Archive for the "Miscellaneous" Category

Very cool photo mosaic meme

Friday, 19th September, 2008

Photo Mosaic Meme

Photo Mosaic Meme

1. Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park (#309), 2. Handmade chocolate cupcakes filled with blueberry cream and topped with dark chocolate ganache and some more of these absolutely delicious wild blueberries, 3. clarence carter @ sprayberry’s, 4. Summer Window of Blue Color Sky, 5. Gretchen Wilson, 6. Ice tea, 7. 7c5e, 8. chocolate pecan pie, 9. I’m getting older, but I’m not growing up., 10. My husband doesn’t want his picture on Flickr, 11. All By Myself, 12. BMFA STR Firebird Colorway Desktop Wallpaper

Here’s the instructions:

Use Flickr to search for the answers of each of the questions below. Using only the first page, choose an image, copy and paste each of the URL’s into the mosaic maker.

The questions:

1. What is your first name? 
2. What is your favorite food?
3. What high school did you attend? 
4. What is your favorite color?
5. Who is your favorite celebrity?
6. Favorite drink?
7. Dream vacation?
8. Favorite dessert?
9. What do you want to be when you grow up?
10. What do you love most in life?
11. One word to describe you.
12. Your Flickr name

Thanks to Renee Alston for using this meme on her blog — that’s how I found it.

I do not forget

Thursday, 11th September, 2008

Seven years ago to the moment, I was sitting on the floor in a crowded TV lounge in the GPC Student Center with dozens of fellow faculty and students, watching in horror as the news replayed video of the World Trade Center towers burning and collapsing, of the gaping and burning hole in the Pentagon, over and over and over, searing itself into our memories.

I have not forgotten.  I will not forget.

Letter to the Editor

Monday, 1st September, 2008

The fall issue of Belle Armoire Jewelry was on the stands at Borders Saturday afternoon.  When I picked it up, the first thing I turned to was the Letters to the Editor section.  It contained four very brief, nothing-but-praise entries — not even a breath about the negative responses to the Carter Seibels feature in the last issue.  I know that they received critical feedback from several people, including me, but you would never guess from the letters, nor from the Editor’s Comments, nor any indication of any response anywhere from the table of contents.

At first I was a little perturbed, but then I remembered that this IS a Stampington magazine.  In all the years I’ve read their various magazines off and on, I have rarely if ever seen a negative comment.  That seems to be in keeping with their whole editorial philosophy — much of their published artwork has a definite sameness about it; rarely do you see anything outside very narrow boundaries in there.  (There’s a reason I don’t buy many of their magazines any more — in truth they get boring quickly.)

Since they chose not to publish my comments, at the risk of being repetitive I’ll post them here:

Dear Editor,

My delight in seeing a lampwork artist featured in the Summer 08 issue of Belle Armoire Jewelry rapidly turned to dismay as I read Rice Freeman-Zachary’s article on Carter Seibels, for two reasons.  Apparently neither Ms. Seibels nor Ms. Freeman-Zachary fully understands the use of presses in making lampworked beads.  Pressed beads are indeed hand-crafted, formed one at a time at the torch, unlike furnace glass beads which are mass-produced using molds and then cut into individual beads.  In the hands of a lampworker, the press is simply another tool in their arsenal, allowing creation of forms that would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, without their use.  Let us not forget that “hand-formed” beads are actually shaped with tools, not actual hands, as well!  The quality of the resulting bead depends on the skill and vision of the artist, regardless of what tools are used to form the bead — whether pressed or hand-formed, a bead can be exquisite or merely ordinary.

Far more disturbing, though, was the paragraph where Ms. Seibels equates “middle-aged” beadmakers with traditional work, and younger artists with experimental and thus more creative work.  Such generalizations are dangerous! To many people, “traditional” implies boring, stodgy, and ordinary — words which no one wants applied to themself or their work. Had this ageist remark referred to differences in race or gender, I hope it would never have seen the light of print.  As a “middle-aged” artist myself, I hope that the editorial staff, Ms. Freeman-Zachary, and Ms. Seibels will consider their words far more carefully in the future.  Furthermore, I suggest that you take note of such creative lampworking visionaries such as Andrea Guarino-Slemmons and Lydia Muell, both decidedly older than Ms. Seibels herself and both of whom have abandoned eBay for other, more artist-friendly, sales venues.

Sincerely,


Three Things You’d Save in an Emergency

Friday, 29th August, 2008

Sara at On Simplicity wrote:

what three non-essential things would you save in an emergency? Your family, friends, pets, and any medical needs are considered essential for this question, so we’ll assume you’ve already got those.

As I think about my own answer to this, it really brings home how little I really need in terms of material possessions!  It also makes me realize that I don’t have a current backup of my data on my computer, because an external hard drive or flash drive containing that would probably be at the top of my list.  Perhaps I should do something about this???

Let’s say that number 1 is my hypothetical external data backup.  Number 2 might well be my rolling case containing my bead inventory.  A couple of thousand dollars of inventory would do quite a bit to help me restock my studio, or give me an opportunity to recognize the generosity of anyone helping me out in that emergency.  Number 3?  Hmmm.  I think I might have to quickly grab my little metal lunchbox containing my journal and journaling supplies.  I would probably need to work through a lot of angst as we rebuilt our life, and I’ve always found journaling a good tool for that.

So I would say that’s my final answer:

  1. A backup copy of my computer data on external/flash drive
  2. My bead inventory case
  3. My journal box

How about you?  What three things would YOU save?

How I Do It

Thursday, 28th August, 2008

Not too long ago, Twiggy, one of my fellow lampworking-forum members, said to me:

I don’t know how you keep all your online stuff up to date, run a forum and actually get to melt any glass.

As I told her:

Ha ha ha. The secret is I DON’T do it all as well as I look like I do. I don’t keep my online stuff up to date very well. About once a month or so I will go over to each site and play with it a bit so that it LOOKS like I’m keeping it up. I’m really bad about consistently listing stuff on Etsy because I’m finding it to be a PITA. If I had a bit bigger name I’d just set up a shopping cart on my website and list most stuff there, just a few things elsewhere to make myself visible.

Luckily I don’t depend on this for my living!

Also, since I have a full-time job as a computer science professor, I can call a lot of the computer stuff, including running the forum, “professional development” and kill two birds with one stone that way. Sneaky, eh?

I learned how to fake “having it together” long ago.  Of course, there are times when the facade crumbles — if you want to come visit me, you better be coming to see ME, not a clean house!  Yep, one of my tricks is that housework is a low priority.

It’s also still true that there just aren’t enough hours in the day to do everything I’d like to do.  So I give little bits of my attention to this, and that, and the other, here and there.  Every thing gets its little bit of my life; nothing gets all it wants.  It’s all compromise, and it works because it has to — because it’s how I work.