Allergies!


I hate it when that dry little cough that hides in the back of your throat wakes up before you do...and then you are startled awake coughing and shaken. My head is splitting and sniffling. I guess it's Spring! Yeah for everything except for the malaise that comes from the coating of light green pollen that clings to everything. It is particularly noticeable on the car--but I think a claritin and some tea might help turn the tide. I hope.

I am working on a series of pared back images (trying to keep it to three colors) with an example of the work above. This is tough going...but challenging much like Scrabulous (if you like Scrabble...this is an elegant rendering of it).It is a bit of an exercise...but the image I just did of a buffalo is pretty good. What is interesting is that the process is changing for me. I work with a photograph and then dump the photo and start really looking at the shapes, at the solids and how the image is broken up. Then, I will redesign the shapes, cut into the big flat areas (as I am finding that the big areas unless intentional can be tedious and need to be broken up to keep the image interesting). I am outputting the image midway and working on top of it quickly with black and white gouache to take the image further. Then, I will freehand those ideas on the existing file--and if need be, do that again. I am intrigued by brush creation in Illustrator. I am making them and modifying them to keep a hand drawn look but cut a bit of the time I am spending on these images. It is really simple...and lets see what happens. This adding and subtracting--the cutting and the patching is very interesting and good training. I shouldn't say this as it is skill building. The Memento Mori black and white drawings were good training for this next step.

I am doing these simple (hopefully going simpler) images as they are strong and could morph to visuals for logos or symbols. I have done complex color images that are photographic....its how do you do that and translate the images without going geometric. Thus the little progression to get my eye "in" and technique further refined.

More later.

sunny day


R is off to the American Museum Association convention in Denver today. He is sitting on a panel discussion tomorrow, so our fingers are crossed that maybe his baggage is not lost and that his travel is as simple as it can be given the hook up in Philadelphia and the dreaded bus trip. K and I got back from the pharmacy for some last minute purchases for R and two rose plants ($5.99) from in front of the store. It is so springy that I can only hope that those nasty deer do not eat the rosebushes...and if they do, I hope the thorns get caught in their stinking throats.

I have been chatting with these wonderful people--both linguists with one of them with expertise in Sanskrit and the Indian culture. I have challenged him to help me find a story for the Ted and Betsy Lewin course this summer, the development and illustration of a children's book. There is a story about the antics of monkeys and a king monkey that looks promising...but we are going to eat lunch and chat about this...and we will see where this can go.

Just got back from the new movie about the Rolling Stones. I agree with many of the reviews...not a 4 but def a 3. There were some sensational moments--perfectly cropped, perfect slices of time and expression that were transcendant. It portrayed men doing their work, with love and humanity as a family. Mick and Keith seemed fragile--albeit with all the steam and energy as before, but somehow on the edge of their abilities but also with age wearing them down. Mick has hearing aids. And Keith, who I never thought as a gentle being--came through not as a campy old musician, but someone who loves his music, the show and his engagement with people in the band. For me, the semi nutty quality that Scorsese portrayed as a character was hilarious--New York paranoia matched with a personal vagueness yet edginess that he portrayed. Scorsese was almost a little guardian angel or animus that spun the plates to bring us this vision of the Rolling Stones. It is a nice hour or so of music. I would try to see it in an IMAX or a theater with kick booty sound. That was limiting for us.

We are having a downpour--Chet the Lawnmower man was hoping and hoping for rain...and I think today we got a bit of what was required.

Flaxinated!

Phew! I just got back from the congregation of Flaxnation. They were all there--all shapes and sizes, in clothing and in bathing suits and camisoles, tossing shirts from bin to bin, trying things on and commenting to their neighbors about how they look and how things fit. Human mirrors with edit buttons.

Highlights include:

> cool linen and silk plaid shirts (colorway being pear and a blueberry and ivory plaid, or a purple, rust and ivory, or a lemon yellow, cool red and one with red/turquoise and yellow). This material is beautiful and has a nice hand and drape. There are sleeveless and sleeved tees to go with them.
> coats. Not wonderful wool like the Eileen Fisher ones--but coats in about 4 different shapes. Ivory, tan, black, navy. The basics.
> if you like florals, there is this box of huge, single colored floral print shirts, tees, pants in turquoise, pink, grey colors (turquoise with turquoise flowers). Big print. I thought is was a bit overwhelming, but the ladies that were draped in it looked good.
> lightweight linen sleepwear: pants, shirts, nightgowns. Pear, white, or a bluish grey.
> Neesh stuff in general. I bought K a forties style dress in black, transparent material and a layered black lace skirt.
> Really nice boyfriend shirts in a puckery cotton in white, washed orange, washed grey, washed denim color and my favorite, a thin blue stripe on white--kind of mattress ticking type of pattern. Same material had pants, capris, wrap jackets and these long tunics with a placket and buttons down the first 6" from the top.
>Flax basics. All linen, all the time. Ivory, brown, black. Perfection.

If you are in the neighborhood, stop by. Its worth it. They give everyone a free, linen bag made of their material to stuff your finds into. The $5. bins are terrific. Prices range from $35. and down. Nothing goes much beyond that. And, they have a ton of merchandise that they are constantly opening up boxes and putting out. So, Friday is different from Saturday and Saturday from Sunday as it is all dependent on what gets moved onto the floor. Plus, a new add is there is a Bierkenstock shoe truckload sale that is happening in the parking lot so you can work the entire LOI (look of Ithaca) if you so desire. Merrill shoes are an option along with Teva sandals. It is the uniform of the Flaxnation. Once a year. We should make it a holiday! Why not?

Ten Images for Ithaca (Greece) Competition

The competition invites this year all designers to set their imagination free and talk about their dreams, whether these are images and feelings the human mind creates while we sleep or their hopes and wishes. Therefore, the term “dream” can also be used metaphorically, it can be the “starting point” of an idea or be the main theme for the final piece.
The ten best entries will be printed into banners with dimensions 2m x 60cm and will be hung along Ithaca’s promenade for the entire summer of 2008. Their creators will have free accommodation in Ithaca on the weekend of the exhibition’s opening (July 2008). Each individual or group may submit up to two posters. In order to enter the competition, each artist has to register through this website. Each piece must have dimensions of 40cm height x 12cm width (15,75’’ height x 4.73’’ width) and must be uploaded as an electronic file (pdf or jpeg), resolution 360 dpi, maximum file size 10 MB.Entries can be uploaded until 31 May 2008. Visit the site to learn more.

Have a little time? Could be worth a trip to Ithaca, Greece.

Get the work out there



Meet Amanda, our friend, our helper and all round amazing person. Amanda is an equestrian, a dog and animal lover, student and soon (hopefully) to be studying at Cornell (landscape architecture). I gave Amanda one of my Memento Mori books and she showed it to the tattoo artist she consults and decided to have one of my illustrations tattooed on her arm. Amanda is a tattoo pro--she has a full back tattoo filled with color and very complex illustration. She has a tattoo from her neck down filled with all sorts of color and imagery (including a pierced heart). So,taking the encouragement/ charge from my mentor, Murray Tinkelman, you need to do the work and then get it out there....we are gettting it out there. And, surprisingly, there are takers. We hopefully will celebrate Amanda's new tattoo with lunch with the artist and maybe with a show at the tattoo parlor.

What you can see on Amanda's arm is the outline of the proposed design. The design is transferred to her arm and then is outlined with a fine needle on her arm . Amanda told me that the artist had to get an extra fine needle to do this detail work...the extra fine schaedler pen of the tattoo world. In about 2 months (the artist is way booked up until then), the flat planes of black will be filling the outlines. Wow.

Walk in the Park






Today is "Take your Kid to Work" day--so R is taking A to work despite the fact that school was cancelled. And it's not snowing. It was cancelled without any info albeit there were a few bomb threats at the school yesterday with an M-80 (large firecracker) found in a Middle School bathroom with a note taking responsibilty for the prank and threatening more. I surmise that maybe some preventative work is in place to deal with this prior to it happening again.

Took K for a walk early in the morning. We went to Taughannock Falls park with the poochita to see the buds and early leaves, see the falls and the high water. It was wonderful being in the cool, humid breeze with K. chattering on about her favorite video set "Planet Earth" and all the wonderful details that have lodged in her brain dying to come out. She is such a peach--and we had an amusing time talking about science, nature, biology while Shady Grove sniffed and sniffed and sniffed. The pictures are from that stroll in the morning air.

More later>>

Don't duck it.


Well, now I am coming out. Need to. Need to talk about this. So, here goes. You know (maybe you do) the fear that mounts around turning fifty. Dying, age, losing it and worst of all...the dreaded colonoscopy. Yes, dreaded. So, I talked to everyone I know about their colonoscopy experiences--and believe me, they confirmed my fear and dread. However, my hubby had the test a month ago and told me it was no biggie. As I trust him the most of everyone, I decided to go with the recommendation. And he was right. Honestly, the fasting and prep was the biggest part of the experience. I designed a boxed kit for InsureQuik FIT for the use in doctor's office and/or for individuals to buy and do self testing at their convenience and at home. But now that I have had the procedure, my take is do not think of the ease of the boxed kit, but to take the time and get the real thing--where they are looking at the colon live, if there are polyps, they get them--and get them before they develop versus waiting for a subtle signs the kit detects--when there may be something brewing and in the works. Everything was nice, relaxed and kind at the Cayuga Medical Center--with all sorts of interesting questions down to if I had any cultural or religious issues that I needed help with prior to getting going. Lots of explanations and talk around the procedure and truly, outside of my not being out of it as promised and fully understanding and remembering the experience (dang, they promised the amnesia drug--which they may have given me, but didn't work!). The worst thing was having the IV inserted--and knowing when they would round a bend--but with the "thousand leagues under the sea" visuals or that other movie with some guy and a busty chick that was shrunk and injected into a person's blood stream--it was a virtual reality show with positive results. All in 35 minutes. No biggie. The drug hit me after eating a sandwich and I had to lie down--though I thought I could make a go of it. And now, I am as right as rain. Cannot say it enough, do not fear it...embrace it. This test is worth it as colon cancer is a #3 cause of death for women--and it can be managed and treated so that it is survivable. Isn't that worth a day of fasting, 35 minutes of living a movie and a nap?

It is to me.

wishes


I am fasting for a medical test today and can do clear liquids. And everything looks so delicious--and I can't have it. So, I figured I would post this cake picture from Ithaca Bakery last weekend as a little nod to how I am feeling. And cake is not what is top of the list...but neither is jello. I am looking forward to getting this experience done and putting this food fascination to rest.

Did a bit of walking at the House of Health. Feeling more easy with the room of giants, the machines, the flailing arms and pumping legs. I love how quiet it is and that everyone is plugged in and going their own way. It is definitely each man is an island at Island. The Cornell rowers were out along with all sorts of flying waterfowl (mostly ducks but I saw something else that I had never seen).

Dan Pelavin was very cute in his blog entry "Oh, now I get it"
. Worth taking a peek. It is another search for identity note.

Had a nice time trolling for cosmos type engravings last night for the Solstice, Equinox, Eclipse illustrations on deck. As you can see, I dove deep into the Library of Congress with some interesting images. Not exactly what I was looking for...but, who cares. The journey was worth it.

tons flying over the transom. Must go.

another view of the universe


Descartes's Mechanical Philosophy
According to French philosopher René Descartes (1596-1650), the universe operated as a continuously running machine which God had set in motion. Since he rejected Newton's theory of gravity and idea of a vacuum in space, Descartes argued that instead the universe was composed of a "subtle matter" he named "plenum," which swirled in vortices like whirlpools and actually moved the planets by contact. Here, these vortices carry the planets around the Sun.

Isn't this cool from the Library of Congress' Beginnings show.I love this.

okay....its a...


GROUNDHOG!

Back from the house of health. Program change. Walking on the treadmill of time. Surprisingly pleasant looking down on the inlet with the Cornell shells--gliding over the water with their red paddles and energetic rowers. It will be 70 degrees today--so all is well with the world from forsythia, daffodils and little buds. Chet is doing a spring cleanup of the property. Mandy is getting the little tractor fixed and our man, Dare Daniels, is prepping for the delivery of cement tomorrow a.m.

Lots of work on publications, logotypes and illustration for Steuben. Will log in later as we are biz zee.

Oh!
Note to the Flaxnation--this Friday/Saturday/Sunday at the Triphammer mall from ten until... And worth the trip. I think later Friday I may descend on the fabulousity (I wonder if I can take pictures?)

tidbit for now

K is back. Energized, excited, enlightened, peppering her speech with french phrases--effusive about her trip. She tumbled off the plane in new clothes--tight fitting hot pink pants with a black dress--draped in a white and pink scarf. I think this french thing might be rubbing off. She made grunge (or her version of it) chic. Indeed! She is sleeping as it was a long trip back. Today will be a segue from the dream to the reality.

We got what we needed for A--shorts, shirts, golf shoes (Calloway no less to his delight) and blue jeans. Limited mall time so we had some relaxing time chez Luckystone prior to the trip to Syracuse for the 10 p.m. pick up. We googled Italian restaurants with ratings and found a slew on North Salina Avenue. We had a great dinner at Antonios (700 N Salina) to the delight of our big boy who delivered a small handcart's portion of tortellini with a loaf of bread in silence. Fork to plate to mouth to plate to mouth to plate until the fork was laid across an empty plate. Seems there are more restaurants and stores on North Salina Street we will need to discover.

More later>>

Our Girl

K comes back from France today. From the two emails we got from her, the trip was more than she expected and she loved every bit. The deal with her peers from school was not an issue by the time she got to O'Hare and by the time she was in the air to Charles DeGaulle, she has some new best friends. So, that is that (and I gloat because I knew it...and told her so!--). So, we are up to Syracuse to pick her up--and will be thrilled to see her though my guess is that she will be planning and plotting for how she can get another ticket to get to France sooner than later. While we are at it, buy A a few pairs of what he thinks is stylish, pants. I just hope we can convince him to have them at least close to his waist size albeit nothing else looks as if it fits. He pulls it off...but it's teen fashion and you never know how you can get it wrong until you do. Additionally, we will see fixures and tile for the bathrooms in the works.

Dare Daniels (don't you adore his name...you would adore him too), the Mason To The Stars has been "at it", with the laying of stone and prepping the ground to have a ton of cement poured (my guess Monday/Tuesday of next week)to get the garage right and tight (and done) along with some stairs etc. Dare is amazing. He is heads down, don't get in my way--a very private man who is extremely motivated and very introspective about his work. We are thrilled to have him as he is a gem of a person and an amazing craftsman who takes the time to do the job right. So things are moving forward with our house projects.

Shady Grove is delighted to be at the lake. She opens the door and lets herself out to sun on the ground, or to guard us on the porch. She has had her spring shearing, so she looks much younger, much puppier and surprisingly cute. With her bangs cut, catching a pinecone is artful...and nary a drop or fumble.

As an aside, got an interesting call from an art director who is located in Interlaken. She was looking for resources who are designers, illustrators, artists for a possible project she has yet to be rewarded. I googled her and found quite a bit--that is very real with very real clients who value quality. She was quite nice and fun--and even if nothing happens, I look forward to meeting her...but if something does happen, it could be a tremendous vehicle to get my work out there in an entirely new venue beyond print. I hope I can say more later>>

My friends, the librarians


I was yacking away with my new friend, and stellar musician, Carol Elizabeth Jones, about old time music and sources for inspiration and reference I could go. She, being totally plugged in, recommended a few books and then send me to a wonderful place we all need to go..The Library of Congress' American Memories Page. There are great digital files you can access for starting points--also, if I were a teacher, files that would drop into a powerpoint for students to really see and understand the time, the topic, the idea in a meaningful way. I am delighted with the printed ephemera section down to actual folding diagrams to depict how a piece shown in the collection would be folded (as indicated in the name of the selection--Leaflet, folder etc.to Double Vertical Fold). These folding diagrams are fascinating as inspiration for design/print/illustration pieces on the possible table at the office.

Check it out. It's a fun time...that could have great payout...and it's free!(albeit supported by those taxes we all had to pay out this past week).

The Collective

A group of artists were approached by the local bed and breakfast group to be available to have our studios open for visitors coming to Trumansburg. It would be a nice marketing hook for this group and made sense except to her crankiness, me. My big beef is that these nice studio tours that would be tagged into a marketing plan for the B&Bs would hold me hostage to being open (even on the weekends) and manifest itself in someone buying a box of cards to be "nice". Profit to the B&Bs (free programming) and profit to the visitor (free stuff to do)--but it made me cranky. So, when approached, I said NO, no no...but. It's the Buts that always get me into trouble. I said, what if we posted a site of artists in the area and if, just if, your visitor wanted to see the stuff live, they could call or email (which is part of the site) and we could accomodate. We, the artists, get our work out to a larger group. They, the Bed and Breakfasts have a gumdrop to offer to their guests. And, we get to portray a group of artists that are in our little town, on our quiet plateau, to not just the visitors but to those who live and work in Tburg. A letter went out to around forty people and we are putting up mini sites (Luckystone providing gratis), and we have gone live. It is nice to see the range of work, of artists, of people--and from what I can see coming in through email and snail mail, this should be a nice offering. Now, I need to think about how we get the URL out to the broader world so we can begin to get some hits. Today, it's sending it out to you all. Then, mid May, a note to the Chamber of Commerce, Community Arts Partnership and a few other arts organizations in Tompkins, Broome, Chemung, Schuyler and Steuben Counties. Need to see if there are any freebie places to site the site. We'll see.

check it out>> The Trumansburg Art Collective>>

IF Primitive [Fear]


I fear me you but warm the starvèd snake,
Who, cherished in your breasts, will sting your hearts.

William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

Snakes strike primitive fear in most of us--one of the most primitive creatures striking an ancient chord. Especially me (down to the garden snakes that nestle against our stone foundation that startle me while I pull weeds and hack at the nasty sumac that establishes roots where it's warm).

From the Ape, Little Chimp Society

Just a short and sweet newsletter. Although a number of you already know, I just wanted to bring to the attention to those who don't that recently the LCS was plagiarized (images and LCS interviews) and published as a book called Colorful Illustrations 93 degrees C! This was done with the knowledge or permission of me or anyone involved.

For more information read my blog post about it...
http://apefluff.com/colorful-illustrations-93c-please-do-not-buy-this-book/

What can you do to help? :)

Please make as many people aware of this as possible by linking to the above post from any social networks, blogs, portal, or news submission sites you can get to. This will bring awareness to the situation and hopeful shame the resellers into removing it from there stock and sites.

And if anyone is feeling brave please ring Index Book on (+34) 93 454 55 47 and ask them POLITELY to stop selling it :) Please they are Spanish, but have English speaking staff.

I personally use http://www.jajah.com/ for long distance calls.

Thanks for your time and I appreciate your continued support.

Geekin' oh girl


Today is the end of week of travel, visiting and work.

I got some good direction on a calendar publication I am doing for the Museum of Glass. We have been working with the inspiration of the calendar being the front section of the New Yorker, the same from New York Magazine and a children's magazine...I think Time Out. So the theme is packed copy...tight tight, everything columnar and gridded--limited silhouettes and run-arounds. I found a cool font, Conduit, that is a workhorse in this pub as its a bit condensed and fresh (not overused), so with a bit of negative spacing, and slightly tighter leading, I am able to make the graphs relatively black looking. The real trick here is that the client needs multiple layers of headlines (about 4 treatments) ---that tier...and after yesterday, I think we are there. The other nice thing about this pub is that it is 6" x 12" ( a one by two unit page--which becomes a square or a one by one unit in the spreads). So the size is cool too. I hope to get this sharpened up today.

We also have a bunch of other publications in the mix that need to be resolved. Additionally, I need to comb through an identity manual for use in India. Erich and I reviewed a manual out of Sweden yesterday and was scratching our heads as the color aspect of the manual was a bit more than we usually provide or even read...showing cmyk, rgb, pantone color--all the known world. However, this team insists that designers work with LAB colors, which essentially is a photoshop color-space that is just that--a color-space--that in order to output(read print or display) needs to be translated to cmyk or rgb. It does provide a consistent way to deal with files--Wiki talks about the advantages of Lab:

Advantages of Lab

Unlike the RGB and CMYK color models, Lab color is designed to approximate human vision. It aspires to perceptual uniformity, and its L component closely matches human perception of lightness. It can thus be used to make accurate color balance corrections by modifying output curves in the a and b components, or to adjust the lightness contrast using the L component. In RGB or CMYK spaces, which model the output of physical devices rather than human visual perception, these transformations can only be done with the help of appropriate blend modes in the editing application.
Because Lab space is much larger than the gamut of computer displays, printers, or even human vision, a bitmap image represented as Lab requires more data per pixel to obtain the same precision as an RGB or CMYK bitmap. In the 1990s, when computer hardware and software was mostly limited to storing and manipulating 8 bit/channel bitmaps, converting an RGB image to Lab and back was a lossy operation. With 16 bit/channel support now common, this is no longer such a problem.
Additionally, many of the “colors” within Lab space fall outside the gamut of human vision, and are therefore purely imaginary; these “colors” cannot be reproduced in the physical world. Though color management software, such as that built in to image editing applications, will pick the closest in-gamut approximation, changing lightness, colorfulness, and sometimes hue in the process, author Dan Margulis claims that this access to imaginary colors is useful going between several steps in the manipulation of a picture

Hewlett Packard describes Lab color this way:
Lab Color Space Model

Lab is a theoretical color model that describes color in three planes: L, a, and b. This color model is not tied to any display/output device, as is the case with RGB and CMYK. This color model is consequently considered a 'device-independent' color model, and does not carry with it the inherent gamut limitations of monitors or printers. The three planes of Lab describe the following:

L = describes how light a color is (range = 0 to 100; higher numbers are lighter)
a = describes how red/green a color is (range = -128 to 127; + values are more red; - values are more green)
b = describes how yellow/blue a color is (range = -128 to 127; + values are more yellow; - values are more blue)

I love it --color you cannot see...the land of the it's there, believe me... the land of the imagination. Maybe the secret sauce?As you can see...this is a party that we need to better understand. It could be a nice tool to understand to establish a more consistent approach to our work and files depending of course on the end use(s) which often gets parsed to a wider range of uses that no one anticipates.

I need to finish up the first of my pics for Hartford. First one is a Buffalo head surrounded by yellow roses and a lone-star. Next is an image (or two) around the Cow-town designation that Fort Worth happily claims. And then, I need to jump into a chicken illustration and one of a very cute dog that I just met!

We are up at Sheldrake for sleeping and living after work for the next few days. The little day lilies are bright green promises, the forsythia is in bud but no bursting branches. Its going to be cut those bushes down to nubbins after they bloom as they are enormous and we will have to strain to see the water if we don't do some massive chopping. No daffodils yet though the snowdrops have come and gone. Tiny tips of our fragrant hostas are pushing up--but just. It is such a privilege to see the sky colored water stretching out in front of us with the world waiting to burst with leaves and colors. And we are not talking LAB color. The real thing, please.