Saturday, September 29, 2012

Inspiration for Project 3


I've started looking at older tattoo flash for my holiday cards series. I'm trying to pay a lot of attention to the font and style of drawing/design.






Thursday, September 27, 2012

Rough of Project 2, Phase 2


I may need an Indesign genius to give me some help with this project. I would like to be able to flip it upside down to read the continuation, "How To Send Mail Art". Any ideas???









Sunday, September 23, 2012

Say "hi"

Here is one ad campaign I loved.  A "friendly" car seemed so cute and adorable, it even says "hi" by blinking its head lights at the viewer. I don't know what ever happened to these cars but I never see them on the road.








Anti-Smoking ad's

Anti-Smoking ad's can be much harsher in other countries. MAybe it isn't a concept in advertising but it certainly gets the message across. Or maybe the concept is to scare people out of smoking.

http://www.adpunch.org/hard-hitting-anti-smoking-campaign-from-riyadh.html
http://coloradoindependent.com/21585/marostica-avert-thine-eyes-from-obscene-british-anti-smoking-flyer
http://www.dirjournal.com/internet-journal/anti-smoking-campaigns-scary-clever-and-sometimes-cruel/

Got Advertising?

        Of course the "Got Milk" advertising campaign has converted many a milk drinker back to drinking milk which was at one time just for kids. Now its just for everyone including sexy movie starts and models. It has my attention!

Ideas for Holiday Cards

Ok this is tricky, because no matter what everything says christmas to me. But here we go:
Idea/Brainstorm 1:
      Tattoo Design, Season Greetings Cards, This was the best visual I could find describing what I'm thinking but minus the grossness,



Idea/Brainstorm 2:
      Kids coloring book-like designs for Seasons Greetings Cards. Maybe I could include crayons as well. I like how far fetched this one is,

Idea/Brainstorm 3:
     Bad Photo/retro photo Seasons Greetings:

Idea/Brainstorm 4:
Star/Pattern/Quilt-Pattern-Like design card. Maybe I'll have some text maybe I won't. The focus would be mainly on the design of the card and not point to any one holiday or even wintery season.
Idea/Brainstorm 5:
 Hand Sewn Cards. Hand sewing into the cards words like "Season's Greetings", "Peace", " Happy Holidays"...hmmm.

BRAINSTORMS of Images Danced in my Head

Here are some brief brainstorms of images for "holiday" cards:







Sunday, September 16, 2012

Assignment 1, Phase 2: The Article


I haven't decided on a title yet. I think the article is a little on the short side as well. To the right there will be the recipe, below will be a list of possible uses and benefits of the rind.


Watermelon is a delicious summertime treat, with one question that always gets asked, “What do I do with all this rind?”. Others follow, “Do I eat it?”, “ Do I compost it?”, “Should I just through it away?”. Well a big “No” to all. Because there are so many things to do with the rind. Including one very well kept southern secret pickling watermelon rind!
   As trends in your diet go in and out sustainability is definitely in and just tossing the rinds into you neighbors yard is not the way to go. A pickled rind maintains it’s slightly sweet taste while mixing with the sour and crunch of a pickle. It is also pretty, and has a slight pink color to it when pickled. 
 The recipe to the right can be modified to exclude the cherries and include radishes or ginger providing a less sweet pickled taste. You can also find countless internet recipes to provide a larger array of pickling techniques and tastes. The pickling process is one that can be left alone to stand overnight, slave to the kitchen you are not.

Something great can be done with the rind and it doesn’t end with just pickling it. Look below!

Assignment 2, Phase 1


Ideas For Project 2, Phase 1

First Idea:
How To Clean A Carborator? This would be an actual quick and easy guide to cleaning a carborator of a Yamaha Vino Scooter, 49.5cc’s. Having been a scooter owner for 6 years I understand the need for a simple comprehensive guide for scooter maintenance. Your carborator usually needs to be cleaned at least once a year when taken out of storage and can cost any where from $250-$35 to have a mechanic clean it, it depends greatly on the mechanic, but the mechanic could be you! 
    On one side would be a “Getting to Know Your Parts Guide” that outlines where all the parts of a small scooter or Yamaha Vino 49.5cc’s are located. On the other side of the accordion fold would be the “How To Clean a Carborator?” section, maybe a Vol.1 of a series. I have long wished that this kind of information existed for my self. I want to make this into a series of “How To’s” for scooter owners.

Second Idea:
                 How to Make And Send An Art Mail Package? I have recently been making art mail packages for friends that live both near and far. I love receiving mail and sending mail, the post office is a wonderful thing and mail is very important to me. This “How To” would go over the steps involved in making an art package, what to include how to include it, how to make sections and layers within a regular box, basically how to get creative with your sending. Then it would cover how to send through the post office. There are actually some things that may not be sent and you always have to make sure you items are properly secured, I get in trouble for putting bows on the outside of my packages, glitter and undried paint.







An art page of interest

For some reason I am really into this persons art work. It isn't 100% clear who the artist actually is. I'll spend more time on this site and find out who but for now...http://www.handmodel.ca

Saturday, September 15, 2012

How To Make a Repeat Pattern = Awesome

http://www.designsponge.com/2008/05/welcome-julia-and-how-to-make-a-repeat-pattern.html



This is a link to a great little tutorial on how to make repeat patterns. If you don't know what that is, think wall paper or clothing pattern that has an interlocking design. The artist doesn't just draw the same thing over and over again. You can can do this your self easily. Examples of repeat patterns are above.

The Visual and The Verbal

I chose this image because as a viewer you can tell that words are being directed at each other and odds are they aren't nice.

A Visual representation of Sake (in Spanish)

http://manualthinking.com/en/specialists/sake-and-priorat-tamae-imachi/
                                        This is a visual representation of the Sake making and material process. It is in Spanish from a restaurant owner and sommelier in Barcelona, Spain. This website also sells raw materials for making your own guide like the one above.

YUM!


Quilts

 I recently under went a change and began to appreciate my grandmothers quilts. I didn't think about the time, dedication and complexity of them until I decided one day last winter to make one. The heat wasn't working in my house for about a month in December which was manageable yet cold enough to ignite the fire of quilt making in me.  I had plenty of fabric on hand and began making a queen size quilt.
   This isn't an example on one of mine or my grandmothers, but I admire it for it's simplicity and complexity.

pictures for the Watermelon Rind article, Phase 2, Project 1









Research for Project 1.5

http://www.livestrong.com/article/408893-benefits-of-watermelon-rinds/

BENEFITS OF WATERMELON RINDS

Mar 28, 2011 | By Nicole Wolf
Benefits of Watermelon Rinds
Photo Credit watermelon image by citylights from Fotolia.com
Most people discard the hard green rind of the juicy watermelon, but don't be so hasty -- the watermelon rind has many benefits. Whether you eat the rind or use it topically, this often-wasted food can do good things for your body. Finding a use for it also helps cut down on the amount of garbage you produce, so it's good for the environment as well.

NUTRITIONAL BENEFITS

The rind may not be as juicy as the flesh of a watermelon, but you can eat it. A 1-inch cube of watermelon rind contains 1.8 calories. The majority of the calories come from carbohydrates, with 0.32 g per serving. While you will not derive a tremendous amount of macronutrients from eating watermelon rind, this food does contain some vitamins. One serving provides 2 percent of the daily recommended intake of vitamin C and 1 percent of the vitamin B-6 your body requires every day.  This makes watermelon rind good for your skin and immunity, as well as the health of your nervous system.

ECONOMIC BENEFITS

Considered primarily a Southern food, pickles made from watermelon rind offer a tart taste and stretch your food dollars. Homemade pickles made from watermelon rind offer an inexpensive alternative to purchased pickles. Because watermelon rind is often thrown out and not used, finding ways to use it for food, such as pickles, relishes or jam, extends the functionality of this fruit. You can cut the rind into spears and chunks, as well as shred it for recipes. The crunch and texture mimic pickles made from cucumbers, and you get the most use out of the fruit.

CITRULLINE CONTENT

Watermelon rind contains a compound known as citrulline, according to a study published in the June 2005 issue of the "Journal of Chromatography." Citrulline might serve up a range of medicinal benefits. Evidence in the March 2011 edition of the "Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture" suggests that the citrulline in watermelon rinds gives it antioxidant effects that protect you from free-radical damage. Additionally, citrulline converts to arginine, an amino acid vital to the heart, circulatory system and immune system, says researchers from Texas A&M's Fruit and Vegetable Improvement Center. These researchers speculate that watermelon rind might relax blood vessels and have a role in treating erectile dysfunction.

ACNE TREATMENT

Acne, especially when it occurs on your face, can be a humiliating medical condition, but using watermelon rind might help prevent breakouts. An article at the Compleat Mother website notes that eating watermelon is key for treating acne, but you can also rub watermelon rind on acne as a method of naturally clearing up your face or other areas affected.

REFERENCES



Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/408893-benefits-of-watermelon-rinds/#ixzz26a8kvplk

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Food Article concerning what I call Post-Vegetarians

Link to Food Related Article

Why Vegetarians Are Eating Meat

A growing number of vegetarians are starting to eat humanely raised meat. Christine Lennon talks to a few converts—including her husband and famed author Mollie Katzen.
To a die-hard meat eater, there's nothing more irritating than a smug vegetarian. I feel at liberty to say this because I am one (a steak lover) and I married the other (a vegetarian with a pulpit). For me, "Do you now, or would you ever, eat meat?" has always been a question on par with "Do you ever want to get married?" and "Do you want children?" The answer to one reveals as much about a person's interior life, and our compatibility, as the response to the others. My husband Andrew's reply to all of those questions when I asked him three years ago was, "No."
Obviously, we're now married. We had twins earlier this year. And somewhere in between those two events, the answer to the third question was also re-evaluated, and the vegetarian soapbox was put to rest, too.
Yes, my husband has started eating meat again after a seven-year hiatus as an ethically motivated and health-conscious vegetarian. About a year ago, we arrived at a compromise: I would eat less meat—choosing mostly beef, pork and poultry produced by local California ranchers without the use of hormones or antibiotics—and he would indulge me by sharing a steak on occasion. But arriving at that happy medium wasn't as straightforward as it sounds. In the three years we've been together, several turns of events have made both of us rethink our choices and decide that eating meat selectively is better for the planet and our own health. And judging by the conversations we've had with friends and acquaintances, we're not the only ones who believe this to be true.
For Andrew and about a dozen people in our circle who have recently converted from vegetarianism, eating sustainable meat purchased from small farmers is a new form of activism—a way of striking a blow against the factory farming of livestock that books like Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilemmadescribe so damningly. Pollan extols the virtues of independent, small-scale food producers who raise pasture-fed livestock in a sustainable and ethical manner. In contrast, he provides a compelling critique of factory farms, which cram thousands of cows, pigs or chickens into rows of cages in warehouses, feed them drugs to plump up their meat and fight off the illnesses caused by these inhumane conditions, and produce innumerable tons of environmentally destructive animal waste.
The terms "grass fed" and "pasture raised"—meaning that an animal was allowed to graze the old-fashioned way instead of being fed an unnatural and difficult-to-digest diet of mostly corn and other grain—have now entered the food-shoppers' lexicon. But Andrew and I didn't fully understand what those phrases meant until we got to know Greg Nauta of Rocky Canyon Farms. Nauta is a small-scale rancher and farmer from Atascadero, California, who grows organic vegetables and raises about 35 animals on pastureland. Since we met him at the Hollywood Farmers' Market a year ago, it has become even clearer to us that supporting guys like him—by seeking out and paying a premium for sustainably raised meat—is the right thing for us to do.
Nauta's cattle graze on 200 leased acres of pasture in central California and are fed the leftover vegetables and fruits he grows that don't sell at the farmers' market, supplemented by locally grown barley grain on occasion. "That's dessert," he says of the barley, "not a main course. That would be like us eating ice cream every day."
Three times a week, Nauta loads his truck full of coolers stocked with cattleman's steaks and handmade pork sausages and drives to the Los Angeles–area farmers' markets. Selling his vegetables and meat directly to conscientious eaters, people to whom he talks weekly about rainfall averages and organic produce, Nauta says, is "the best way small guys like me can compete." In the past several months, Nauta has noticed a handful of curious vegetarians, like Andrew, wandering over to his booth to ask questions. And they're satisfied enough with the answers to give his meat a try—and come back for more.
If preserving small-scale farming isn't a compelling enough reason to eat beef or pork, consider the nutritional advantages grass-fed meat has over the factory-fed kind. "One of the benefits of all-grass-fed beef, or 'beef with benefits,' as we say, is that it's lower in fat than conventionally raised beef," says Kate Clancy, who studies nutrition and sustainable agriculture and was until recently the senior scientist at the nonprofit Union of Concerned Scientists. "The other thing is that the meat and milk from grass-fed cattle will probably have higher amounts of omega-3 fatty acids, which may help reduce the risk of heart disease and strengthen people's immune systems. What's good for the environment, what's good for cattle, is also good for us."
Combine these findings with the questions being raised about meat replacements derived from soy and wheat gluten, and the real thing seems better by the minute. "What we know about soy is that as you process it, you lose a lot of the benefits," says Ashley Koff, a Los Angeles–based registered dietician. "Any soy-based fake meat product is incredibly processed, and you have to use chemicals to get the mock flavor. Any other whole-food diet is going to be a lot better for you." Vegetarians like Andrew—he once brought a tofu sandwich to a famous Texas barbecue restaurant—may now have a harder time justifying their "healthier" dietary choices.
Former vegetarians are some of the most outspoken proponents of eating meat. "I was vegan for 16 years, and I truly believed I was doing the right thing for my health," says the actress and model Mariel Hemingway, who is the author of Healthy Living from the Inside Out. "But when I was vegan, I was super-weak. I love animals, and we should not support anything but ethical ranching, but when I eat meat, I feel more grounded. I have more energy."
Even chef Mollie Katzen, author of the vegetarian bible the Moosewood Cookbook, is experimenting with meat again. "For about 30 years I didn't eat meat at all, just a bite of fish every once in a while, and always some dairy," she says. "Lately, I've been eating a little meat. People say, 'Ha, ha, Mollie Katzen is eating steak.' But now that cleaner, naturally fed meat is available, it's a great option for anyone who's looking to complete his diet. Somehow, it got ascribed to me that I don't want people to eat meat. I've just wanted to supply possibilities that were low on the food chain."
Recently, when responding to the invitation to her high-school reunion, Katzen had to make a choice between the vegetarian and the conventional meal. She checked the nonvegetarian box. "The people who requested the vegetarian meal got fettuccine Alfredo," she says. "It's a bowl full of flour and butterfat. I'd much rather have vegetables and grains and a few bites of chicken."
For Andrew and many of our ex-vegetarian friends, the ethical reasons for eating meat, combined with the health-related ones, have been impossible to deny. "The way I see it, you've got three opportunities every day to act on your values and have an immediate effect on something you're concerned about," Andrew says. "You're probably worried about Darfur, too, but what can you do about that every single day? Write a letter? It doesn't have the same kind of impact."
Supporting ranchers we believe in, and the stores and restaurants that sell their products, has a very tangible impact that we experience firsthand all the time. But ask most vegetarians if the battle between small, sustainable ranchers and industrial farming is at the top of their list of concerns about eating meat, and you'll probably be met with a blank stare. "For people who are against eating meat because it's wrong or offensive to eat animals, even the cleanest grass-fed beef won't be good enough," Katzen says.
Convincing those people that eating meat can improve the welfare of the entire livestock population is a tough sell. But we'll keep trying. What we've discovered is that you can hover pretty close to the bottom of the food chain and still make a difference, quietly. We've found a healthy balance somewhere between the two extremes—which, come to think of it, is also a good way to approach a marriage.
Christine Lennon is a freelance writer in Los Angeles who regularly contributes to InStyle and Time.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Horrible Food Photography

Royal Farms has the worst food photography. It looks fake and unappetizing, but maybe they have the worst food as well.

Scorpion Delight

I looked up "gross food" on google search just to see what I could find. I think it's from a TV show called "Taboo". I couldn't find out what it is other then scorpions. The thing that is most noticeably odd is how lovely the presentation of the food is, but it's garnished with  scorpions...ewww!

http://documentarystorm.com/gross-food/