Sunday, May 30, 2010
Girl's Weekend
So my fabulous friend Ila is soon to be officially married. I say officially because I'm not sure how much will change since she and her fiance always seemed married to me. Anyway, this weekend we celebrated her last all-girl outing as an unmarried woman. It was perfectly classy, relaxing, and quite enjoyable to say the least. There was amazing food, fabulous conversation, and Ila did not get alcohol poisoning so I would call this weekend a success.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Update: Weeks 2-6 Elements of Design II Projects
So my elements of design class has been a huge struggle this quarter. It's really tested my creativity and pretty much confirmed I lack a lot of it. But luckily work can always be re-submitted so thankfully I won't be failing this class. Case in point, week 2's project below. So after planing with those folded notecards put together from week 1, we were to add a secondary material to our "sculpture." So I thought paperclips would be fun. Apparently not. I thought it looked okay at first but then class proved that I could have chosen something better. It just didn't go with the sculpture right.
So I went home after class about to cry and thought about it some more. Then I came up with jacks as a secondary material and it turned out soooo much better. I'm really excited because went I went to Target to find jacks, I thought I wouldn't be able to find them and then I was surely screwed but luckily I found some in the party section and they were perfect because they were all the same color.
So week 3 was to create a drawing of the sculpture with the secondary material. We could do it any way we wanted as long as it tied to our project. I knewww everyone in our class would go abstract (and I was practically correct) but I'm really not an abstract sort of person so I went with a literal translation and my teacher loved it. It's graphite pencil with gauche (paint) on bristol paper. So that made me happy.
For the week after our homework was to create a 3D cube and tetrahedron. Yeah, I was like wth is a tetrahedron as well. Well, a cube is a six sided square so then a tetrahedron is a four sided triangle (ohhhh). Then the week after we were to create two sculptures using one piece of paper and making cuts and folds to it but no pieces of paper were to be removed or added. So essentially I should be able to undo-it and it would go back to one piece of paper. So this is what I came up with.
My second sculpture was not good so I'm not posting it. It was ok but needed help. I think I'm abandoning it so I'll have to redo it sometime this week. But this is what I'll be using for my final project. Last week we turned in a few sketch ideas for our final and someone suggested what will be my final project but for now it'll be a secret. I'll be honest and say that I'm only sort of excited for it. It's not a chandelier, and as cool as that would be, a few other people are doing chandeliers and no one's doing what I'm doing (not to say no one ever has so don't get too excited). Oh I can probably say what the final is supposed to be, it's a model based off our sculpture. Most people turn it into a building or a sculpture for a park and make a model out of foam board but I'm doing something a little different. No foam board for me. Guess I should get excited for it (I sort of am but I have "it's almost summer even though I'll have summer school"-itis)
So I went home after class about to cry and thought about it some more. Then I came up with jacks as a secondary material and it turned out soooo much better. I'm really excited because went I went to Target to find jacks, I thought I wouldn't be able to find them and then I was surely screwed but luckily I found some in the party section and they were perfect because they were all the same color.
So week 3 was to create a drawing of the sculpture with the secondary material. We could do it any way we wanted as long as it tied to our project. I knewww everyone in our class would go abstract (and I was practically correct) but I'm really not an abstract sort of person so I went with a literal translation and my teacher loved it. It's graphite pencil with gauche (paint) on bristol paper. So that made me happy.
For the week after our homework was to create a 3D cube and tetrahedron. Yeah, I was like wth is a tetrahedron as well. Well, a cube is a six sided square so then a tetrahedron is a four sided triangle (ohhhh). Then the week after we were to create two sculptures using one piece of paper and making cuts and folds to it but no pieces of paper were to be removed or added. So essentially I should be able to undo-it and it would go back to one piece of paper. So this is what I came up with.
My second sculpture was not good so I'm not posting it. It was ok but needed help. I think I'm abandoning it so I'll have to redo it sometime this week. But this is what I'll be using for my final project. Last week we turned in a few sketch ideas for our final and someone suggested what will be my final project but for now it'll be a secret. I'll be honest and say that I'm only sort of excited for it. It's not a chandelier, and as cool as that would be, a few other people are doing chandeliers and no one's doing what I'm doing (not to say no one ever has so don't get too excited). Oh I can probably say what the final is supposed to be, it's a model based off our sculpture. Most people turn it into a building or a sculpture for a park and make a model out of foam board but I'm doing something a little different. No foam board for me. Guess I should get excited for it (I sort of am but I have "it's almost summer even though I'll have summer school"-itis)
Update: Weeks 2-6 Design Communication Projects
I've been bad at updating on my projects and it's already Week 7, more than halfway through my classes! I've been so busy with them and traveling to Chicago that it's always hard for me to remember to update. It'd be easier if O'hare would just have free wifi since I'm always burning time there anyway but oh well. My last update was pretty much after my first week and nothing interesting was going on in regards to what the class was really about. It's essentially a drafting class "communicating" our "designs." How clever eh? Below are a few pictures of my work. I'll spare you the detail but I'm pretty proud of my work. It focuses more on quality than quantity in elaborate design. And with that thought, I've done really well in the class. Even when I thought OK well here was Week 2: Elevation. Meaning 2D, no perspective, no dimension, just flat. Not bad eh?Then came Week 3: Plan and Elevation. The plan is an overhead view, what you'd see when you want a "layout" of a room. That's actually my bathroom. I have a small bathroom.
Week 4 we killed some peppers. They were red. We had to use peppers to create an orthographic projection and well as explore light logic (shading in regards to light). An orthographic projection starts with the overhead view and then "projects" the side view straight down (See left page). The right page is an orthographic projection of a section of the pepper, both horizontal (top) and vertical (bottom).
Week 5 we started perspective drawing with some exercises not pictured because they're even more uninteresting than you already may find this but this is my blog and not yours. =) Week 6 (pictured below) we started gettin' interesting. It's a one perspective room so unlike elevation, it shows objects in 3D converging at one point in the center.
Decent right? Well this week will be a nice refresher as the next two weeks will be spent on one project with is essentially an accumulation of what we've learned to date using either a bathroom, kitchen, or bedroom. I'm going with the bedroom so hopefully in two weeks I won't have killed myself. It seems I get a bit tired by week 6 and at the same time it gets more difficult...
Next post: Weeks 2-6 of Elements of Design II
Week 4 we killed some peppers. They were red. We had to use peppers to create an orthographic projection and well as explore light logic (shading in regards to light). An orthographic projection starts with the overhead view and then "projects" the side view straight down (See left page). The right page is an orthographic projection of a section of the pepper, both horizontal (top) and vertical (bottom).
Week 5 we started perspective drawing with some exercises not pictured because they're even more uninteresting than you already may find this but this is my blog and not yours. =) Week 6 (pictured below) we started gettin' interesting. It's a one perspective room so unlike elevation, it shows objects in 3D converging at one point in the center.
Decent right? Well this week will be a nice refresher as the next two weeks will be spent on one project with is essentially an accumulation of what we've learned to date using either a bathroom, kitchen, or bedroom. I'm going with the bedroom so hopefully in two weeks I won't have killed myself. It seems I get a bit tired by week 6 and at the same time it gets more difficult...
Next post: Weeks 2-6 of Elements of Design II
Monday, May 10, 2010
Reasons Boyfriend is Awesome
He gives me tips on how to give my number to guys at bars.
Me: If I actually give my number to a guy at a bar, I'd just give him my google voice number. And if the guy calls it right away, I can just say that my phone is a work phone and he has to call that number to get redirected to me so my work won't find out.
Boyfriend: Just make sure you don't tell him in the beginning that you don't have a job.
Glad boyfriend looks out for me.
Me: If I actually give my number to a guy at a bar, I'd just give him my google voice number. And if the guy calls it right away, I can just say that my phone is a work phone and he has to call that number to get redirected to me so my work won't find out.
Boyfriend: Just make sure you don't tell him in the beginning that you don't have a job.
Glad boyfriend looks out for me.
Monday, May 3, 2010
SF/Sonoma Wedding Weekend (Part 2) - What I Ate
One of the best things about vacations, and just life in general, is eating. Sometimes I look at my pup who constantly wants to eat and I wonder how it is that she is always at my feet flashing those sad puppy dog eyes at me hoping I'll give in and share. And then I realize maybe she gets it from me since I feel like I'm always hungry or at least down to eat. Anyway, the morning after the amazing rehearsal dinner (wish I had gotten pictures), we decided to go to a cute little cafe in Santa Rosa that we had found on yelp, Dierk's Parkside Cafe. It definitely lived up to its four star rating. We got there around 10am and it was crowded but getting a table for six only took about ten minutes which was really great. We sat down and started with waters, coffees, and soju bloody mary's. Boyfriend got the smoked salmon egg tart pictured below with smoked salmon, mushrooms, tomatoes, and herbs in puff pastry shell. Totally delish and not as heavy as I thought it would be when I sampled a bit (this is why I stay in a relationship[jk babe!], the sharing of dishes).
I got the country benedict. I love a good eggs benedict and it's really hard for me to resist ordering it when I come across it on a menu. The benedict consisted of a warm crispy baguette covered with scrambled eggs, bacon, mushrooms, spinach, oven-dried tomatoes, hash browns and hollandaise sauce. Sooo good and a bit heavy but totally worth it. And the strawberry was huge and amazingly sweet.
After brunch we went wine tasting and then to downtown Healdsburg to wander about. We decided to get a bit of lunch before heading back to the hotel to get ready for the wedding. It was such a beautiful day we decided on Healdsburg Bar and Grill since it had a patio for us to enjoy the sun (hence the dark shadowy pictures). We weren't too hungry so Boyfriend said he'd share with me. We went with the "very adult" mac n’ cheese with fiscalini cheddar, parmigiano-reggiano, bacon, dijon and chives and mixed greens. Umm I think I almost died it was sooo good.
We also ordered a basket of fries with truffle oil and parmigiano-reggiano and a side of horseradish. I'm not too huge on horseradish but this was very mild. Everyone else thought they could go step it up on the horseradish but they're bigger fans of it than me. And well truffle oil goes amazing on everything. The fries themselves were perfectly crispy... mmMm...
I failed to get pictures of the rest of the Sonoma trip but back in SF my big sis and I decided to try some Burmese food since it was on 7X7's 100 things to eat before you die list. I was a little hesitant at first seeing as how I barely know where Burma (Myanmar?) even is. But how glad was I? Answer: really glad. We went for lunch as I hear it gets ridiculously busy for dinner. We had the server recommend a few things and tried their famous dish. To start we had the tea leaf salad. It was sooo delicious with amazing flavors. Definitely my favorite of the day.
Next up was the infamous Samusa soup. It's vegetarian but was still very hearty and yummy.
Finally, we went with the Nan Gyi Gok which was a mild coconut chicken curry noodle dish. Yummy but not as curry coconut-ty as I had hoped.
I got the country benedict. I love a good eggs benedict and it's really hard for me to resist ordering it when I come across it on a menu. The benedict consisted of a warm crispy baguette covered with scrambled eggs, bacon, mushrooms, spinach, oven-dried tomatoes, hash browns and hollandaise sauce. Sooo good and a bit heavy but totally worth it. And the strawberry was huge and amazingly sweet.
After brunch we went wine tasting and then to downtown Healdsburg to wander about. We decided to get a bit of lunch before heading back to the hotel to get ready for the wedding. It was such a beautiful day we decided on Healdsburg Bar and Grill since it had a patio for us to enjoy the sun (hence the dark shadowy pictures). We weren't too hungry so Boyfriend said he'd share with me. We went with the "very adult" mac n’ cheese with fiscalini cheddar, parmigiano-reggiano, bacon, dijon and chives and mixed greens. Umm I think I almost died it was sooo good.
We also ordered a basket of fries with truffle oil and parmigiano-reggiano and a side of horseradish. I'm not too huge on horseradish but this was very mild. Everyone else thought they could go step it up on the horseradish but they're bigger fans of it than me. And well truffle oil goes amazing on everything. The fries themselves were perfectly crispy... mmMm...
I failed to get pictures of the rest of the Sonoma trip but back in SF my big sis and I decided to try some Burmese food since it was on 7X7's 100 things to eat before you die list. I was a little hesitant at first seeing as how I barely know where Burma (Myanmar?) even is. But how glad was I? Answer: really glad. We went for lunch as I hear it gets ridiculously busy for dinner. We had the server recommend a few things and tried their famous dish. To start we had the tea leaf salad. It was sooo delicious with amazing flavors. Definitely my favorite of the day.
Next up was the infamous Samusa soup. It's vegetarian but was still very hearty and yummy.
Finally, we went with the Nan Gyi Gok which was a mild coconut chicken curry noodle dish. Yummy but not as curry coconut-ty as I had hoped.
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