dailyish photo: my mixing bowls

My mixing bowls, from the outside in: The big yellow bowl was purchased during the summer I worked in the costume shop of the Santa Fe Opera during college. My roommate and I bought this on a trip to Target when we realized we needed popcorn, booze and warm blankets to make it through the summer. The dry air and cold nights there resulted in me getting strep throat for the first time in my life. We didn't have a television in our apartment and I couldn't afford a computer so my roommate bought me one of those black and white flocked posters that come with markers for you to fill in, you can still find them in drug stores. It was a stained glass window, or something. I was so bored I spent hours trying to figure out how to fill it in so that none of the colors would be next to one another. I also read The Mists of Avalon. Twice. The two largest orange bowls were purchased the second year that Scott and I lived in Seattle, when we rented a house in Ballard. It is a short walk away from where Delancey opened up after we moved away, how I wish we still lived there. It was a three-bowl set from Williams-Sonoma and buying them was one of those "I'm finally a grown up!" moments for me. After only a few weeks I broke the smallest bowl in the set, my favorite one, when I dropped it while doing dishes. It cracked right in half. Which make me feel not so much a grown up. The rubber feet on these bowls are light blue, a detail which I adore. The medium orange bowl was purchased earlier this year at a Ross that opened in my neighborhood. The Ross was clean but shockingly sparse, more like mostly empty Goodwill. It was incredibly depressing and a bit disorienting. Suddenly there was this shiny orange melamine bowl looking like it was waiting just for me. Then I found a second shiny orange bowl a little further down on the shelf. They are just about the size of the bowl I broke, so I bought both. The smallest four (orange, green, yellow, blue) were a birthday present from Scott last year and they make for very happy prep. The blue one is so cute and petite, it's smaller than a teacup, that I find myself just holding it because I find it so pleasing. Scott bought them at the Moma store while he was in New York with Kirby Krackle. He also visited Mood during that trip simply so that he could snap a picture for me. I wasn't jealous at all.

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Project Runway, HP computers and me and Scott.

To celebrate their collaboration with Project Runway [1] for season 9 HP invited me to take on a few of the episode challenges, at least in digital sketch form. I'm a huge fan of the show and have watched every single season so I was super happy to be part of this partnership. The lovely people at HP sent me a TouchSmart [2] computer to use for the virtual creations. Project Runway very well might be my version of watching professional sports so this whole thing is sort of overwhelming. Quick background: I entered college to study costume design where I learned that I really wasn't that good at it. After college I stumbled into building websites and discovered that being able to pay rent is awfully nice. Somewhere in there I started this site and these days pretty much only use Photoshop to resize the pictures of stuff [3] I've made out of meat [4]. Scott, on the other hand, studied actual graphic design before being hired away to work on the web. He continues to design album covers and band posters for his various awesome music projects [5]. He knows how to use Illustrator and send things to fancy print shops. Which is why when Scott declared he would like to also play along with the Project Runway challenges that I began to feel a bit intimidated. He is so much better at this stuff than I am. The set up: In the first episode [6] of this season the Project Runway contestants were woken up early, told to grab a sheet off their bed and hustled out of their apartments still in their pajamas. They headed (actually, walked through the streets of New York!) to the workroom where they discovered that their first challenge was to create an outfit from the pajamas they were wearing and the sheet they were carrying. (Is this your new worst nightmare? Because it's way up there among mine.) Happily for everybody involved they were given scrubs to change in to. They were also given the option of using fabric dyes. Also, scrubs look really comfy. At this point I paused Tivo and Scott and I agreed we'd have to incorporate what we were wearing at that very moment in to our designs. We were wearing very boring stuff. I had on a white jersey tank top and loose fitting black jersey workout pants from Old Navy (meaning, really, pajama pants). Scott was wearing a black t-shirt and jeans. I wish I'd been wearing something lacy or at least patterned. (Did you see what the winner did using his boxer shorts [7]?) I also gave myself the rule that once I got started sketching something I wouldn't be able to back down. It only seemed fair. This might have been folly on my part. Here is my design: Here is how I fantasize, in the style of the Project Project Runway [8] girls, that this would have gone down: I took apart my white tank top at the seams and dyed half fuchsia and the other half a bright green. Both turned out more neon than I intended but I forged ahead. I turned them into a tight fitting top using the black jersey from my pants to create a collar, center stripe and hem. At this point Tim Gunn came around and showed a lot of concern when I admitted I hadn't thought about what I was going to do for the bottom piece. I freaked out. Since everybody else appeared to be making smaller garments I decided to make a long flowy skirt and dyed bits of my sheet black, pink and green. Tragically the sheet color didn't match jersey very well so I decided to keep the sheet fabric as far away from the top as possible. I constructed a skirt with vertical black stripes and blocks of color at the bottom. In the middle of sewing long seams I was called in to give a workroom interview where I shakily admitted to the cameras that I was worried about my idea but it was too late to start over. I was only half finished sewing the skirt just as the end of the night was called. On the way out I contemplated scrapping the skirt altogether and making a mini out of my remaining fabric instead. (Seriously, in real life I went to bed that night giving some real thought to just drawing a different skirt and wondering how much fabric I might have left over if this were, you know, reality.) It would have looked something like this: But the next morning I decided I just didn't have time and that the mini skirt would be, how to say this? Too Pretty Woman? I had to go with what I had. I spent some precious last minutes uselessly fretting towards the cameras and nearly forgot about accessories. I dramatically grabbed a pair of strappy heels for my model as she was leaving the room. Here is Scott's design: Scott [9] created a fitted shell from part of the sheet he had dyed gray and appliqued strips of the black t-shirt to create asymmetrical stripes. He dyed the rest of the sheet a melon color, it turned out a bit more muted than he intended but decided to work with it. Lastly he deconstructed his jeans to turn into a cropped jacket with short sleeves. Scott remained fairly calm in the work room and when Tim Gunn came around he had everything ready to show, the jacket wasn't finished but it was pinned to the form so Tim could see the outfit emerging. Scott worked quietly and the cameramen were unable to even get a shot of him that could later be edited into something that could be interpreted as "looking disdainfully at other people's work". During his workroom interview the producers weren't able to get him to criticize anybody else so none of the footage was used. He worked carefully and had enough time to fit the pants well and finish the seams in the denim nicely. He decided to only accessorize with shoes. Judging was swift. (We're still in fantasy mode here, just in case you started reading somewhere in the middle.) I was in the bottom three, Scott was in the top three. My vision and taste level were questioned, I tried to explain that I had run out of time but was reminded that being decisive is part of the competition. Heidi didn't absolutely hate the top, Nina had that expression she gets, Michael Kors generously pointed out that I had at least attempted something sweeping, Nina Ricci said something vaguely complementary but ultimately unswaying. I barely managed to stay on until next week and groveled to the judges. I later showed an insincere amount of concern for the loser before Tim Gunn had to come and tell them it was time to leave. Whew. Scott didn't win but showed pleasant surprise that his first outfit for Project Runway was so well received and heartily congratulated the winner. The end. Scott also sent me this, his first idea that he feared might be taking the challenge a bit too literally: I used ArtRage to create my outfit, it's a painting program that allows one to use the touch screen on the HP TouchSmart and tablet computers. I fiddled with the settings as I was using it, thus the pencil strokes in one of my drawings is very different from the other (which is to say, entirely my own doing). I started off making my own fashion croquis, a figure drawing template that is based on nine heads of height. (Or rather for models, real humans are usually drawn seven heads tall. For me? Six.) I got as far as you see above before outright cheating and finding a few croquis templates here [10] which I could trace. I shared the templates with Scott too, so I guess it wasn't really cheating. Right? Right. Anyhow, this time around I used the pencil setting in ArtRage because it reminded me of all the Prismacolor pencils of my past. Next time I think I'm going to try to work with the art marker option. It was different to draw right on a screen, and fun, but I could definitely use more practice. Some thoughts about the HP TouchSmart [2]: It's really fun to have a huge, bright screen in my office. I bought my last laptop based on it's portability and weight (under 3 pounds) so the screen on it is pretty darn small. In comparison the TouchSmart screen feels like a huge upgrade. One of the most fun discoveries was that I could play Crayon Physics Deluxe [12] using the touch screen. You can play Crayon Physics without a touch screen, in fact I bought it before the TouchSmart made it's way into this house, but the game is extra fun to play by drawing things on a huge screen with your finger. It's currently my very favorite thing. For serious like. (FYI: I originally bought the game as part of the Humble Indie Bundle 3 [13] which is five DRM-free PC/Mac/Linux indie games at a choose-your-own price, limited time, go for it now if you'd like any or all of them. This thing? It is good.) Please excuse the ick factor here: The TouchSmart screen doesn't smudge the way you might expect it to from being touched so much. I'm not quite sure how it all works but I take the same amount of care when touching the TouchSmart as I do when using my iPhone and the TouchSmart screen has remained nice and clean. The built-in webcam appears to be the most flattering I have encountered so far. I'd share screen caps but apparently I'm unable to smile and/or not roll my eyes on camera. It's something I'll work on. The touchscreen desktop comes already set up with buttons for Twitter, Netflix, Hulu, Facebook, RSS feeds, weather, a calendar you can sync with your own and a few other common things. Once you sign in to various services you're set. HP also offers a movie store that lets you flick through movies, watch previews and decide to rent or purchase right there. Now, I can watch trailers from my laptop as well but somehow the ease of the slide-y interface makes it extra appealing. I'm finding movies that I'd like to watch that I passed over when I saw them inside Netflix. There are a few other instances where a touch interface on a large screen is pretty darn cool (solitiare! photographs!) but the movie trailers are catching my attention, somebody behind the scenes is doing something right. A note: I was not financially compensated for this post. [1] http://www.mylifetime.com/shows/project-runway [2] http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/shopping/store_access.do;HHOJSID=nW1yT4GGHc...!-1752973926?template_type=computer_store&landing=desktops&a1=Category&v1=TouchSmart%20PCs&jumpid=in_R329_prodexp/hhoslp/psg/lateralnav_TouchSmart_desktops [3] http://www.notmartha.org/archives/2008/02/27/bacon-cups/ [4] http://www.notmartha.org/archives/2009/10/27/meat-hand/ [5] http://www.scottandrew.com [6] http://www.mylifetime.com/shows/project-runway/video/full-episodes [7] http://www.mylifetime.com/shows/project-runway/season-9/photos/designers/bert... [8] http://www.justcraftyenough.com/2011/07/project-project-runway-challenge-1/ [9] http://www.scottandrew.com [10] http://www.designersnexus.com/design/free-fashion-croquis-templates/female-fa... [11] http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/shopping/store_access.do;HHOJSID=nW1yT4GGHc...!-1752973926?template_type=computer_store&landing=desktops&a1=Category&v1=TouchSmart%20PCs&jumpid=in_R329_prodexp/hhoslp/psg/lateralnav_TouchSmart_desktops [12] http://www.crayonphysics.com/ [13] http://www.humblebundle.com/

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photo: sometimes I wish doing errands was more like playing video games

This is the housing for the top of the elevators and stairs on the roof of the parking garage at a Target store nearby. But all I can see is a level in Portal 2 [1]. [1] http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003O6E3C8/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=notma...

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photo: typical

It's not well known but one of the best views in Seattle is from the Observation Deck of the Columbia Tower (one of our skyscrapers). To get there you take a bank of elevators up to one floor and transfer over to another bank of elevators and, hold on, what do you find as you're walking past? A Starbucks! A Starbucks with a pretty great view. Above is one of the first views that greets you from the Observation Deck. I've circled the Space Needle in orange to show you how tiny it seems from the Columbia Tower. See? Cute. Here is the proof of the Starbucks. It's free to get up to it, by the way. To get to the observation deck you take the bank of elevators in the North Lobby to the 40th floor, pass by that Starbucks, then take those elevators to the 73rd floor. Follow the signs to the left. It's about $5 per person to get in and then you find yourself looking down at the Space Needle, which is pretty cool. The views are nearly 360 degrees and on a clear day you can see all the surroundings mountains. It's far cheaper than the Space Needle, involves a whole lot less waiting and zero souvenir photographs. (The Space Needle, though, does have glass elevators and a rotating restaurant.) It's one of my favorite places to bring visitors. And not just to show off that yes we really do have Starbucks everywhere. update: Not too long after this I found myself taking a picture of the Columbia Tower from the top of the Space Needle [1] for comparison. [1] http://www.notmartha.org/archives/2011/07/15/one-view-from-the-space-needle/

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