I keep my blog as a personal record of what I'm up to, which might be seen as working towards "An elegant sufficiency, content, retirement, rural quiet, friendship, books, ease and alternate labour, useful life"

I'm certainly not there yet.  There is quite some way to go!

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Thursday
Aug042011

8000 calories

 

This weekend, we’re the support crew for a bunch of friends who are tackling the Three Peaks Challenge.  They are walking to raise money for The National Ankylosing Spondylitis Society and my hero and I want to do everything we can to make their challenge that bit, well, less challenging.

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Though I’ll share some of the driving, my skills are more suited to the nutrition side, so for the last couple of weeks, I’ve been putting 200kcal goody bags together.  Rather surprising to see how many (few) wine gums or M&Ms there are to the bag when compared with, say, dried apricots.  But I’m not sure that overloading them with fibre is altogether a good idea – how many loos are there on Ben Nevis? 

 

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As well as the pocket snacks, we’ll need some things to nibble in the minibus.  Having tried the ginger slices out a couple of weeks ago, I made more of them, using GF flour so that we can all enjoy them.  I also made Martha Stewart’s Zucchini and Orange cake, which is OK… but not quite in the same league! Never mind, there’s always the good old favourite Rice Krispie bars.  Is there anyone who doesn’t like those?

 

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The Zucchini and Orange cake results in one of those strange kitchen phenomena: the half bald orange, which lurks around the kitchen for several days before someone gets tired of moving it around and throws it in the bin.  Why don’t we cut it in half and squeeze it right away?  Who knows?

 

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The hot food presents a slightly different challenge for me.  I’ve got three sets of large ziplock bags in the freezer with hearty one-pot casserole-type food to have ready for their return from each mountain, but thinking they will want to get right on with the ascent as soon as we arrive, I’ve been thinking of more ready-to-go meals for them as well.  Enter Hugh.

 

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I recalled having watched a programme where he made his own “pot noodles” and googled to find the recipes.  Though they looked a great idea, we had no pots to put them in and, thinking about it, would I expect our friends to carry and then return bulky plastic tubs?  After a bit of thought, I had a go with making them in the stronger, heavier freezer-type Ziplock bags and bingo!  Worked really well!  So, tonight, we’ll pack the dry ingredients into the bags and when they’re ready to go, they’ll be able to pour a cup of hot water into the bag and voila.  Five minutes later, a hot and tasty snack ready to go.  Not only that, but they might decide to stuff it in their pocket and eat it a little later.  Yes, those bags really are water-tight ;-)

 

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So, there was just one last meal to prepare – a ribollita soup a la River Cafe.  Loads of chopping – so how handy was it to have Ben on hand to whizz through those veggies in no time?  Well, how great is it to have a guest who brings his own kitchen knives with him?!

 

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So, I think we’re just about there.  With bags of muesli and pasta (and smaller bags of GF muesli and GF pasta!) there in the box, I haven’t actually gone to the bother of working out if we have the recommended 8000 calories per walker in there but am pretty confident that we’ll be ok.

The Support Crew challenge will be to resist joining in the feast.

Tuesday
Aug022011

Decompression

 

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Being home after a few days away feels good, but it takes a while to get back into things again.  I’m still coming across little bundles of goodies like the one above – the linen tape I bought in M&J and a bag of lace shared with me by Jordi.

 

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My flight was delayed because of bad weather, but my hero was waiting when I arrived at Heathrow and I’ve enjoyed a bit of show and tell.  Getting all the samples out was a good exercise in recalling the processes involved and I took the opportunity to update my notebook with a few additional samples and thoughts.

 

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I had put all the working files, source images and suchlike on a 16GB memory stick, so now organised them a little better, discarding the files I didn’t use and copying the videos I took using my Flip during the class.  I added my classroom photos to that little bundle and found it fitted perfectly onto one of the 4GB drives we bought in Staples. My organised mind felt rather pleased about that and with the addition of a bit of appropriate notebook bling, my record of the class is complete.

 

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The prints I made are in a separate folder, which will hopefully be added to once I get myself into gear at this end.

 

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In the meantime, it was back to earth yesterday with a visit to the dentist.  Just before I left for NYC, I broke a crowned tooth.  Too late to get it attended to before I went, I made use of the do-it-yourself filling replacement material available in US drugstores (but never seen here?)  It got me through the week but yesterday was the moment of truth.  After complimenting me on my self-administered repair, my dentist advised that the necessary treatment looks likely to be expensive – well into four figures!

Maybe a good job I went straight from the dentist to work?

Saturday
Jul302011

Last day

 

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Being a creature of habit, I always walk on the same side of the street, so on this, my last morning in NYC for a while, I crossed the road and got an altogether different view from the usual.

 

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Actually, I went over to see what was going on beneath this, the National Debt sign.  Since we started coming here to New York, we’ve seen those figures increase and this morning, following the events in government last evening, there was a bit of a hoohah going on there on the street.

 

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I didn’t linger however, having important business to attend to further down 6th Avenue.  I did stop to watch this chap in an elevated platform string a ?nylon cord across the street from one lamppost to another, though – the Extended Manhattan Eruv, I learned from the policeman standing on the same street corner, watching the goings on with the same curiosity as I.

 

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My business was there in Toho Shoji though.  Newly extended, I found what I was after and though I would have liked to have lingered, I still hadn’t eaten breakfast.  I’d packed up as much as I could, put clothes for the flight in the top of my suitcase and checked out of the hotel, thinking that I’d get what I needed and eat in whatever time I had left.

 

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When I arrived in class, all was quiet and cool.  The perfect time for dealing with a tricky and, for me, challenging, overprint of the “Tolstoy’s Ceiling” image I’d done on the brown kraft paper a couple of days ago.  I wasn’t happy with the indistinct image and so prepared another layer in black and white, which I hoped would bring out the architectural detail a little more.  I measured carefully, I checked all the print settings and held my breath as I loaded the paper.

 

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Not bad, eh?  I don’t seem to have taken a photograph of the finished piece – it will have to come later and in the meantime, you’ll have to believe me that it looks a whole lot better than it did.  It’s still not a spectacular piece, but it represents a shift-change in my ability to control the print outcome, so for me, it’s an important piece of work.

 

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No time to bask in glory, however, because there’s more to do.  I’d made a list of the remaining goals to be achieved and one of them was to print and apply the gel substrate we’d made.  I felt that this, in particular, needed to be done in the presence of an expert!  Though I’d planned to cover a cigar box (thank you, Jordi) having watched Mary demonstrate the steps required to achieve a good end result I decided on a smaller, flatter project and bought half a dozen round capiz shells in Toho this morning.  I printed out the image I’ve called “Colombo Fields” – it’s a photoshopped image of Colombo harbour superimposed on another image of Castlegate Meadow in Gloucester, taken on my way to work one day.

 

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Having sprayed it with a post-coat of Krylon to fox the image, it had to be carefully peeled off the kitchen cutting mat with the minimum of stretching.  Thankfully, it came off relatively easily – hardly any need for holding breath at all!

 

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I likened this to making a sheet of clingfilm and then putting it through the printer before peeling it off and applying it to…well, whatever we fancied.  In my case, it was those six capiz shells and a couple of flat, plastic disks.  Getting it straight with no crinkles wasn’t easy and like clingfilm, it really did want to stick to itself rather than behave and stick to the surface I wanted it to stick to. 

Patience needed!

 

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By this time it was getting hot.  The air conditioning in the part of the building we were using had broken and with all the machinery going full tilt, the temperatures had risen to sauna levels.  The classrooms and print labs are at basement level and with no windows to open, we were getting very uncomfortable.  Installations such as the one above began to appear and a bin full of iced water was brought for us.  Time for lunch, perhaps?

 

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We went out onto the "cool” street and spotted these chaps high above the street having a conversation, it appeared.  What a strange experience it was after lunch, to go from the normally hot and steamy street into an even hotter and steamier building again!  But portable air conditioners had been brought in and the temperatures were beginning to be under control again, thankfully.

 

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This was important because Mary had some crucial information to share about the placement of substrates on carrier sheets, being particularly important to those of us who intended to print over the edge of the paper.

 

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I wasn’t quite there yet, deciding to make my last print of the day on matte white Inkaid painted onto brown kraft paper.  This wallpaper sample from the Andaz hotel room recently fitted the paper well and the effect of printing on that matte white surface was very satisfying indeed.

 

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Did I say last print of the day?  I lied!  I spotted that one of the remaining goals for the day was direct printing onto the aluminium sheeting, which had to be prepared by thorough cleaning, rubbing with steel wool and then two coats of digital ground.  Drying it swiftly became a great excuse for standing in the direct line of the fan!

 

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Putting it through the printer on a carrier sheet, following Mary’s advice about printing over the edge of the metal, it was breath-holding time again.  All was going well until…

 

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I heard a “click” as the metal sprung back into shape after being released from the roller and the print head scraped the last quarter of the image.  How very infuriating!  This could have been remedied by using the straight feed of the printer, the one which ensures the media being fed through doesn’t have to flex at all; the one which steadfastly refused to accept any medium at all, today, however.  So, lessons learned – and a great bit of printing nevertheless, because it can be cut down or even washed off and reprinted, should I choose.

 

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Then, as if to prove that it was Friday afternoon, hot as hell down there and we were all tired, my decision to do a “quick and easy” transfer print using hand sanitiser gel into my  notebook result in the mess above.  Too much gel perhaps?  Too little patience?  Time to relax, to call it a day and to enjoy sharing what we’ve all achieved in these four, short days.

 

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Believe me, there were some spectacular pieces!  Jordi recreated her masterpiece completed on the first day but spoiled in the rain on the way home.  The youngsters in the class had all worked their socks off, making the most remarkable images and really revealing their exciting artistic talents.  The rest of us sat back and proved that once again, everyone else in the room creates more interesting and well-finished results than oneself – and that’s true for each of us.  We packed our things up, said our goodbyes and thankyous and off we went.

 

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For me, it was goodbye and see you soon to Jordi, a quick change of clothes in the hotel and a squeezing of artwork into my suitcase before jumping into a cab to JFK, where I sit now.  My suitcase was labelled “heavy” when I checked in, which is hardly surprising, but I managed to secure a seat on an earlier flight.

It’s been a fantastic week, full of fun and activity.  I suspect that I’ll have no difficulty sleeping on the way home!

Friday
Jul292011

Woman vs Machine

 

There have been several small tussles, believe me!

 

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The day started well with my usual quick run round.  A little overcast this morning but it’s remained warm and sunny all day.

 

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I went to take a look at the newly cleaned Public Library building, which looks stunning now it’s done.  Almost eerily white, it shines out like a beacon on Fifth Avenue.

 

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Into class then, and another idea for the list – printing on the thin mulberry leaf papers using a kitchen cutting mat as a carrier sheet.  I’ve got the things secured and primed but haven’t yet printed – there’s one for the list for tomorrow.

 

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I had a whole heap of papers primed and ready to go, including that black sheet on the top.  Having sifted through my images, I’d decided on that photograph of the flatiron building I took last evening and prepared both image and paper for printing.  As I did, I spotted a look of concern on Mary’s face and over she came with a sheet of tyvek which she suggested using to fool the printer into thinking it was printing a normal, white sheet of paper, because unsurprisingly, it wouldn’t like printing on black.

 

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Both sheets were fed into the printer, but before the print button was pressed, the white tyvek was to be pulled out at the last minute.  But my printer wasn’t so easily fooled – as soon as we took the white sheet away, the error message came up and all was lost.

Time and again, we reloaded both sheets.  Time and again the printer thumbed its nose at us.

 

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Not so easily beaten, Mary explained about the front feed – these printers have three feeds and perhaps by using the one at the front, we might be able to fool it in a different way.

As if.  Once again, the printer won.

 

By this time it was getting near lunchtime and I’d achieved very little.  Time for a quick win.  I loaded my textured sheet and created a composite sheet of images for it hoping that this one would go through easily.

 

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At last, success.  Four good clear and crisp images on the sheet, well placed and a satisfying enough conclusion for the morning.  I went to lunch feeling determined to get that black print sorted this afternoon.

 

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As we headed out of the building, the great images on the walls stopped me in my tracks again – this one is on the way to the ladies loo and makes me smile every time I see it.  I’ll save Jordi’s blushes by not posting the photograph of her posing as an additional character!

 

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We made a dash over the road to Kinokuniya, to take a look at the new craft books there

 

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That embroidery book!  So cute!

We grabbed a bite to eat before rushing back to tackle those printers again.  I’d already set myself the challenge of printing the flatiron photograph in a “frame” created on a funny piece of paper I’d brought from home – we’ve spoken a lot about the placement of images, getting them set up just right and how we want them to be – for the first time, I was 100% successful and felt rather pleased with the outcome here.

 

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I still hadn’t printed the black sheet, however.

 

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Just as I was summoning up courage to tackle it again, Mary demonstrated the aluminium transfer technique and prepared another aluminium plate for direct printing tomorrow.  Hang on a minute, I thought – if I can’t print a sheet of black paper, how on earth am I going to print a sheet of aluminium?

 

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As I prepared the image and the paper, Jordi had a suggestion.  Perhaps…just maybe it might work?  Who knows?  Worth a try…

 

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Ta dah!!  Not only did her idea work perfectly, my experience this morning of locating the image perfectly on the sheet, right way up meant that I was able to get the variation in coloured substrates in the correct place to work perfectly too.  I had applied red inkaid in the area around that red sign on the left, to make it “pop” and to get a kind of shadow on the building.

And what little flash of brilliance did Jordi contribute to this success?

 

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A strip of washi tape along the leading edge.  Brilliant!

 

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Returning to the studio, we found Mary demonstrating the gel print to Louise’s mirror.  Now, having just conquered the black paper issue, were we ready to contemplate peeling off what amounts to a sheet of handmade cling film, printed with an image to be applied to a 3D object?

Not really.  We watched and promised ourselves that tomorrow, we’ll tackle it with ease.  Fingers crossed.

 

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We returned to the hotel for a quick freshen up before dinner, noting that once again, the news crews were outside (I’m staying in the same place as a certain notorious Frenchman) and headed downtown to Otto.

 

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Otto is a favourite of ours and yet again, we enjoyed a memorable meal.  The food is delicious, the atmosphere buzzy and service charmingly efficient.

 

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Of course, there is also the added attraction of the gelati.  Our all time favourite Olive Oil gelati, the seasonal favourite Sweetcorn gelati and my favourite pistachio too.  Oh my word, were we full?

 

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We walked through Greenwich village past this shopfront – Textile Arts Center opening soon?  I have a sneaky suspicion that my friend and mistress of the washi tape will be back.

 

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We waited for the bus reflecting on another great day.  We’re tired but delighted with what we’ve done so far and with one more day to go, have plenty to keep us busy.

And, in the woman vs machine stakes, I think we are still ahead. 

Just.

Thursday
Jul282011

Heard on the street

 

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“let’s just say the story of stuff took a turn and developed, yeah?”

 

Oh, that old excuse…