Posts Tagged ‘tattoos’

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

October 15, 2013

Tattoo Tuesday is about jellyfish –  because I think they pretty and interesting.  I remember gathering and studying little pink ctenophores – which are comb jellies – relatives of jellyfish, when I was in college on a biology field trip to Chesapeake Bay.  We tromped around the Bay in February, gathering specimens and studying them in the Marine Fisheries Lab nearby.  I was particularly taken with the comb jellies. Their rows of cilia undulated down their bodies, propelling them along.  Fascinating to watch.

comb jelly

Here are the tattoos:

jellyfish 3

jellyfish 2

jellyfish 1

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Who am I honoring on tattoo Tuesday?

October 8, 2013

 

It’s the friends you can call up at 4 a.m. who matter. – Marlene Dietrich

I am very grateful for mine.

friendship3

friendship2

friendship1

friendship4

The friend who can be silent with us in a moment of despair or confusion,
who can stay with us in an hour of grief and bereavement,
who can tolerate not knowing… not healing, not curing…
that is a friend who cares.

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

October 1, 2013

popcorn1

According to the Popcorn Board (who knew there was a Popcorn Board?) October is National Popcorn Month.

Wikipedia explains popcorn thusly: Popcorn, also known as popping corn, is a type of corn (maize, Zea mays var. everta) that expands from the kernel and puffs up when heated. Corn is able to pop becauseits kernels have a hard moisture-sealed hull and a dense starchy interior. Pressure builds inside the kernel, and a small explosion (or “pop”) is the end result. Some strains of corn are now cultivated specifically as popping corns.

The Muppets explain it like this:

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Whose birthday am I celebrating on Tattoo Tuesday?

September 24, 2013

muppet henson

Today is the birthday of Jim Henson, creator of the Muppets.

Henson’s creative genius brought to the television screen the Sesame Street characters and the Muppet Show and he created films such as the Muppet Movies and the Dark Crystal.  Henson would have been 77 today.

Here are some Muppet tattoos:

muppet animal

muppet ker,ot

muppet fozzy

And my favorite:

kermit tatoo

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

September 17, 2013

PLUMS and Plum Blossom Tattoos

A few years ago, my friend, Betty, invited Roz and me over for dinner and made a Plum Galette for dessert.  After dinner, Roz and I politely ate a slice of the galette, and then another, and then abandoned our forks and finished off the galette so that only crumbs were left.

I bought some lovely purple plums in Whole Foods the other day and made this tart.  While it was not devoured all in one sitting, it was pretty good.

pie book cover

The recipe is an adaptation of Rose Levy Beranbaum’s Plum Flame Tart in The Pie and Pastry Bible

1 recipe sweet cookie tart crust

3-4 large purple plums sliced into 1/8 sections

1/3 – ½ cup sugar – depending on the tartness of the plums

½ t cinnamon

1/8 t nutmeg

1/3 cup Apricot or other preserves for glazing

Heat oven to 350 degrees

Place a cookie sheet on a rack in the lowest position in the oven

Crust

One stick of cold, unsalted butter cut into pieces

¼ cup sugar

1 ½ scant cups of all-purpose flour

1/8 t salt

1 large egg yolk

2 T cream

Combine the egg yolk and cream and set aside

Using a pastry blender combine the sugar, flour, butter and salt until the mixture looks like coarse crumbs. You can also use a food processor for this part.  Add the egg and cream mixture and blend with a fork.  I needed a little more cream to make it come together.  If the dough is too soft, refrigerate it for a few hours or freeze for about 10 minutes.  Mine was perfect as is to press into the pan. Press the mixture evenly over the pan bottom and about ½ inch up the sides. Use a tart pan with a removable bottom or a similar spring form pan.  No need to treat the pan because there is plenty of butter in the dough and it will release easily. I used a 10” spring-form pan because that is what I have.

Bake the tart shell for 8-10 minutes.  Remove from the oven and cool.

Place the plum slices on the tart shell in concentric rows beginning with the outer edge of the crust, working toward the center.  Mix the sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg together and sprinkle over the tart.

Bake the tart for about 45 minutes, or until the plum slices are soft.  Remove from the oven and cool.

Glaze the tart by warming and straining apricot preserves and brushing over the tart.  I had an extra plum or two, so I just made some plum preserves, strained them and used that as the glaze.

plum tartWhy did I photograph the plate upside down?

And the tattoos?

plum blossom

plum bird

plum6

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

September 10, 2013

Today is bean soup day.  What bean soup is more well known than Senate Bean Soup.  Here is a reference from the U.S. Senate commenting on the possible genesis of Senate Bean Soup (which is on the menu everyday that the Senate is in session.

soup

I offer a recipe from Food.com:

Ingredients

1 lb dry navy beans

1 meaty ham bone

1 cup chopped onion

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 cup chopped celery

2/3 cup mashed potato flakes or 1 1/2 cups mashed potatoes

1/4 cup chopped parsley

1 1/2 teaspoons pepper

1 teaspoon ground nutmeg

1 teaspoon oregano

1 teaspoon basil

1 bay leaf

salt, to taste

Directions

  1. Wash and sort beans; in large kettle, cover beans with 6-8 c hot water.
  2. Bring to a boil; boil 2 minutes; remove from heat, cover, and let stand for 1 hour.
  3. Add another 2 quarts of cold water and ham bone.
  4. Bring to a boil; reduce heat and simmer 1 1/2 hours.
  5. Stir in remaining ingredients; simmer 20-30 minutes until beans are tender.
  6. Remove ham bone, trim off meat and return meat to soup; remove bay leaf.
  7. Serve hot; freezes well.

And the tattoos:

bean limaLima Bean

Bean mr.Mr. Bean

bean1El L Bean

So raise a mug to salute this musical fruit and let everyone know como frijoles, or how you bean.

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

September 3, 2013

This week a few literature oriented tattoos:

knittingVirginia Woolf

wind up bird chronicleThe Wind Up Bird Chronicle

tempestThe Tempest

These are from BuzzFeed:  50 Incredible Tattoos Inspired by Books

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

August 29, 2013

Flaming_marshmallow_tattoo_by_Reddsky

Okay, so I missed Tuesday this week.  We are on vacation.  However, August 30, is Toasted Marshmallow Day!  Fire up the campfire, find some long sticks, and prepare by watching Ghost Busters.

King Arthur Flour has recently posted a recipe for homemade marshmallow fluff: recipe here.

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

August 20, 2013

tattoo-of-world-with-countries-visited-colored-in

40 Maps that will help you make sense of the world.

I don’t know if this is really a tattoo or not, but it is interesting.  Maps and charts have always fascinated me.  I was our family’s navigator when we went on trips.  I was the only one who was interested in reading a map.  I remember a trip to Pittsburgh when my father refused to ask directions, but just blithely crossed every bridge he came to.  (Have you ever been to Pittsburgh?) We never got home.

Here is a map of internet usage.  If you click on the image, it animates.  Do you see us – we’re that little twinkle right over there?

internet-usage-of-the-world-based-on-time-of-day_2

I thank HMS Defiant for the reference.

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What is tattoo Tuesday about?

August 13, 2013

Science tattoos – these are some of my favorites

star-navigation-440-tattoo(Above) Marc Morency, Quartermaster 1st class, USN, writes:
“My tattoo is the visual depiction of how to plot a line of position from a celestial body using the altitude intercept method, a method which has been time tested for more than a century. For me it serves as a reminder that while technology improves, the sea remains an unpredictable place and it is up to the older generation to teach the younger the old school ways of doing business.”

subatomic-doodling

(Above) Zach writes: “This is a half sleeve up my upper right arm based around an image taken by one of the CERN bubble chambers. It is based on this image. I first saw that image my freshman year of college. It had the sublime, simple beauty that only something made of math and science can have. It stuck with me for 8 more years before I actually decided to get it etched into me. Oddly enough, on Valentine’s Day. I guess it was my Valentine’s to physics and science. Oh, and when people ask who drew it, I always respond ‘God.’”

murchison-web

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(Above) “For some time I have wanted to get a tattoo to depict my appreciation for meteorites. On September 28, 1969 meteorites fell in Murchison, Australia. On September 28, 2004 our daughter Christina (a.k.a. Pinky) was born. As if wasn’t already a top-fiver for it’s amino acids, Murchison quickly moved up the ranks of my favorite meteorites and I had decided it would somehow be involved in the meteorite tattoo. With a little help from friends Steve Arnold (IMB) and Jason Phillips I obtained a small capsule of Murchison crumbs to pulverize and one day add to the ink. I ultimately decided on a carbon buckeyball, found in Murchison, unrolled and laid out flat. With Murchison fully represented in design and medium, I had the tattoo artist make one carbon atom bright pink in honor of Pinky. Although it’s only the size of the head of a pin, it means the world to her… and me.”

limulus-web

(Above) Loren, a biology graduate student, writes, “It’s a sketch of the horseshoe crab Limulus, such as a zoologist would make (and with the abdominal segments correctly identified). Perhaps the most magnificent living fossil of all, the horseshoe crab is the survivor of a lineage that extends back some 445 million years into the Ordovician. The four extant species are the only living representatives of the ancient arthropod class Merostomata and the only known chelicerate crabs.”

glyph600-web

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(Above) Alice writes, “This is an Aztec speech glyph that dates back before the conquest. I’m a linguist, and I believe this glyph embodies the impossible elegance of spoken language as well as the intrinsically artificial and cumbersome nature of written language.”

fitting-foundations

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(Above) Mark writes:
“This tattoo is the Zermelo-Fraenkel with Choice axioms of set theory. These nine axioms are the basis for ZFC set theory, which is the most commonly studied form of set theory and the most well known set of axioms as well. From these nine axioms, one can derive all of mathematics. These provide the foundation of mathematics, a field that you can likely tell that I love dearly.”

equationtatwide600-web

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(Above) Alison, a high-school physics teacher, writes:
“Like many scientists, the wonder of the natural laws of the Universe is where I draw my spiritual inspiration. I also study the religions of the world, and have been fascinated by the reoccurring theme of Creation, Preservation, and Destruction. The Mandelbrot Set (top) represents Creation, with the emergent properties of a simple equation that produces such a rich, complex, and unpredictable fractal pattern that goes on into Infinity. The equation for hydrostatic equilibrium (bottom left) represents Preservation, describing the precarious balance between crushing gravity and expanding pressure inside of stars (including our own) to keep them in a stable, sustainable size for billions of years. The equation describing entropy (bottom right) symbolizes Destruction, simply stating that this fundamental break down of systems and accumulation of disorder either increases or stays the same over time, but never decreases. All three circle around the Delta, the symbol for Change.”

does-the-golden-ratio

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(Above) Milad writes:
“I am a Mechanical Engineering undergrad at UC Berkeley and I got this tattoo about a month ago. It’s the golden ratio in the shape of a rectangle, with the ratio of the sides of the rectangle actually being the golden ratio! I have been obsessed with this number since I heard about it in high school, and it is the reason why I became so fascinated with mathematics. The golden ratio is known to be the closest mathematical explanation of beauty. It has been used a lot in architecture, art, and music around the world, and has some amazing mathematical and geometrical properties.”

circuit-ankle440

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(Above) “This tattoo is the schematic for the reference point of electricity. I just think of it as the source of electricity. Its really either the point at which you consider voltage to be 0, or in this pictures case, the physical connection to the earth (hence the lower calf). Electronics has been my passion for as long as I can remember, and I feel like this tattoo doesn’t do it justice. So I plan on getting another one to incorporate my passion for electronics and my trans-humanism beliefs.”

cajal440-web

(Above) Anonymous writes: “This is a ‘Ramon y Cajal’ drawing of a human motor cortex pyramidal cell. I am a student of neuroscience and greatly admire Ramon y Cajal not only for his scientific contributions but for the artistic and beautiful quality of his images. This image reminds me of the vast and incredible power of the neocortex, and of the amazing capability of the human body.”

From Accidental Mysteries

From Science Tattoos – Carl Zimmer

With thanks to HMS Defiant