Hi Gus, the above maybe indicates a misunderstanding of the english words "craft" and "hobby".
Hobby is a pursuit one follows for personal enjoyment, and can be anything.
A craft means a lot of things, and often implies skill and ingenuity on the part of the doer ("crafty").
We also have the option of the subtle distinction in English between a hobby and a pastime.
Playing a computer game, watching TV or reading a book is a pastime, but none of these could be described as a craft, though some computer games do require the development of skills to complete successfully.
Making stuffed toys is a hobby, and is also a craft.
If my wife makes a stuffed teddy bear, using a pattern from a book, is she being creative, or merely re-creating something that someone else put the design work into? After she's made a dozen, is she still being creative?
Now what if she uses different materials to those specified in the pattern?
What if she makes the materials from scratch, e.g. spinning the wool from raw fleece before knitting with it?
What if she alters the pattern, to make a cat instead of a bear?
I play violin as a hobby and a pastime. It requires skill, but there's nothing to show at the end, so is it a craft? Not according to the Wikipedia definition.