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Sunday, October 29, 2006

How to Photoshop Pop Art Inspired by Lichtenstein

Link: Pop Art Inspired by Lichtenstein - Online Tutorial

If you are a fan of pop art then you're probably already well acquainted with the work Roy Lichtenstein. Roy Lichtenstein became one of the leading pop artists of the sixties with his comic-strip paintings. Drowning Girl 1963, shown left, is one of his better known works and is a good example of the design features in his most famous pieces. Notice the thick lines, bold colors, and thought bubble. His work also often included boxed captions and words such as "WHAAM!", commonly found in comic books.

Benday dots were Lichtenstein's trademark. Benday dots are a printing process which combines two (or more) different small, coloured dots to create a third colour. Back in the day, pulp comic books used benday dots in primary colours to inexpensively create the secondary colours such as flesh tone.

You can create the benday dot effect by using the Colour Halftone filter found in Photoshop, however in this tutorial I'm going to show you a way to create a fantastic looking black and white Halftone Pattern. "Why?", because I like the look of it better.


Friday, October 27, 2006

DIY Photography » How to spot faked images

Link: DIY Photography » How to spot faked images.

There’s a knack to spotting if an image has been edited or not. Shadows are usually the first give-away, as is inconsistant lighting. If you suspect a person’s head may have been added to another body, look extremely closely at the skin tones, and gradations. Look at the fringe, and see if the background looks consistent, colour-wise, with the original. Finally, use common sense and don’t believe your own eyes - if something looks unnatural, take a closer look, and see if you can find out why it doesn’t look kosher.

Nerd Elite.com :: A Haunted House? No, Just Kind of Unsettling

Link: Nerd Elite.com :: A Haunted House? No, Just Kind of Unsettling.

Schlock Culture Room. The room is cramped. You’re sandwiched between scantily costumed acrobats and contortionists from various Cirque du Soleil touring companies. They’ve all paid to see a Maroon 5 concert on a nearby stage. The cast of Varsity Blues accompanies the band on backup vocals. Nearby, the anchors of Fox News take turns spanking Ashlee Simpson’s bare bottom. Simpson hisses at you as you exit and the sound of Bill O’Reilly squealing, “Soooo-WEE, Soooo-WEE” rings in your ears....

It's more evil than Clive Barker. 

Boing Boing: Cory's fictional "Whuffie" is now running code

Link: Boing Boing: Cory's fictional "Whuffie" is now running code.

Joseph Petviashvili is a fan of ... novel Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom -- he likes it so much that he's created a software version of "Whuffie," the reputation currency that forms the basis of the Bitchun Society ... described in the book.

Bitchun.org is runs on open source code (still in alpha release), creating a marketplace for trading and rewarding favors for your friends and like-minded strangers....

For those interested, my Skype/Whuffie username is atticusfunk.  For those interested, check out the Whuffie blog and the direct link to where you can download a copy of the book, Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, from where the concept is derived. Here' the link to the Skype plug-in needed for Whuffie.


Boing Boing: Suspicious Looking Device exists to incite unease

Link: Boing Boing: Suspicious Looking Device exists to incite unease.

The Suspicious Looking Device is a bright orange box with a countdown timer on the top. If you touch it, it lets out a loud siren and then scoots away on a set of hidden wheels. Its entire purpose is to look suspicious -- it has no other function.

Boing Boing: Seven-headed task-light

Link: Boing Boing: Seven-headed task-light.

Gerber -- whose multitools are the best in the world, for my money -- have shipped an sevent-headed LED flashlight whose bulbs are individually poseable to illuminate different parts of a tricky, underlighted project or room. It's called the "Inferno Flexlight" and can be hung, posed, or held.

Incidentally, while Boing Boing's Cory Doctorow lusts after Gerber's multi-tool, I've always preferred the Leatherman Fuse (link goes to Campmor, the New Jersey outdoors superstore that I've been addicted to since I was a cub scout), with locking blades. 

Uncrewed aircraft swarm together indoors - tech - 27 September 2006 - New Scientist Tech

Link: Uncrewed aircraft swarm together indoors - tech - 27 September 2006 - New Scientist Tech.

A flock of indoor uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs) is helping engineers develop smart swarming strategies for larger autonomous surveillance aircraft.

The multiple-rotor radio-controlled aircraft provide a simple and cheap way to test out strategies before they are scaled-up for real world use.

"We're focusing on persistent surveillance," says project leader Jonathan How at MIT in the US. "This would be useful for, say, convoy protection." His team is working in collaboration with Phantom Works, the research and development arm of Boeing.


Friday, October 20, 2006

The Jewish Museum - Special Exhibition

Superheroes: Good and Evil in American Comics
The Jewish Museum

1109 Fifth Ave. @ 92nd St.
New York, NY 10128
212.423.3200

tied in with this exhibit at the Newark Museum:

Masters of American Comics
The Newark Museum
49 Washington St.
Newark, NJ 07102-3176
973.596.6550

Friday, October 13, 2006

Blawger Bowl III, Weeks 4 & 5

The past two updates for this year's Blawger Bowl had to be delayed in order to facilitate moving.  You see, you can't play on the computer all day and claim that you're "packing." 

It's sort of like blawging at work. I.e., it doesn't end well. 

Regardless of the fact that I'm currently living amongst boxes and packing peanuts, I present week 4 and week 5 of the Blawger Bowl update for your perusal.  All three of you. 

Week 4 - Unbillable Hours v. Anonymous Lawyer/Jeremy Blachman

Week 4 put me up against Jeremy Blachman's "Completely Guessing."  Blachman is a sort of blogging celebrity, in that he has a novel published and has written for the New York Times.  Unfortunately, that didn't help his game.  Unbillable Hours won, 110 to 71. 

Blachman, a Harvard grad, takes notice on his blog of 02138, the smarmy alumni magazine for Harvard (there, now google can associate you shitbirds with being smarmy).  I had noticed the magazine myself, as, for reasons I don't understand, an issue ended up in my office mailbox.  I didn't go to Harvard, but I did go to a law school which views itself with equally self-important eyes.  Wrongly, in my opinion, as I still maintain that I learned nothing about the practice of law while there.  Nonetheless, I look at my law school's alumni mag ("bourgeoise ipsa loquitor," a.k.a., "the yuppies speak for themselves") and 02138 as part of the greater trend of lifestyle magazines designed to make the upper class and upper middle class feel special about themselves. 

I'll give another example.  In the somewhat affluent region in which I live (the Jersey shore), someone came up with the idea for a lifestyle magazine called "MAR." Much like Harvard's self-referencing "02138" (the main campus zip code), MAR refers to the area in which it serves: an area it refers to as the "Mid-Atlantic Riviera." 

Now, aside from the fact that I've never lived a lifestyle that approximates the Riviera, my readthrough of the magazine made me pray it was either parody or completely oblivious.  Executive helecopter charters competed with the solicitations of personal shoppers and Ferrari/Maserati of Central New Jersey.  Consultants provided advice about both feng shui and surgery to remove signs of aging. 

I wondered if the magazine would find its way to low income towns like Asbury Park or Neptune, just to rub in the insult. 

The magazines seem to be designed - like the society pages of old - to reassure a certain class of people.  "Yes, you're noteworthy," the photos of shiny-faced, suit wearing partiers seem to say.  "You deserve no less than this," the jewelry and custom kitchen cabinets (starting at a reasonable $40k) ads advise the privileged. 

In the grand scheme of things, I can't decide if the magazine is a signifier to me (time to get out; the area has changed and you're not interested in changing with it) or a hysterically out-of-touch statement, the "let them eat cake" of the Hummer crowd. 

Week 5, Unbillable Hours v. ????
This past week, my team took on one of the two teams ... about whom I know nothing (as indicated in my first blawger bowl post).  This is frustrating, since I have no way of doing a write-up about the blawger.  However, considering the bastards beat my team 96-72, signalling what may be a slow, ugly decline, I don't mind not having to do a write-up about them.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Three Dragons

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Dragon No. 1
Chinese New Year 2006, New York, NY (C. Jan. 2006)

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Dragon No. 2
Chinese New Year 2006, New York, NY (C. Jan. 2006)

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Dragon No. 3
Chinese New Year 2006, New York, NY (c. Jan. 2006).