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  • It’s a thousand degrees behind those metal shutters!

    October 22nd, 2007

    Kate, Lydia, and I went to the West Chester Fire Department‘s Fire Safety Training day on Saturday:

    IMG_0052.JPG

    We watched a shiny blue Penn medevac helicopter take off, and we waved “hi” to Smokey the Bear (who had big ol’ furry plumber butt), and we watched them light a big fire in the “burn building” of hay and straw, then practice rescuing a downed firefighter, and we all came home smelling like campfire. It was a really great time.

    Ps. Everything in a fire truck is snapped into a cradle or holster, and everything is upholstered in quilted leather, and the seats are custom-built so that your oxygen harness fits right in there. It is unbelievably, gut-wrenchingly awesome.

  • “Look, Daddy! Lucifer!”

    October 18th, 2007

    My brother Oliver was in town this week, and we started enthusing about the work of Frank Frazetta, whom I’ve written about before.

    The next day, he presented me with the best daddy-daughter portrait ever:

    "Look, daddy!  Lucifer!"

    Oliver, I am forever in your debt.

  • Needed: a companionable, quiet, stench-free hobby.

    October 12th, 2007

    I’ve been looking for an indoor, living-room-friendly hobby to do at night, when I get home from work. Something that makes me present in the world of people and things, leaves my brain free for conversation with my lovely wife, and doesn’t involve reeking hydrocarbons. Kate’s knitting is the Ultimate Hobby Activity, as far as I’m concerned; it’s a skill that takes a lifetime to master, occupies her hands, allows her to talk, and results in making really beautiful, lasting things. And she can do it pretty much anywhere.

    Has to be a Man Hobby? Nah.
    I briefly considered whether I was going to include “must be traditionally male” as a requirement for hobby selection, but the “traditionally male” requirement seems to be antithetical to the “no smoke or smells” requirement. That leaves scrimshaw, I suppose, but I don’t want to have to put away a rack full of incredibly sharp chisels every night, when I’m tired and clumsy. And then I’d have to pick whalebone shavings out of the carpet. Plus, how many pairs of mermaid boobies do I really want to carve?* So if my new hobby involves painting watercolors of fuzzy kittens while we watch “Dancing with the Stars”, so be it.

    Knitting is out
    I tried knitting, but unfortunately that filled me with rage. I respect the hobby and the people that do it, and I recognize that if I worked my way through the learning period it would probably get better, but frankly it seemed like all the worst parts of fly-tying, combined with all the worst parts of learning the piano. I’m sorry, Michelle, I think the baby sweater project is officially a bust.

    Juggling? Prestidigitation? Card sharping? Knot-tying?
    I also tried: learning more contact juggling (the kind of stuff you see David Bowie’s character doing in Labyrinth), but it’s just too SCA-nerdy for me these days. Card shuffling is out for the almost same reason; I no longer want to look like a David Mamet Grift Cadet (when a teenager, I thought I looked incredibly cool spinning a quarter over my knuckles. Oh, who am I kidding, that was just last year.) I asked for the big book of knots for my birthday, imagining that I could spend my time churning out monkey-fist keychains of tarred twine, which I could sell on Etsy (oh, hey look!) . Clearly, I was now grasping at tarred straws. Plus, knot-tying turned out to be worse than knitting; some of those knots involve pinning twenty-five strands of rope to a board as you move forward carefully, and then you realize OH GOD I’M MAKING A MACRAME OWL.

    So then, remembering an incredibly awesome First City Troop footstool that my grandmother made, I decided to try needlepoint. Here’s my first attempt, which is almost finished! It’s a rudimentary picture of Tikaro, the stuffed pig made by my aunt Sylvia:

    Tikaro needlepoint

    It now needs to be stretched back to a square shape, but I’m pretty happy with it. I like how needlepoint is a lot like pixel art, and I like how you’re using natural materials — wool yarn, cotton canvas, starch, and masking tape — and I like how in some ways it’s exactly opposite to computer work. Want to fill an area with color? No “command-A, Edit > Fill, preserve transparency”. Nope, it’s three evenings of basketweave stitch, and each little session is either tighter or looser depending on how you were feeling that night.

    I paid lip service to not needing to be Traditionally Male, but anyone whose first project is a kind-of fake heraldic shield is right in the middle of the Venn intersection containing both Male and Nerd. And SCA. Oh, well, next one will be a fuzzy kitten with a ball of yarn. Or a screaming eagle. One of those.

    * This is a trick question.

  • “Aha!” said Poirot. “His tongue, it is purest cadmium blue!”

    October 1st, 2007

    Every morning, I walk from 31st street and 8th avenue to 26th street and Park Avenue South. This is almost the same trip my dad took when he lived in Mount Airy, and commuted daily from the North Philadelphia train station to 23rd street, just west of the Flatiron building.

    I have my choice of going mostly east and walking through the north end of the fashion district, which in the morning is full of shuttered doors and orange “this premises closed for copyright violation” notices. Or I can go a few blocks south, then east and walk through the flower district. In the flower district, the sidewalks are choked to a narrow path lined with stacked boxes of moss and wheatgrass and waxy cardboard containers of exotic stems just off the airplane, getting trimmed with razors and placed into store windows.

    If I go a little further south on eighth before turning, I can walk past the sex-shop district bordering the Fashion Institute of Technology, and I can entertain myself separating the sex-workers just ending their shifts (baggy sweatshirts, ripped fishnet stockings, newsboy caps, jewel-y cellphone, cigarette) from FIT students just beginning their day of classes (tight tank tops, ripped fishnet stockings, newsboy caps, portfolio case, cigarette)

    Any further than that, and it’s Chelsea, and I can see the fellows going to and from the small, private gyms set in brownstone fronts. These guys look like they were constructed out of spring steel; you can hear their joints operating smoothly as they walk. And all the ads plastered on the wall are for yoga classes. The trees are surrounded with flowers, and dogs are carefully curbed. BO-ring.

    My favorite walk lately has been down 29th street, because I can walk past Blade Fencing, which looks for all the world like what Ollivander’s wand shop would actually look like if it were in NYC: dim light, concrete floor, fifteen-foot-tall steel shelves and lots of bizarre and interesting stuff — carefully made in exotic parts of the world — precisely stacked all the way to the ceiling. While cleaning the basement last week, I re-discovered my fencing mask that I got at Blade, which made me nostalgic for when I took lessons.

    But mostly my favorite is one store window on 29th street, which has a rack full of little jars that totally makes me stop in my tracks every time. Here’s a cameraphone picture through the front window:
    IMG_0171.JPG
    A small sign says that it’s Kremer Pigments. I assume that it’s where you go when you are mixing your own paint(?) or dye(?), or are generally an utter badass when it comes to color. I am not an utter badass when it comes to color, but I have been repeatedly frustrated by the limitations of gamut. (“Gamut” is the range of colors that it’s actually possible to create on a printed page, using commercially-available ink. Monitor gamut is wider than print gamut, but it’s still very easy to make an eye-popping green in Photoshop that won’t survive conversion to a JPEG.) The oranges and blues in the bottles look magical and pure and visceral. It makes me want to lick the window.

    I’m sure that most of those pigments are made of incredibly toxic minerals, so that would probably result in a very swift, unpleasant death.

  • Laurels Grow Fastest on Cobwebs

    September 24th, 2007

    I spent the weekend cleaning the basement. I really enjoyed doing it . That’s for some special definitions of “enjoy”, of course. I mean, nobody likes crouching behind the furnace with a shopvac, but if you feel like you’re Doing Right by your family, and it’s something you’ve been meaning to do for two years, and there’s a dumpster right outside to make it easy to get rid of the crap you’re sucking up, and — in particular — the shopvac you’re borrowing is basically fueled by a rocket engine and makes anything in a four-inch radius simply vanish, then it’s not really that much a hardship, either.

    I’d attach pictures, but they look just like what you’d expect:

    • BEFORE: Fairly cluttered basement with rubble in the corners and thirty years’ worth of dryer lint furred on the pipes. Gigantic wing-chair with deep cat-claw scarring sheds horsehair in the corner.
    • AFTER: Incrementally less cluttered, with visible corners and clean (but not washed) pipes. Gigantic stuffing-leaking wing-chair still present, after some soul-searching about cat’s single sacred refuge in the wide world.

    Nobody’s going to mistake our basement for a freshly-painted rumpus room now, but neither are they going to mistake it for a HAUNTED SPIDER HOLE and start tapping the walls listening for immured prisoners.

    Since I felt so virtuous knocking semi-permanent wooden structures apart and carrying them piecemeal, dusty and tainted with cat pee, out to the curb, I didn’t pay that much attention to my Weight Watchers over the weekend, and as a result I got a Big Fat Surprise this morning. Goddamn it. Now I have to eat like a @#$@# squirrel this week if I want to be able to claim any sort of forward progress. The trouble with wanting to be a skinny person is you have to eat like a skinny persion, and skinny people eat BORING FOOD. And not much of it.

    Okay, here’s a photo after all:
    basement_before

  • Guerilla Drive-In: The Life Aquatic at Dudas Diving Duds

    September 17th, 2007

    Walking down Pond’s Edge Road from boarding School to the local strip mall, I would walk past an old 1700s barn behind a line of trees that I vaguely knew to be some kind of scuba-themed shirt shop, or something. It was called “Dudas Diving Duds”, and every now and then you’d see a car with a Dudas sticker. Ho-hum, I wonder if I have enough for a milkshake and why is school so boring?

    WHAT A BLIND FOOL I WAS. Just on the other side of those trees is a hive of Authentic Nautical Adventure. Gleaming stainless-steel pipes connect banks of gleaming compressors to rows of scuba bottles. Wetsuits to be repaired hang in rows. There are piles of AUTHENTIC RECOVERED TREASURE in the corners — brass wheelhouses, compass fittings, silver bank notes. And there are sunburned adventurers walking around, just back from Africa and the Philippines, probably with wicked knives in battered plastic spring clips strapped to their calves. I dunno, that’s what divers do, right?

    And when nobody’s looking, they put on their Team Zissou costumes and stand around all day in the Official Pose:

    The Official Photograph.  The one where I'm holding my arm like this.

    So, I ask you: what better place to show The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou than at Dudas Diving, in the roofless courtyard of their old barn? Nowhere, that’s where. Since there’s no electricity, Mike Dudas (second from right, above) threw an extension cord over the three-story wall, and Matt rented a balloon light from Knox (you can see one in action here. Thanks for the hospitality, Awesome Dudas Adventurers!

    The reason we needed light is because I got my airbrush-tattoo kit up and running. You see, I’m preparing for a second career as a carney. Here’s a picture, after I nerdily arranged everything in Pelican cases:

    The Tattoo Kit
    That’s a 20-foot bottle of compressed nitrogen (at about 2500 PSI), a low-pressure regulator from a beer distributor, a quick-disconnect fitting from Home Depot, and an external-mix airbrush with alcohol-based tattoo paint from Tribal Tattoos in California. I used nitrogen instead of CO2 because, you know, we wanted to be green. Tribal Tattoos warned me against using nitrogen to power an airbrush because “it’s highly flammable”, so I figured I’d better stop taking their advice.

    Instead, I took advice from Dudas’ tank master Toren Peterson, who performed a rigorous safety inspection of my work, then started spraying moviegoers with gothic thugg-style letters (because those are the only stencils I have so far):
    IMG_0159.JPG

    Kate and I had a really good time. We had 28 people, which as far as I’m concerned is exactly the right amount for a Guerilla Drive-In. The only drawback was that it was colllllld, especially with the clear, starry sky overhead. But I had warm socks that Kate knit, and we made it through. For the next (and last) Guerilla Drive-In of the year in October, I think we’ll have to project directly across a roaring fire.

    Again, thanks to everyone at Dudas (and especially Mike Dudas) for having us, and I’m sorry Toren ended up getting the crazy eye: ESTEBAN!!!

  • More to come later on this topic…

    September 10th, 2007
    Bad Ass

    Also bad.  Super bad.

    More to come on this subject, but right now I have to go harvest a hundred and sixty acres of slough hay. Well, actually, I have to sit at a desk and write emails reminding others of version-control best practices. It’s… it’s not quite the same thing.

  • Let’s have a child, we’ll name her Minnie Pearl

    September 7th, 2007

    Kate told me this story on Tuesday:

    Lydia [walks into the kitchen, holding a doll]: Mommy, I thought of a good name for the doll that Paula gave me.
    Kate: Oh, that’s great, sweetie. What name will you give her?
    Lydia [holds up doll]: I will name her VEN-GE-ANCE!

    This awesome, piratical utterance is attributable to a short, yellow-hatted anarchist that we have been reading about recently. I will put her where she belongs, on a Dead Milkmen cover:

    One Saturday I took a walk to Zipperhead. I met a girl there and she almost knocked me dead

    From “Madeline’s Rescue“, which both Kate and I had read to her the day before:

    Madeline jumped on a chair.
    “Lord Cucuface!” she cried, “Beware!”
    “Miss Genevieve, noblest dog in France,
    You shall have your VEN-GE-ANCE!“

  • Wait, ice cream truck, stop! I’m not a ninja assassin, I SWEAR!

    September 6th, 2007

    …but, oh please, couldn’t you mistake me for one, for just a moment?

    Nitrogen on the sidecar
    During lunch yesterday, I went and picked up a five pound (or, as I learned, a “20 foot”) bottle of compressed nitrogen from Keen Compressed Gas in West Chester. I love meddling in random areas of industry, since you get to (just for example) WALK OVER A METAL CATWALK in order to get inside. I told the fellow what I was up to, explained that I needed a bottle of gas for [SECRET UPCOMING PROJECT], and then completely ignored his advice to buy the big tank, since it wouldn’t have fit on the motorcycle.

    Anyhow, I felt very glamorous and secret-agent-y with my industrial nitrogen bottle strapped to my sidecar, especially when I was chasing down the ice cream truck I met coming the other way, since I’ll need his involvement in [SECRET UPCOMING PROJECT]. Sadly, I lost him around Bolmar street. Apparently there’s some kind of ice-cream-truck batcave around there.

    When I was googling compressed gas, I learned a new and interesting section of the yellow pages I had never seen before: “Carbonic Gases.” I also learned the other kinds of people that use them Carbonic Gases:

    • Welders,
    • West Chester University frat boys (CO2 bottles power their giant basement Kegerators),
    • Aquarium enthusiasts (i’m not sure why),
    • and very occasionally,

    • People into [SECRET UPCOMING PROJECT]
  • Back from Avalon

    September 4th, 2007

    LBY works her one expression
    We’re back from two whole weeks at a beach house in Avalon, New Jersey, and it was FANTASTIC. We rang all the chimes:

    • First week cold and rainy, so we had to entertain ourselves with jigsaw puzzles and a spinning captain’s chair: check. I’m not being sarcastic, here: this is a traditional and important part of any beach vacation, and is designed to test your nerve. The day we drove down was BEAUTIFUL, but we awoke the next morning to weather reports showing thunderstorms as far out as the forecast goes
    • Read all of the “Little House” books: check. Almanzo Wilder continues to be my hero, possibly because he is so much unlike me.
    • Embarass ourselves with Dance Dance Revolution on the boardwalk: check. Eleven-year-olds have now, it appeared, directly wired their brains into the computer; their feet are moving with unbelievable accuracy.
    • See the most terrifying ride you’ve ever seen at the boardwalk, and ride it: check. I rode the “Cyclone Extreme”, which (Google reveals afterwards) is a “Moser Super Flipping Action Arm.” It’s kind of like a fifty-foot-tall industrial welding robot arm with a chair on the end. Did I mention it was fifty feet tall?
    • Dig a big hole on the beach; so big that Matt could put his chair and umbrella in the hole: check
    • Henna tattoo: check. I got “KATE” tattooed on my left bicep in Olde English Gangsta Script, but my T-shirt sleeve fell down and smeared it, so it kind of looked like it said “CATS”. Sorry, Kate.
    • Lots of jumping and splashing in the water: check
    • Outdoor showers: check
    • Sunburned stomach: check

    All in all, it was wonderful, and I’m sitting under Eighth avenue, about to roll into Penn Station and see what the work world has been up to while I’ve been gone. Gulp!

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