Archive for category Life

More to Come

St. Ann's Beach, Laguna Beach, California

Happy New Year, everyone. Time for the annual renewal, recharge, relaunch or whatever. I’m promising myself that some things will get done.

 

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This One Goes to Eleven

Adam is 11 years old today. He’s everything a Dad could wish for, and I’m very lucky to have him in my life.

He’ll celebrate with his friends next weekend, but this year’s portraits are already on their way to family all over the country. Like last year, we went out to a local park for a natural-light posing session with the 5D and the RB67. The digital result is above, and the film below.

Though I was pleased with the results from last year’s experiment with WHCC (I’ve used them since), based on a number of recommendations, I decided to try the services offered by Mpix. Apart from the good reviews from friends, I really liked one of the Mamiya frames and wanted to include it as the second shot in the family package so I was interested in their True B&W Paper process.

The Mpix order flow was easy, and all of the options were clear. I chose the Endura Metallic option on the color prints, the True B&W  for the other, and the die-cut corners for wallets. Post-order communication was good, and production and shipping were speedy. The prints arrived on-time and nicely-packaged. The colors pop on the metallics, and the depth and gloss are nice. The matte black-and-white processing lived up to the promise, so I’ll probably put more work through it in the near future. The price was comparable to WHCC and other services I’d shopped – a little higher on some items, lower on others. Overall, a great experience and I can join the satisfied customer chorus.

Ordinarily, the order would have included a larger print to frame and place on our family gallery wall. As I was considering print vendors. coincidence dropped an e-mail in my in-box from CafePress and their recently-acquired Canvas On Demand service, offering half-off a gallery-wrap canvas print. I took the chance and ordered an 11×14. The result was not bad for the price I paid, but the assembly quality was not up to the standard of some gallery wraps I’ve seen. If I want another, I’ll probably look elsewhere.

 

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Steps Taken

OK, I guess “Small Arts Media LLC” is officially up and running, so I need to get off my ass and do something about it.

And, as I feared, that was the easy part.

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Serious Parental Responsibility

Are you sharing art with your kids? Arts education is one of the best investments we can make in our children’s future – program after program and study after study show the benefits. Conservative forces in Congress and their constituents engaged in culture warfare will keep trying to kill funding for the arts, but it won’t happen if we don’t allow it.

Regardless of political theater and the shifting fortunes of public media, this is something you need to take into your own hands. You can’t just hope they’ll pick this stuff up on their own. There’s an art museum near you, and a children’s theater series. Your local library has a whole section for you. A world of art is open to you in the the biggest library ever conceived, the Internet – Kids.gov will get you started. Take advantage of the annual Free Museum Day, as well as free museum days year-round. Take your kids (and their friends), and show your enthusiasm. Make it real for them.

If you, as a parent, aren’t exposing your kids to art – visual art, music, literature, whatever – you’re guilty of a form of neglect. It’s child abuse, really. You’re stunting their development, and leaving them less-able to cope in a world where cultural literacy actually is as important as those flaming Liberals said it would be.

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Brew On

No, I don’t need another expensive, complicated pastime that requires a lot of equipment, mixing things, and having to wait to enjoy the results. My friend Kip’s all about that, though, so through him I can enjoy a taste of something new without taking on a new hobby/obsession/money pit of my own.

Speaking of tasting something new, Kip makes good beer – really, really good beer. He’s been doing it for a couple of years now, and his results continue to improve. As he’s produced batch after batch – close to 50 at this point – he’s acquired the skills, tools and confidence to design his own brew recipes and submit them for competition judging. He and his brewing/business partner John have progressed to the point where they’re winning awards in regional competitions and are poised for broader acclaim. They’re cooking up a business plan now, and will soon make the leap from home-brew to nano-brewery pro.

I find a lot of parallels between the brewers and the shooters (especially analog folk). There’s the craft and hand-made angle, the chemistry and alchemy, controversy over style and lots of gear talk and envy. Both crowds get enjoyment out of doing the work, but whether a golden pint in a glass or a well-captured shot behind glass, it’s most meaningful when the results are shared.

My friend Mark and I got to pitch in over the weekend on a new brew (a full-grain rye IPA, spiced with fresh Cascade hops), and I’m grateful for the chance to help. I took away a load of inspiration from the process. I can’t describe the experience as heartily as Kip can, so hop over to bierkast.com for the tale of the Rusty Rocket. It’s about half-way down the entry, alongside some snapshots I managed during the steps.

Thanks, Kip. I hope to help out again soon. Brew on!

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And We’ll Take a Cup o’ Kindness Yet

Mann, oh Mann

Quite a year, everyone – not all good, but decent on balance.

Here’s to a kinder, more consistent 2011. There’s a lot to be done.

Should old acquaintance be forgot,
and never brought to mind?
Should old acquaintance be forgot,
and days of old lang syne?

For auld lang syne, my dear,
for auld lang syne,
we’ll take a cup of kindness yet,
for auld lang syne.

And surely you’ll buy your pint cup!
and surely I’ll buy mine!
And we’ll take a cup o’ kindness yet,
for auld lang syne.

I’ll stumble, and I’ll fall, but I’m going to keep trying. Happy new year.

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