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Friday, July 8th, 2005
I've been reading Chris Pye's Woodcarving: Tools, Materials & Equipment and getting a fair bit out of it -- a lot of the content is stuff I had heard before in various places but his way of phrasing it seems quite apt and like it might stay with me longer -- like it get the meaning of it better than when it is batted around at WoodCentral. So today I went to his web site to see what is going on over there. Turns out he is making available for free (at least for now) download, a series of woodcarving manuals. I downloaded and started reading Learning to Carve and was struck by this observation on the third page: Many beginners have a head fantasy of learning to carve but really have no idea of hard work it might take to realise this simple wish. This is just about exactly the criticism I was making the other day of my own approach to making plans in life...So yeah, I like this guy and he speaks to me. I am going to continue reading his stuff and hopefully pick up some carving skills.
posted evening of July 8th, 2005: Respond
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Friday, July first, 2005
So tonight I finally got to see the Townsend retrospective after thinking about it for a month or more. Can't recommend it highly enough -- obviously the furniture is breathtaking in design and execution, and the wood -- but the great thing is the selection of pieces, and the way they're arranged to let you compare them. They have at a rough guess 30 or 40 pieces, mostly tables, chests of drawers, desks, and cabinets, and a few chairs, and some miscellany -- so you can go from one (say) desk to the next, to the next, seeing how they are basically the same and what differences are introduced from piece to piece. Also there is some comparison of pieces by John Townsend with cheaper copies done by other Newport shops, which I found interesting. In one of the rooms, pieces are displayed upside-down -- so you can examine a lot of the joinery pretty closely. (And even in the other rooms, the way the furniture is layed out it is fairly easy to look behind and under stuff without attracting much adverse attention from the guards.) I went in to this show knowing that Newport furniture is not really my bag -- and came out pretty well confirmed in that opinion. I mean, a cabriole leg with a talon on the end of it is really beautiful and admirable; but I don't feel any real impetus to duplicate it. What surprised me about the show was how interesting I found the drop-leaf tables -- a piece of furniture that has never really been high on my list of things to make -- some of the ones I saw there had me thinking Yeah, I could build something like that and have it come out pretty nice! So, I'm going to keep that in mind as a possible project for later on.
posted evening of July first, 2005: Respond
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Wednesday, June 29th, 2005
I have started creating a web site for Ellen's business, Pageturners, Ink. (Temporarily housed on READIN.) Check it out!
posted afternoon of June 29th, 2005: Respond
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Tuesday, June 28th, 2005
If anyone is around midtown next Tuesday evening (the 5th) and feels like meeting up for a drink, I'm going to be listening to the Ed Russell Group at Kavehaz. The club is at 37 W. 26th, music at 8. I'll be the guy looking unsure of himself. (No really, drop me a line if you're going to swing by.) Ed was my guitar teacher for several years when I was living in Queens, a genuinely nice guy and a very accomplished jazz guitarist. His combo is groovy too.
posted afternoon of June 28th, 2005: Respond
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Monday, June 13th, 2005
I was googling around today and thought I would look for the sentence "I got a girl long and tall, sweet as she could be", which I believe is the first line of a Big Bill Broonzy song I was listening to last night and enjoying. No results... but!!! "long and tall" + "sweet as she could be" brings up only one result, and it is Michael Taft's Pre-War Blues Lyrics Concordance!!! This is huge! I haven't even begun looking at it yet but I'm completely psyched that such a thing should exist and be online. Update: And here is a link to the front page of the concordance.
posted morning of June 13th, 2005: Respond ➳ More posts about Guitar
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Friday, June 10th, 2005
With regards to my most recent post -- The idea of writing poetry directed at a listener (who let's say for the sake of argument is me), asking him to consider a situation where he is talking to or watching somebody else and to try to imagine how he would react, or to suggest a possible reaction, seems pretty interesting to me, and like it might be a useful format to spend some time working on. Are there any good poets that use this format, that I could read up on?
posted afternoon of June 10th, 2005: Respond ➳ More posts about Poetry
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Wednesday, June 8th, 2005
Here is something I have never done: I am posting a poem which I wrote this afternoon. Facets So what about Jason, Who throws up his hands in disgust And cries, "I've been living a lie!" As he flounces out of the room To reclaim his truer self -- What are you his interlocutor To make of this behavior? Sit puzzled in his wake, pulling at your beard, mulling, Muse: "Hmm, 'living a lie', I like the sound of that..." Find a facet of your being in Bad Faith, Some distorting mirror, Imagine it cracked.
posted evening of June 8th, 2005: Respond ➳ More posts about Writing Projects
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Tuesday, May 31st, 2005
A bunch of new images for the READIN Family Album:
posted evening of May 31st, 2005: Respond ➳ More posts about Sylvia
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Sunday, May 29th, 2005
"Night of the Hunter" is the movie that I have had in mind ever since I saw it 6 or 7 years ago at the American Museum of the Moving Image, as the archtypal confidence-man movie -- I could never remember the name of the movie though, just that it had Robert Mitchum going down the Mississippi [incorrect -- the river is actually the Ohio] conning widows. Tonight we watched the movie on video tape and it took about 5 minutes for it all to come flooding back. What a fantastic film.
posted evening of May 29th, 2005: Respond ➳ More posts about Night of the Hunter
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Saturday, May 28th, 2005
"Bulbous Bouffant" by the Vestibules has been one of my favorite things ever since I heard it on Greasy Kid Stuff last year. This evening I stopped by the group's home page and was pleased to see they have several video sketches available for free download (of which the funniest is probably Dry Cleaner, or Name Game), and a full album (Chest of Drawers 5.0) on sale for only US$3.
posted evening of May 28th, 2005: Respond
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