Posts Tagged ‘art’

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What am I celebrating on tattoo Tuesday?

May 12, 2015

Edward-Lear-001Today is Limerick Day, the birthday of Edward Lear (1812) who popularized this poetic form, although limericks have been traced back to the 16th century.

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Lear was also an author, illustrator, artist and musician.  He was the youngest surviving of twenty-one children and, although he suffered from a variety of physical afflictions,  remained productive throughout his life.  Skilled as a draftsman, he began selling his drawings to support himself as early as sixteen years of age. (Wikipedia)

Edward_Lear_-_Butrinto,_Albania_-_Google_Art_ProjectLear’s painting of Butrinto, Albania

Limerick expert Don Marquis identified three types of limericks: “limericks to be told when ladies are present; limericks to be told when ladies are absent but clergymen are present; and LIMERICKS.”

I do have a book of the naughty ones, but here are a few limericks which can be told when ladies and clergy are present:

There once was a lady, Ilene,
Who lived on distilled kerosene,
But she started absorbin’
A new hydrocarbon
and since then she’d never benzene.

 

There once was a lady from Hyde,
Who ate a green apple and died,
While her lover lamented,
The apple fermented,
and made cider inside her inside.

 

The limerick packs laughs anatomical
Into space that is quite economical.
But the good ones I’ve seen
So seldom are clean
And the clean ones so seldom are comical.

 

Since it is tattoo Tuesday, here is a tattoo depicting Lear’s poem about the Owl and the Pussycat.

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

May 5, 2015

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Tattoo artist Brian Woo’s dad wanted him to be a doctor, but instead of textbooks, Woo began to experiment with tattoos at 13. Soon he was apprenticed at Shamrock Social Club in LA, where stars like the Sex Pistols, Tupac, and Johnny Depp have been tattooed and waiting lists can be over a year long.

The Doctor describes his technique as fine line black and grey. And the tattoo that made him famous? “A wolf made up of my constellations – the first time I used my signature circles and lines to create an image,” he said.

Credit boredpanda

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I like the sciency, scrimshawy, graphically clean look of these designs.

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

April 28, 2015

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For those hardy souls who are into running, the Pittsburgh Marathon is being taking place this weekend.  Some folks have opted for tattoos to commemorate their efforts:

 

 

pgh1This bridge tattoo is my favorite.

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This is a story here in the Pittsburgh Gazette.  Thanks to Robb for this news.

 

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What am I sappy cat blogging?

April 24, 2015

Hello Kitty Dim Sum Restaurant in Hong Kong

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If you love dumplings as much as you love Hello Kitty, it’s time to book a flight: the first Hello Kitty dim sum restaurant in the world is now open in Hong Kong.

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Hello Kitty Chunanoki opened in Yaumatei on April 16 and fans waited for hours to snag one of the 80 seats so they could enjoy some of the 37 Hello Kitty dim sum options. Every part of the restaurant is themed, from the tables, glass chandeliers, to the wall artwork. Even the chopstick holders are shaped in the form of Hello Kitty’s iconic hair bow.

For devoted fans, Hello Kitty decor simply isn’t enough, sometimes you just want to eat her face. I say that in the most adoring of ways. The restaurant serves traditional dim sum items, all with a Hello Kitty twist. Rice and noodle dishes come family-style in the shape of her head, while traditional dim sum options like custard-filled steamed buns and pork bao are irresistible when adorned with Hello Kitty’s wide-eyed expression.

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Cuteness knows no bounds when you open up the lid of a bamboo steamer and see steaming Hello Kitty manju staring back at you. Even the popular dim sum dish har gow gets the Hello Kitty treatment. The thinly wrapped plump shrimp dumplings somehow taste even better when embellished with tiny pink edible bows.

The restaurant will only be open for a 2-3 month trial period so Hello Kitty fans will have to act fast to get their kawaii dim sum fix. Check out the video above for an up close look at the interior and unabashed kitty-adorableness.

Images via Jetsoclub and Kotaku

Credit: Jenn Fujikawa

And Cynthia Moore

Reblogged from Nerdist

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

April 21, 2015

DSC01822Sunday was Daffodil Sunday at Lakeview Cemetery.  This historic cemetery, founded in 1869, encompasses over  285 acres and is the final resting place of people such as John D. Rockefeller and President James Garfield.

Every spring over 100,000 bulbs on Daffodil Hill bloom in great profusion. Last Sunday was probably the peak of the blooming season.

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People and cameras also were blooming on the hillside and it was difficult to take a photo without also capturing people enjoying the view.

Did you know there is a Daffodil Society?

Do you know the difference between daffodils and narcissus?  There isn’t any according to the Flower Expert.  Both are members of the genus Narcissus.

Did you know daffodils have their own poem, written by William Wordsworth?

They also lend themselves to lovely tattoos:

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Where was I last weekend?

April 7, 2015

loganberry logotorte-MThe wonderful Loganberry Book Store held their annual Edible Books Festival on Saturday, April 4, where edible portrayals of real books were displayed, voted on, and consumed.

Here are some of the entries:

DSC01776Call of the Wild – or perhaps Cauliflower of the Wild

DSC01777Harry Butter and the Sorcerer’s Scone

DSC01779Annika’s Secret Wish portrayed with a delicious rice pudding as told in the story.

DSC01785The Tell-Tale Heart

(That is a matzoh Haggadah in the background – how appropriate for the season)

DSC01781Owl Moon by Jane Yolen

With strawberry owls sitting on chocolate rice krispie nests.

Entry consumption began at 2 pm and was completed by about 2:15!

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What am I chewing on today?

March 30, 2015

pencil7Today is National Pencil Day.

I love colored pencils.  They are my favorite drawing tool.  Jennifer Maestre takes the medium in an entirely different direction, however,  with her amazing and fanciful sculptures created from colored pencils.

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From nationalcalendarday.com:

Each year, March 30th is National Pencil Day.  Hymen Lipman received the first patent for attaching an eraser to the end of a pencil on this day in 1858.

The majority of pencils made in the United States are painted yellow.  It is believed that this tradition began in 1890 when the L & C Hardtmuth Company of Austria-Hungary introduced their Koh-I-Noor brand, named after the famous diamond.  This pencil was intended to be the world’s best and most expensive pencil.  Other companies then began to copy the yellow color so that their pencils would be associated with the high quality brand.

Notable pencil users (Wikipedia)

  • Thomas Edison had his pencils specially made by Eagle Pencil. Each pencil was three inches long, was thicker than standard pencils and had softer graphite than was normally available.
  • Vladimir Nabokov rewrote everything he had ever published, usually several times, by pencil.
  • John Steinbeck was an obsessive pencil user and is said to have used as many as 60 a day. His novel East of Eden took more than 300 pencils to write.
  • Vincent van Gogh used only Faber pencils as they were “superior to Carpenters pencils, a capital black and most agreeable”.
  • Johnny Carson regularly played with pencils at his Tonight Show desk. These pencils were specially made with erasers at both ends to avoid on-set accidents.
  • Roald Dahl used only pencils with yellow casing to write his books. He had 6 sharpened pencils ready at the beginning of each day and only when all 6 pencils became unusable did he resharpen them.
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What do I find a-maze-ing.2?

March 26, 2015

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In 1983, Kazuo Nomura created an incredibly detailed maze, which he then rolled up and stored in the attic.  The maze had taken him 7 years to complete, working in the evenings after he came home from his job.  He worked not as a graphic designer, but as a janitor.

Two years ago his daughter found the maze.  She asked her father if he would consider drawing another one.  His answer was a concise, “no.”

However, late in 2014, Mr. Nomura began creating a new maze – this is what it looks like.

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To read more about this story, or to find out where to purchase a print of the maze, go to Spoon and Tomago.

There is an interesting article about mazes and labyrinths at Smithsonian.com, which was written to accompany their “BIG Maze” exhibit that was on display last summer at the National Building Museum.

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photo credit: Kevin Allen

What do I find a-maze-ing.1 is here.

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What am I sappy cat blogging?

March 13, 2015
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What do I find charming?

March 9, 2015

typographic-butterfly-specimens-1I love these little butterflies composed of typographical elements.  They were created by Japanese graphic designer, Guusan.  I found them at Spoon and Tamago.  I will not look at Times New Roman the same way ever again.

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