Filed under photography

i am a bad cyborg

Holly gets here tomorrow. If things are going according to schedule her plane has already taken off from Shanghai and she’s on her way. I managed to clean up my room to a relatively decent degree. I mean, yes, all her stuff will have to be piled on the floor, but it’s not like she’s got that much stuff anyway.

I also got the thing that’s due on Thursday finished off this morning which means I’ve only got two classes while she’s here and only minor homework. The last five weeks of being really boring and working ahead have paid off. (Cue me getting deathly ill and unable to do anything for the entire visit, but being very fine the day after she leaves. This is me pre-empting you universe. I don’t want any of those shenanigans.)

Also, I’ve got a co-op job interview on Wednesday. The job is in Australia. I don’t have super high hopes for getting it, but it seems like the kind of thing I’d be pretty good at. And it would be in Australia. Just for 8 months, but still.

So yes. While Holly’s here I might put more pictures up on the ol’ Flickr account. Also, hopefully she’ll get some blogging in. But I might not be visible on the internet the next couple of weeks because of non-digital life. Selah.

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , ,

ramble ramble

Today I learned about Lexis Nexis QuickLaw and the interesting things you can do with it. Here are my notes, which may or may not be useful to you if you weren’t there. It was another of the Special Libraries Association week events at school. They put on good events. Useful stuff. On Wednesday we got to tour UBC’s Rare Books and Special Collections which included watching a robot go and find a metal box in this vertically huge storage area and bring it back to us so we could see what was stored inside a smaller box within that box. It was Robert E. Lee’s wife’s hair. Which was very blonde.

If you don’t read my library blog you might not know I didn’t get the job I interviewed for last week. Which is why I’m home this fine Saturday evening. I know eventually I will work again, but the lack of money coming in is starting to make me a bit twitchy. And I’d rather be saving money right now for when Holly gets here (in 17 days). She apparently likes to eat something called “food” rather than my preferred subsistence: gnawing on the aspirations of children. Not that I have any legitimate right to gripe about money, not when I gladly make the choice to do these intercontinental flights every few months. If it was that important to me I could sit here with a few more thousand dollars and be much less happy.

But enough about that. I was at Brenda’s parents’ place in Abbotsford last night watching slides and eating Croatian food. It was pretty excellent. It made me want to travel somewhere that isn’t Nanchong (after the next time I go to Nanchong, of course). Happily, I know someone who might also like to do such a thing. There are lots of places in the world that aren’t Nanchong. They are fun to speculate about.

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

it’s hard to be invisible sometimes

At Canzine West yesterday, I was quietly sitting in the audience for a reading. The first reader was Anna Swanson, a poet, reading some poems in that cadence that spoken word poets have. It seems easy to parody, but it fit with the things she was reading. She talked about being a fire watcher and how in that job you earn your money by remaining sane while being alone in a fire tower for long periods of time. I really liked her poem “When Women Were Clouds.”

Amber Dawn decided not to just read from her novel, Sub-Rosa, because it sounded too much like she was in space, so instead she brought the microphone out to the audience to ask people why they deserved to call themselves an artist, and what they hoped to get out of being there that day. Sadly for me, I was the first person she came to. I don’t do well with that kind of thing at the best of times. Being put on the spot to say something about something I struggle with anyway (go on, ask me the last time I wrote any fiction; I’ll collapse into a puddle of self-loathing) wasn’t very much fun. I told her I didn’t deserve to call myself an artist and asked her why she was doing this to me. It was probably funny for the others sitting there but also painful and sad. Now, of course, I have an answer but it’s too late. When she was done she thanked everyone for playing along, conveniently overlooking my terrible performance in her game.

Other than that, I had a good time. And then watched a Phillies-Giants game (that wasn’t the pitchers’ duel we’d hoped for but was still damned fine baseball), before heading down to Marlis’ photo exhibition from the 12×12 photo marathon. Holly’s pointed out that it seems like I have quite the social life here, even when I’m ostensibly getting schoolwork done.

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

feeding the twittermind

On Saturday I went to a show that took place in a chocolate shop. A handmade chocolate shop called Cocoa Nymph where I had a hot chocolate (labelled on the blackboard as “Drinking Chocolate”) that was a much more holy beverage than any communion I’d ever taken. I went there to see Marian Call perform. I’d never heard of her before, but the TwitterMind said it would be fun, and Twitter never made suggestions about cool things to do in Winnipeg. Now that I’m within its tendrils where it can affect the real world I feel like I owe it something. Attention sacrifice in the place of blood, right?

So Marian Call was awesome. She had some geeky songs, including some stuff that’s evidently official Firefly and Battlestar Galactica merch, but she was mainly just a great indie folk singer with awesome pipes. She had a great song about how she’s not a real Alaskan woman, and sang a fun one about karaoke. It was during that song that I got my picture of the show, using my phone, because that’s what I default carry these days.

And behold the power of Twitter, two days later it’s one of my most viewed pictures ever. There’s also some StumbleUpon traffic too, but it got tweeted and then looked at. Which is cool. I like the picture a lot.

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

expansion complete

The wedding went fine and people had fun. Hooray and congratulations. Pictures are up on flickr. And yes they’re a little grainier than I might have preferred, but I accidentally bumped my ISO up to 200 which my camera’s little sensor doesn’t like too much. I was very busy (and wasn’t the official photographer anyway) so I didn’t take any really neat pictures. Sorry. (I do like this one of Sri though.)

It seems that all the work of carefully picking songs was fairly pointless for that crowd. Note for the future: all Mom’s family ever wants to hear is Johnny Cash or something you can two-step to. Ever. Seriously, future self, why are you even thinking about playing anygoddamnedthing else? You are truly a fool. Ahem. So I’m glad I did end up bringing the laptop instead of just running off iPods as it was much easier to change things on the fly. People danced, which made my mom happy. (Although when I started picking music weeks ago she specifically said “Oh no, it’s not a dance; it’s a house party!” so what I had was mostly along those lines.)

Tagged , , , , , , , , ,

book review: the mystery of the fool and the vanisher

The Mystery of the Fool and the Vanisher isn’t much of a mystery but is super cool. The conceit of the book is that it’s David Ellwand’s journal from going out walking by a mound in England. There in a ruined house he finds a box. The box is full of stuff, including wax cylinders which he sends away to have put on CD. The middle part of the book is the transcription of those wax cylinders with pictures of the box’s artifacts. The whole thing is beautiful, and is all about faerie and seeing things that aren’t there and how it all relates to early photography. So neat. The story is fairly predictable but the pictures of all the items, including a tiny suit of armour made from mussel shells and the stone glasses and hat camera used to see the invisible, are wonderful.

Tagged , , , , , , ,

in amerrica…

Sean and I are back from Amerrica (the extra “r” is for redwoods) and I have a pile of writing to do. Until that all gets settled out, here’s the preliminary set of photos on Flickr. They’re all geotagged so you can see on a map where we were (roughly) for each of them. There are more pictures but these were the more representative I could find as I combed through the gigs of cards I just dumped onto my hard drive.

Tagged , , , ,

i want summer to start now

Of course it’s snowing. Why wouldn’t it snow on the fourth day of May? Perfect sense.

I golfed last week with Sean and it was fun. We didn’t keep score, just hit balls. I got the ball in the air a couple of times, hit one water hazard and wasn’t as cold as I could have been. I didn’t take too many pictures (we were already playing pretty slow) but I liked this one, especially once I’d tweaked the levels up to how it looks there. Trying to make it look like an oversaturated old snapshot or something.

The night before golf I’d been to see the Buck 65 show, which was all good. I take too much on myself at shows like that though. I feel bad when the crowd isn’t crazy into the opening act, as if it’s all my fault, and if we don’t go crazy no one will ever come back to perform ever again. And in Buck 65′s set he started talking about Lenny Dykstra and then broke off. “You have no idea what I’m talking about…” he said. I wanted to shout “Baseball! You’re talking baseball!” but I couldn’t remember anything about Dykstra except that he was a baseball player and didn’t want to be called out on account of my superficiality. When I got home I looked him up on wikipedia. So if it ever comes up again, I’ll be more prepared.

Alison’s David is moving into the house this weekend. I’m hoping all his stuff’ll be out of the dining room in the next few days since the dining room table is where I do my morning writing. And I can’t write at a table piled six feet high with junk. But I got my last notebook filled before he started the process, so it’s a good time for me to take a break. Which I’m using to do up the rest of the Hangman entries from March. So far, I’ve put up something like 24,000 words from that trip.

Tagged , , , , , , ,

things that are good

I’m so full. I’d almost forgotten what it’s like to have dinner at Mom’s. And to have leftovers to eat tomorrow and the day after and the day after that. Awesome.

My remote trigger for my camera arrived today. Not for the camera itself but the thing that lets me fire the flash wirelessly. It’s pretty sweet. Now I can start doing real Strobistish kinds of things. The transmitter is the cheapy Cactus one, not a umpty hundred dollar Pocket Wizard, so it doesn’t fire every single time I try. But when it works it works greatly. Though all I’ve done so far is take Steve the Cat pictures. What can I say? He’s the model that’s most accessible.

Also, I finished (the horrible first draft of) Part One of the story I’ve been working on. I don’t know how many parts there will be, but this was definitely it for Part One. At some point I’ll type up what I have and do massive revisions, but the idea now is to plunge on through the meat curtain into Part Two.

Tagged , , , , , ,

shotguns and the lens of objectivity

I read No Country for Old Men today and enjoyed it. Thanks Steve. I still haven’t seen the movie but I’m definitely glad I read it first. Since all I’ve seen of the trailer is people shooting each other I don’t have any actor faces stuck in the roles of these different characters. I only know Tommy Lee Jones is in the movie but not which person he’s playing (though I can guess). The book doesn’t have the same kind of WTF?! ending that I understand the movie has, which is also good.

I’ve also been spending time these past few days playing with my new camera. On the left there you can see some of the Necromunda shots I put up on Flickr, but man, playing with a flash adds so much to what you can do. I’ve been taking buckets of photos of the same thing (like say a discarded paisley gourd) with the light pointed in different directions and cranking up and down shutter speeds. I’m starting to get the hang of how to manipulate some of those tools, and it’s a lot of fun. The pictures aren’t fantastic yet, but I’m working on it.

Tagged , , , , ,
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 237 other followers