"Now, here’s the thing about regular vampires: they’re fucking lame. They sneak around in the dark and drain blood from people. They talk a big game, sure, and everyone thinks they’re sexy. But is sexy going to protect you from the Wolf-Man?"
Protect yourself this Halloween by studying A Hierarchy of Monsters at Threat Quality Press.
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Monday, October 26, 2009
Mama, he's crazy
I passed a gentleman on my way into the restroom at work this morning. He was standing outside the men's room in a sort of lunged-forward stance, staring bug-eyed at a tongue depressor he was holding out in front of him just above his eye level. He rapidly turned the tongue depressor over and over between his fingers, reading the words written on it. Those words were YES on one side and NO on the other. When I came out of the restroom a couple of minutes later, he was still standing there . . . but now he looked perfectly calm, standing in a relaxed way with his hands clasped behind his back and a benign little smile on his face. Maybe the tongue depressor ritual soothes him somehow.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
The lost links of You'll Eat It and Like It
Often, when I'm cruising around the web, I come across interesting-looking sites that I don't have time to fully check out at that moment. I'll email myself a link to the site so I can come back later and explore it in depth. Sometimes -- and now is one of those times in my life -- I am busy enough that those emailed links pile up and I never seem to get around to looking at them, let alone bookmarking them. Here are some of the sites I've come across in the last few months that warrant further attention:
The Periodic Table Printmaking Project
Meditations on the Perfect Burger
The Footnotes of Mad Men
Lili's Bookbinding Blog
Jam Today
Foodbuzz
the Manbroidery flickr pool
How to build your own letterpress
Craftastrophe
The Secret Language of Families
Bascom Hogue's red work
Zombie Boogie by Mad Tea Party
Shadow Manor: The Art of Darkness
Cupcake Project
Taxidermy werewolf head
Nerd boyfriend
If you get a chance to check any of these out, let me know what you think, because who knows when I'll ever get around to it?
The Periodic Table Printmaking Project
Meditations on the Perfect Burger
The Footnotes of Mad Men
Lili's Bookbinding Blog
Jam Today
Foodbuzz
the Manbroidery flickr pool
How to build your own letterpress
Craftastrophe
The Secret Language of Families
Bascom Hogue's red work
Zombie Boogie by Mad Tea Party
Shadow Manor: The Art of Darkness
Cupcake Project
Taxidermy werewolf head
Nerd boyfriend
If you get a chance to check any of these out, let me know what you think, because who knows when I'll ever get around to it?
Friday, October 23, 2009
El Dia de los Muertos
Don't worry - I won't go TOO crazy posting videos. But my friend Isabel sent me this one and I just had to share.
It really is the most wonderful time of the year!
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Monday, October 12, 2009
Sunday, October 04, 2009
Home, part 3
Saturday, October 03, 2009
Home, part 2
My piano. It's a 1966 Yamaha upright, built the same year that I came into being. Sean and I bought it in the summer of 2001, about six months after my dad died, with some of my inheritance money. We went to Waltrip's Music Center in Arcadia and I played Scott Joplin rags on a bunch of the pianos they had for sale; this one was far and away the best. When it's in tune, it has a bright, open sound. It reminds me of the piano on which I accompanied our high school choirs (shades of Glee). My piano is in our living room and is one of the first things you see when the front door is opened.
Friday, October 02, 2009
Applehead dolls
Two weeks ago Norman and I got the bright idea to carve applehead dolls. We were in one of those seasonal Halloween stores, and a display of withered little shrunken heads (fake, I assume) reminded me of the appleheads my sisters and I used to carve when we were kids. We must have picked the technique up in school somewhere along the way: You peel an apple and carve a little face into it. Then you sprinkle it with salt (to help draw out the moisture, I guess) and leave it in a warm, dry place for a couple of weeks to dry out and shrink. Voila! An applehead. My sisters and I never did anything with ours beyond admire the finished product, though many people out there on the internets have made some pretty cool complete dolls. Norman was surprisingly enthusiastic about getting crafty -- perhaps it was the prospect of wielding a knife -- so we decided to throw a little carving party. Amazingly, everyone we invited accepted the invitation, and last weekend we gathered at The Shambles to work on our dolls. It seemed like the perfect way to kick off the advent of fall; never mind that it was 95 degrees outside and we had to work indoors with the air conditioner running full blast.Both Lucy and Curtis took their appleheads home to dry. I popped mine, Sean's and Norman's into our oven and let the pilot light do the drying work for me. I was pretty good about checking on our little guys at first, but then I kind of forgot about them and went a couple of days without opening the oven door to regulate their status. Tonight after dinner I finally checked on them, and lo and behold, they're done. Completely shriveled and dried out, they're ready for whatever decorative touches we decide to apply to them.
Lucy and Curtis, how are your appleheads coming along? We need to plan a dollmaking session soon!
There's no place like home, or, Stuff around our place, part 1
This bottle opener is hanging on the side of one of our kitchen cupboards. We've had it for years and years and can't remember where it came from; Sean told me that, creepily enough, there was one just like it -- though not this one -- in the pool house of a place he lived when he was a kid. Even creepier, he said he saw a female version of it on eBay a couple of years ago. I can't for the life of me imagine why he didn't bid on it.
Thursday, October 01, 2009
Plus ca change . . .
While driving home today, I was listening to a story on NPR about the discovery of Ardi, who is now considered the oldest human ancestor. A scientist who was interviewed said that one of Ardipithicus ramidus' distinguishing characteristics, one that clearly set it apart from earlier, more ape-like creatures, was its lack of large, fearsome canines. Male apes and chimpanzees use their oversized canines to intimidate other males and impress females. Without these, the scientist said, Ardi's male contemporaries would have had to resort to other meaures to woo females, most likely (and I quote) "exchanging food for copulation."
"And that," I thought, "is where evolution stopped."
"And that," I thought, "is where evolution stopped."
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