didn’t know you wanted to hear, that you didn’t know existed. You’ll discover new songs, new artists, new genres. You’ll hear strange and familiar voices, like your own, a new friend, or a long-lost love. Freeform isn’t formulaic. We’re for you. We’re here for your many moods, interests, passions, and curiosities. Kick off your shoes. Stretch out on the rug. Put on those headphones and tune in. We got you.

Dr. Axolotl
Freeform is a warm, welcoming brain-bath I always turn to when I want to swim in ideas. In my car or the hammock, when the mix gets especially good, the air thickens, the light turns to wine, and my secret gills unfurl to breathe in the weird, wondrous sounds. Since I found Freeform Portland, I can’t imagine going back to water… 

Noah Fence
When I was very young, Radio was music. Completely. All music came from the radio. To my post-infant brain, the radio was magic. All the sounds and the noises and the voices combined to create this incredible feeling of joy and happiness. Without knowing why I would crack a smile and involuntarily tap my foot. I made no distinctions between what I heard, all the songs just came from the radio and I absorbed them all. But growing older, we develop opinions, likes and dislikes, we learn to separate one thing from other things, we put things into genres, types, label things as “happy”, “sad”, “good’’, “Bad”, etc onto a near-endless number of possible of categories and boxes into which we can organize our overtaxed little brains. We lose some of our best infantile qualities, and we lie to ourselves calling it “growing up”, pretending it is okay. I listen to Freeform Portland because it has returned to me the magic of radio. Switching it on at any time of day or night, you can never know exactly what sort of music you are going to hear, and what exactly the DJ might play next. But it seems to always be good, well-selected and driven by a human element, the DJ. Even though there are a limited number of notes and chords, music seems to offer up an infinite number of possible combinations of sounds, and Freeform Portland seems to make a concerted effort to play as many of them as possible. When I listen to Freeform Portland I can let my guard down, and listen with a child’s mind frame. I can envelop myself in the security blanket of sound that is the magic of radio.

Odd Monster
Music is an escape for when we are trapped in our houses, our cars, our jobs, our bodies.  Music is an energy, passed between us in song and dance, and fuels our lives. Music was one of the earliest things invented by humans, and it is the most fluid form of communication there is.  When music is shared with honesty it can change and save lives.  Help support the love of music by supporting Freeform Portland.  We have no advertisements, no talk radio, just blissful music, 24/7/365. Enrich your life and maybe help share the love with others.

dj lonelygirl15
for me, listening to music is a combination of escaping reality and a re-imagining of my lived experience. freeform is a place where i can sonically express all of the things i’ve always wanted to be without fear. this little ipod is a remembered past – the things that i loved to blast into my ears, the intimacy between my heart and a bumping track, and the beginning of a freeform dj’s story.

Matt Mount 
Each and every show on Freeform Portland has at least one new discovery. There are mysterious seashells to find in the endless span of sand, there are new birds that no ornithologist has ever seen, there are moments and memories that come rushing back like a brand new past. The sounds seem familiar, but what is happening is that we’re discovering it together for the 1st time. Freeform Portland invites vulnerable egoless ears to really listen, to be curious, to fall in love, and to be heartbroken in the healthiest way.

DJ Alice Wonder 
Music can come into your life from unlikely places. I’ve found my favorite bands from my older sister, best friends, total enemies, math teachers, convenience store cashiers and of course community radio! Freeform has great tracks day and night, things I’ve never heard anywhere else, even after my many years of obsessively searching out the most obscure music. You never know where you’re going to find the next song you’ll fall in love with- sometimes squirrels have the best tunes!!