http://solito.free.fr/catane/index.php looks promising.
Category: Uncategorized
Becka had some leftover dyes from a recent class at the Textile Center, so we had fun in the backyard with T-shirts. We folded the fabric in patterns — in this example, I accordian folded the shirt. This is a Japanese dye technique called Shibori. Then today, I cut out a stencil using freezer paper, ironed it to the fabric, and painted using navy blue fabric paint. I let it dry, then “set” it with an iron.
(The image is a silhouette of a paddlefish, which has become sort of iconic of me, ever since my masters thesis in which I studied them.)
Democratic Debate
I’m catching up on last nights debate by looking for clips on youtube.com. They certainly had a large panel: Senator Joseph Biden, Jr. (D-De); Senator Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.); Senator Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.); Former Senator John Edwards (D-S.C.); Former Senator Mike Gravel (D-AK); Representative Dennis Kucinich (D-OH); Senator Barack Obama (D-IL); and Governor Bill Richardson (D-NM). Of these, only three (Edwards, Obama, Clinton) rank above 2% in recent polls. Al Gore still rakes in 14%, by the way. With such clear front-runners, why were these others included in the debate? I can see the point in getting a broader perspective, but this crap from Mike Gravel is counter productive:

GRAVEL: We’re not united. I’m not united on many of their views. And I want to take on Barack Obama for a minute, who said he doesn’t take money from lobbyists. Well, he has 134 bundlers. Now, what does he think that is?
And, besides that, he has received money from a Robert Wolf, the head of the USB (sic) bank in the United States, who raised $195,000 — from this bank — wait a second — who has lobbyists in Washington…
COOPER: Your time is up.
GRAVEL: … and it’s a foreign-owned bank.
This is in response to the second question Gravel was asked, and he wastes his 30 seconds to pick on Obama. The Dems will get plenty of negative crap from the Republicans. The “second tier” / “dark horse” candidates in these debates should speak to the issues.
Funny D&D song
Using Garage Band, and five tracks of myself singing, I’ve created a barbershop quartet. I rewrote the lyrics to Lida Rose….
http://homepage.mac.com/arahn/savingthrows.m4a
.. to be about Dungeons and Dragons game. If you try to make a serious song then lack of singing ability becomes a liability. But if you’re making a joke song, then lack of ability actually is an asset….
Becka says my diction isn’t very good, so here are the lyrics.
Saving Throws, I’m rolling those throws,
To cut the damage down by half,
If I fail, well you know how it goes,
I’ll die and you’ll have the last laugh
D and D
Rolling dice and drinking caffeine
D and D
When I blow my whistle,
cast Magic Missile!
Saving Throws, you’re rolling those throws,
Without a Ring of Protection
Saving Throws, how everyone knows,
The DC will need perfection
So here is the dungeon,
With undead to turn
Saving throws, oh won’t you be,
Mine, Saving throws, oh Saving throws,
Oh Saving Throws….
Counter:
Versus Spell
Versus Wand
Save versus poison
Or Breath Weapon
What’s the DC?
Oh it’s not easy
And I’ll bravely tell you
A natural twenty you must throw
High and low
Saving throw
How sweet that mem’ry
When you were whole
Forever
Oh yes, forever
Or cast restoration?
Oh no.
Find me on MySpace and be my friend!
ubunto : Linux distribution. Ubuntu is an African word meaning ‘Humanity to others’, or ‘I am what I am because of who we all are’.
— EOM —
I decided tonight to practice my English Horn. But I have a concert on Saturday that is principally Oboe. So I played through the oboe music for the concert on the English Horn anyhow. The fingerings are the same, although it sounds a fourth too low.
Then I got out my “music minus one” Albinoni concerto for Oboe. I opened the accompaniment track in Adobe Soundbooth CS3, and selected “Change Pitch and Timing” and entered ‘-7’ for one fourth lower. (A fourth is seven half steps.) The fact that the UI is in half-steps but musicians say “a fourth” is evidence of the gap between computer scientists and musicians. At least it wasn’t in octaves or frequency, in which case I would have had to dust of my base-two logarithms.
After thinking for about five minutes, I had my accompaniment for English Horn. Fun!
Soundbooth can also slow them down. So that devilishly difficult movement (Allegro) — I could ease it up a bit. Nobody would know.
(Actually, I think maybe the dog was offended by the transposed accompaniment. I found her hiding in the bathroom when I was finished playing. Lucy used to get excited when I got the double reeds out, because it meant the quintet was probably coming over. But I haven’t had a quintet for some time now, so now she leaves the room when I get them out. Hiding in the bathroom is a nice touch. {sigh}. Being a dog is a rough life.)
Also, an aside.
I have invented to rubrics for remembering the serial numbers on my instruments. The oboe is NH-12. The English horn is HS-44.
For NH-12, I think of the TV show “The West Wing” and the main character: Jed Bartlet. He is from New Hampshire. New Hampshire has 12 letters. NH-12.
For the English Horn it’s even simpler. HS-44. Oboe in French is Haut-bois. Haut-bois starts with an H and ends with an S. And Haut and bois are both four letters. HS-44.
(English Horn is “cor anglais” in French. Actually, the English horn might be a misnomer. It was probably originally called “Angled horn” due to the bent bocal it uses. But a Frenchman probably heard the English word “angled” and thought of the French word “Anglais” (which means English), and thus the angled horn became the English horn. Actually, wikipedia disputes this as a myth, but they’re just a bunch of humbugs, it’s more fun if it’s true.)
It occurred to me, a better way to remember the serial numbers would be to write them down. That’s what this post is. Now Google has them, so they’re probably safe forever…
Andy and Scott on YouTube
Scott and Andy reach for internet fame with the launch of our two stop-motion films on YouTube!
Ok, yes, I’m just recycling work I did years ago, but I was curious how the youtube thing works.
Water Lily
Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco

Yesterday we stopped by the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco.
They had an awesome exhibit of French jewelry, which included many pieces with enamel on precious metals (silver, gold, platinum). Becka and I have recently started experimenting with that technique using PMC (precious metal clay). So it was interesting to see how far you could take it.
Then we went to a vinyard in Sonoma County where we had a cooking class and then ate the dinner we cooked. It included a grilled salad, lentil pilaf, grilled portabellos with cheeze and stuffing, and a wood-fired cherry custard. We did all the cooking outside and the weather was gorgeous.





