Sunday, January 31, 2010

Four months or so coming!


Way back in September, Jolene and I made a nighttime trip to Goodsell. We were thinking about doing an astronomy project together and decided to refresh our memories on the telescopes by imaging something cool!

We decided on M-27, the Dumbbell Nebula. M-27 is a planetary nebula in the constellation Vulpecula, near Cygnus the Swan. It was a good one to image that night because it was high in the sky, so its light would have to pass through the least atmosphere to reach our telescope.

Anyway, we hauled the telescope (an 8-inch Meade reflector) out to the launch pad, focused the camera, and then directed the telescope over to M-27!

We were using a CCD camera with red, blue, and green filters, and with each filter (plus with a clear filter) we took ten or so 40-second exposures of M-27.



All of that was back in September! Just yesterday when I was down visiting Carleton, Jolene and I finally got around to processing our images! We aligned them all (because over the course of our imaging, M-27 moved slightly in the sky more than our telescope was compensating for, so the stars showed up in different places), and then we stacked them (because otherwise it would be much too dim)! Then, in photo-shop we channel-mixed the red, blue, and green images and added the clear as a luminance layer to get the final image above!

love, Jimmy

Monday, January 25, 2010

For my roots

For about three weeks now, I've been hanging out all over the Northern Clay Center throwing pots, trimming feet, pulling handles, and generally potting around. I've been way more prolific than I really expected to be, and this is exciting but also slightly daunting when I think about what glazing them will be like, and then about what I will do with them once I get them home.

But for now, they're all still just greenware! YAY!!!!

Actually, some of them have started to come back bisqued.. whatever, I am ignoring them for the time being.

More will be coming, but here are a few highlights of pottery so far:

On the first night of class, I threw just a few things, but it felt so good to be back on the wheel!


The next week, I trimmed on feet and added mug-handles. These are my two batter bowls, and a little mug.

Big mug!

I've always wanted to throw those lovely round pots with tiny long bottle necks. My first attempt of the year ended in a flopped-over neck that didn't look quite like I intended (this is the pot on the left). But when I added the two handles, I was really happy with it. The back handle is like a bird's wing, and the front handle is a ram's horn.

Adding a spout! This bowl was a little too dry to really be doing this, but I risked it. Maybe it will fall off in the kiln.

Pots with holes. The sphereish one is going to house a candle, and its base is right next to it in the picture. The baby vase in back grew a hole when I fluted it, so I just started carving holes in the other flutes and all was well!


love, Jimmy

Thursday, January 21, 2010

A slightly random project

A couple of weeks ago now, I made for dinner some egg-drop soup. I'd always loved eating egg-drop soup, and it seemed such a very bizarre thing to me that I really wanted to know how to make it myself.

So I googled a recipe, and on the night when Momo made fried rice and cashew chicken, I set to work on my egg-drop soup!

It was actually really simple. I substituted vegetable broth for chicken broth, and I heated it up, adding ginger, salt, and chives, and while it was working its way to a boil, I beat the egg mixture and got ready to drop it.

Dropping the egg was definitely the best part. The broth was boiling, and I kind of scooped bits of egg into it using a fork. The fork lay the egg down in long strings that instantly cooked when they hit the broth. They just sort of crystallized from translucent invisibility to being opaquely white!

I encountered a problem in that, by the time I'd added about half my egg, the egg I'd already added was staying near the surface of the broth and was clinging on to the new egg I added. This made for some clumping, which was sad, but the chunks broke apart pretty easily when I stirred.

The soup was a little bit salty, but really very good. : ) Next time I will decrease the salt and work to somehow stop the eggs from sticking to each other. Maybe if I have more of a constant stir going, that will keep the dropped egg fibers sliding right on past one another.

love, Jimmy

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Plastic Mænad

Planning out

When I saw Julia over her Thanksgiving break, at the very start of my winter one, we decided that when she came home at Christmas, we would make a public sculptural installation somewhere. I told her I'd really love to do something that involved stringing yarn between trees, and Julia, the art-person, consented.

We met up again before Christmas in order to plan our sculpture. We really liked the idea of things hanging off of the between-trees yarn and blowing in the wind. So our starting place was "wind."

We toyed with ideas like stringing cut-out letters on the yarn to spell out words, and we were going to put bells on there that chimed when they blew around. We ended up though, deciding to begin with Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ode to the West Wind."

I got caught up in this poem in the Biblical imagery and idea of poetic power. Julia saw a different pattern: of destruction and subsequent re-creation from the destroyed parts. This pattern is what our sculpture is about.

Getting the things ready for

Last Thursday, Julia and I met to build the thing! I'd been collecting old recycling for a couple of weeks, and Julia had procured some yarn to use. The first step was to cut some holes in some recycling (the created things) so we could hang them up.

Then, we took some more recycled things and had to destroy them (so these were the destroyed things). We poked holes in them too and put yarn through so we could tie them up later.

The last set of things we needed were the re-created things. So we destroyed some more recyclables and used the pieces to build a face. We decided the face should be the maenad mentioned in the poem.

Installing of

So then we drove out to Parker's Lake where we'd decided to install it. It was 10 degrees outside, plus some ridiculous wind-chill, plus we were right next to a lake. It was super cold.

First we picked out two trees and strung up some yarn in between them. But then we had to tie all of the pieces onto the yarn. The thing was, we were wearing thick gloves and were trying to tie knots with thin (and sometimes really short) pieces of yarn! A few of them we managed to get tied on, but most of them we had to quick take off our gloves, tie the knots, and then put our gloves back on.

We were soon ridiculously cold but we were having so much fun! After finishing two of the panels, we went back to my car and warmed up for a while. With our morale back up, we finished the sculpture and took some pictures. YAY!!!


Here is the maenad in the wind:


Julia and I wrote out an artist statement that we posted on the side of the sculpture. Here it is:

Plastic Mænad

This project is based on Percy Bysshe Shelley’s poem “Ode to the West Wind.” The poem explores the destructive but ultimately re-creative power of the wind. The wind itself is a force of nature, but it also represents the power of artistic inspiration. In this project, we have attempted to show the cycle between creation, destruction, and re-creation.


We decided to use recyclable materials in our sculpture because this re-creative cycle is mirrored in the process of recycling. The bottom panel shows objects that might be thrown into a recycling bin. In the center panel, these objects have been destroyed, which is an essential step in the recycling process. In the topmost panel, these fragments have been reconstructed into a new form, reflecting the Mænad in the second stanza of Shelley’s poem. The image of the colossal Mænad in the sky is connected to the extreme power of the wind.


On the blue surface of thine airy surge,

Like the bright hair uplifted from the head


Of some fierce Mænad, even from the dim verge

Of the horizon to the zenith's height,

The locks of the approaching storm.


Lines 19-23 of Shelley’s poem “Ode to the West Wind


Returning to

Tonight after pottery class, I drove to Parker's Lake to see how the sculpture was holding up or even if it still was there. It's been six days since we installed it.

It's still there! Yay!!! Indeed though, it's looking quite ratty! Several of the yarn-pieces had twisted together so that it looked less like a web than it used to. The maenad's face was also wrapped weirdly with yarn so that she was looking down at the snow. Other hanging pieces had slid themselves along the yarn to one side or the other. I found one bottle halfway around the tree!

There wasn't any wind, so at the moment it all was still, but I'm sure it was the wind that twisted the yarn. I untwisted some of it but didn't work too hard, because it should probably be left to the elements anyway. I'm thinking I'll leave it up for another week or so and then come take it down. I'm so happy how this project has gone. : )

love, Jimmy


Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Word-clouds!

Kathy Evertz is the director of the Academic Support Center at Carleton, so when I was working as a writing tutor this fall, I spent some time with her. Now more than once when I was listening to Kathy in a meeting, she pulled up one of those word-clouds on the screen. Word-clouds are those things that display the most frequently-used words in a document and show more-frequently-used words in bigger font. She made word clouds of student comments about tutors and of advice for tutors, thereby demonstrating to us the essentials of what the comments and advice contained.

Anyway, I thought these were kind of silly!

But then a couple of months ago I came across this lovely website that makes word-clouds, and I started making them all over the place. I made a word-cloud of my cow-jumping-over-the-moon story (most-used words were "Vegetable-ears" [75], "moon" [73], and "barn" [48]), of the paper I was writing for class ("letter" [56], "Sara" [47], and "Coleridge" [45]), and of Book 1 of Paradise Lost ("thir" [66], "heav'n" [33], and "hell" and "gods" [16].

Here is a word-cloud of this blog:


created at TagCrowd.com





It seems that I "really" enjoy "pictures" of "knitting" "yarn..." Really, an inordinate amount of fiber-arts terms made it on here! I guess I'm not really surprised by this though!Because they are fun, here are a couple of more word-clouds!


The All-Campus E-mail from November 9, 2009:
created at TagCrowd.com


The Declaration of Independence:


created at TagCrowd.com

This awesome news article:



created at TagCrowd.com


I've been knitting and knitting the last few days - I'm going down to Carleton this weekend and would love to have everything done by then!

Tomorrow I start my pottery class at the Northern Clay Center, and on Thursday, Julia and I are installing our sculpture at Parker's Lake!!

love, Jimmy

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Spun out

Happy new year, everyone! I'll start off with that.

Last night, I was at Noel's house with Justin and Meridel, and we rosed, budded, and thorned a reflection of 2009.

Last year included so many brilliant, beautiful, and happy things, and also a lot of horrible things. But then I suppose the point of rose-bud-thorn is that, like Meridel said last night, the thorns end up sometimes changing their mind and turning roses for the next year. They are places to look for buds in.

I spent New Year's with my sister and her friends Erica and Jenny. There was talk early in the evening (that is, Carrie Paulette, around 9:30 PM) of going to a masquerade ball. This didn't end up panning out, but Erica did have the supplies to make polymer-clay masks! That was an unexpected and unfamiliar project for me. The mask I made ended up being a little too brittle to be practical, but then it was the first time I'd used polymer clay in years, and never had I tried to make something wearable out of it before.



I finished spinning my first ball of yarn! On December 27th, I worked hard to finish first the spinning and then the plying of the whole batch of roving. Plying means spinning two already-spun yarns together to make a thicker, stronger yarn. You ply the yarns with an opposite twist to the twist with which you spin the two component yarns, so the two twist directions neutralize each other and give you a yarn that doesn't crazily curl!

Once I'd plied my yarn, I needed to wind it on the back of a chair, measure it, and tie the skein. Then, I washed the skein in just a tiny bit of detergent and water, which set the twist of the yarn so that it wouldn't unravel when I released the tension on it.

Then, Momo, Dad, and I left to Kansas while my yarn dried. I returned on December 31 at 5AM and wound this ball. Yay!!! I'm pleased and super excited to try knitting with it! Right now, I'm thinking about doing a hat with it.

In other knitting news, the other day Laura modeled the leg-warmers I'd knitting for her so that I could awkwardly take pictures of her wearing them. I inserted these into the pattern I'd written, and then I posted it.

Once I'd uploaded the pattern, I submitted it officially to Ravelry, and so now the pattern shows up on my Ravelry profile as one of my "featured designs." This is really exciting for me! I'd really like to continue writing patterns and hopefully doing something that somebody will enjoy.



During 2008, my big project was Picture of the Day. I took pictures each day of anything significant, and at the end of each day I chose one picture to represent the day. I had artistic pictures, goofy pictures, and pictures of things significant that had happened. Anyway, I put these all together in a folder and labled it the Pictures of the Days. In 2009 I didn't do this anymore and took correspondingly less pictures. But since January 1st, 2008 my camera is basically perpetually in my pocket.

I missed Picture of the Day last year. So this year, I'm starting it up again. Here's my Picture of the Day for January 1st, 2010:


It's Noel doing the dance from Bride and Prejudice. YAY!!!!

love, Jimmy