When I checked the school closings this morning at around 7:00 AM, there was no listing for out school district.
When I checked again at around 7:30 AM, there was to be be early dismissal (at 11:00 AM for the Elementary school).
When the bus arrived, around 8:15 AM, we were told by the driver that school had now been closed. (That wasn't completely unexpected, though — light snow had been falling for several hours, and it was expected to get worse as the day went on.)
This evening around 8:15 PM, we got the phone call that school would be closed tomorrow. (I couldn't believe the school district made this decision almost 12 hours in advance.)
25 February 2010
Snowfall
This may be the single greatest snow storm — ever. It was snowing this morning, then there was rain for about a half-hour, then it was back to snow, and it's been snowing ever since — and it's expected to continue through tomorrow morning. I can't remember ever having experienced a continuous twenty-four hours of snowfall. (I'm so excited!)
24 February 2010
Sketches: Fifties Blondes (Continued)
I think my basic concept was sound, but I quickly came to the conclusion that the design might be too busy.
(This was something I put together quickly — each of the photos would have been of a different actress, of course.)
Simple is better. I tried experimenting with a version that had just one photo, but I was concerned that it wouldn't represent the book properly. (There are more than fifty different entries, and well over a hundred photos.) So I went back to my original concept, somewhat simplified.
This is when indecision began to set in. I want the "50s" element to serve as a background element — but it still has to read as a unified whole (rather than a "5" and an "s".) And, of course, the photo has to look good. As much as I liked the white type (I even tried a version with the photo in black-and-white, set in a white circle), it drew more attention to itself than I wanted.
(That, and the partial image at the top didn't really work, either.)
Yellow-on-yellow, while suitably subdued, presented an entirely different set of problems — it took time to find just the right combination of highlight and shadow to define the shape of the "5." But it's still not working — the effect is now too subtle. (You can see that it doesn't read at this small size.) I'll have to try something else tomorrow.
My original concept has survived more or less intact on the back cover, at least. (Again, each of those photos will be of a different actress. And that's dummy copy, as well.)
(This was something I put together quickly — each of the photos would have been of a different actress, of course.)
Simple is better. I tried experimenting with a version that had just one photo, but I was concerned that it wouldn't represent the book properly. (There are more than fifty different entries, and well over a hundred photos.) So I went back to my original concept, somewhat simplified.
This is when indecision began to set in. I want the "50s" element to serve as a background element — but it still has to read as a unified whole (rather than a "5" and an "s".) And, of course, the photo has to look good. As much as I liked the white type (I even tried a version with the photo in black-and-white, set in a white circle), it drew more attention to itself than I wanted.
(That, and the partial image at the top didn't really work, either.)
Yellow-on-yellow, while suitably subdued, presented an entirely different set of problems — it took time to find just the right combination of highlight and shadow to define the shape of the "5." But it's still not working — the effect is now too subtle. (You can see that it doesn't read at this small size.) I'll have to try something else tomorrow.
My original concept has survived more or less intact on the back cover, at least. (Again, each of those photos will be of a different actress. And that's dummy copy, as well.)
14 February 2010
Value
I've always found it difficult to ask for what I'm due. I'm confident in the quality of my work, but when the time comes to ask that I be properly compensated for my efforts, that confidence all but evaporates. So I put off doing so, and do more work, instead.
Valentine
Not a red rose or a satin heart.
I give you an onion.
It is a moon wrapped in brown paper.
It promises light
like the careful undressing of love.
Here.
It will blind you with tears
like a lover.
It will make your reflection
a wobbling photo of grief.
I am trying to be truthful.
Not a cute card or a kissogram.
I give you an onion.
Its fierce kiss will stay on your lips,
possessive and faithful
as we are,
for as long as we are.
Take it.
Its platinum loops shrink to a wedding-ring,
if you like.
Lethal.
Its scent will cling to your fingers,
cling to your knife.
I give you an onion.
It is a moon wrapped in brown paper.
It promises light
like the careful undressing of love.
Here.
It will blind you with tears
like a lover.
It will make your reflection
a wobbling photo of grief.
I am trying to be truthful.
Not a cute card or a kissogram.
I give you an onion.
Its fierce kiss will stay on your lips,
possessive and faithful
as we are,
for as long as we are.
Take it.
Its platinum loops shrink to a wedding-ring,
if you like.
Lethal.
Its scent will cling to your fingers,
cling to your knife.
— Carol Ann Duffy
11 February 2010
Cards
Last year — I think it was last year, anyway — I had no end of trouble trying to find Valentine's Day cards I liked for my son's class. (Maybe I shouldn't have waited 'til the very last minute.) This year, once I noticed that Valentine's Day was quickly coming up at the end of the week, I decided we'd make our own.
My seven-year-old lost interest after crafting a very elaborate card (and using virtually all of the glitter glue) that will be given to his mother, while I spent the next several hours doodling on large sheets of pink construction paper. (This was a habit I developed while bored during meetings.) These were cut into a series of smaller cards.
My seven-year-old lost interest after crafting a very elaborate card (and using virtually all of the glitter glue) that will be given to his mother, while I spent the next several hours doodling on large sheets of pink construction paper. (This was a habit I developed while bored during meetings.) These were cut into a series of smaller cards.
09 February 2010
Promises
I never do this — I'm usually careful not to do this! — I've all but promised my seven-year-old that tomorrow will be a snow day. (I think I'm more excited about this than he is.)
07 February 2010
Note
I was dusting a bookshelf in my office this evening, when I came across a small yellow Post-It™ Note with a phone number written on it, on top of a book. I can't remember whose phone number it is. I'm not even sure if it ended up there by accident, or if it needed to be hidden.
05 February 2010
Indestructible
My son's Betta is as durable as they come — in the year or so since we brought it home, I've been through three (perhaps four) different fish, while my son's Betta has survived in a tank that was much too small, with water that was never changed as often as it should have been, and far too cold in the when the weather got cool.
(I thought I was doing better with the large glass cube in my office, decorated with a selection of rocks and a stem of bamboo — but I haven't been quite so lucky. I added a small heater to keep the water reasonably warm, but I worry that it's still not enough.)
I gave in and bought my son a small aquarium for his Betta. (It was on sale.) It has a gentle filter, and a small heater, and the fish seems much more comfortable. A Betta does not, by nature, seem to be all that active, but my son's fish seems to enjoy exploring his new environment. I wish mine were a bit more lively.
I let my son choose the decorations — he was thrilled to finally have the opportunity to buy one of those tacky aquarium ornaments he'd admired for so long. I tried to nudge him in a sensible direction, but he had very definite ideas about what he wanted.
(I thought I was doing better with the large glass cube in my office, decorated with a selection of rocks and a stem of bamboo — but I haven't been quite so lucky. I added a small heater to keep the water reasonably warm, but I worry that it's still not enough.)
I gave in and bought my son a small aquarium for his Betta. (It was on sale.) It has a gentle filter, and a small heater, and the fish seems much more comfortable. A Betta does not, by nature, seem to be all that active, but my son's fish seems to enjoy exploring his new environment. I wish mine were a bit more lively.
I let my son choose the decorations — he was thrilled to finally have the opportunity to buy one of those tacky aquarium ornaments he'd admired for so long. I tried to nudge him in a sensible direction, but he had very definite ideas about what he wanted.
02 February 2010
Sketches: Fifties Blondes
Fifties Blondes is (or will be) a collection of photographs of models and actresses from the 1950s, most now forgotten. I haven't gotten any further than these sketches (and others hastily scribbled on my iPod while waiting in traffic), so there's no cover to show yet. But this is the work-in-progress.