Monday, October 23, 2006
Friday, October 20, 2006
Monster Turd!
Your mother warned you to stay away from poo. Now you know why kiddies. Or say no and buy the game. www.bluedragon.tv
Tuesday, October 17, 2006
Sunday, October 08, 2006
Art of Japanese Lacquer
Creating Shikki is most definitely a labour of love, requiring the applying of over 20 to 30 coats of various kinds of lacquer by hand onto a wooden surface. Not only that by extreme sagely patience is needed as after each coat layer, the object is left to dry and cure in a warm place for about a week before the next layer of coat can be applied. Finally the end result is rubbed and kissed with charcoal to enhance it's luster and translucence. AND people thought raising kids was hard!
Wajima City (circled on map) has been famous for producing lacquerware for at 500 years. Located at the northern end of the Noto Peninsula facing the Japan Sea. Wajima was once a major port. The chiefs of lacquerware producers, called Nushi, travelled from there by boat to trade with wealthy merchants and farmers from around the country. In the golden age of the lacquer industry, lacquer guilds exchanged information about customers, helped improve techniques through friendly rivalries, and cultivated the nushi culture.
Wajima City also has it's own lacquerware museum, containing the most beautiful treasure of a the days gone by. Although there are many places in Japan that surpass Wajima in lacquerware sales, rest assured that the very best quality and traditional stuff can only be found in this very city. Not only that but the city probably has coolest manholes on earth! CHECK OUT THE PICS The folks certainly take their craft seriously there!
Some random japanese monster thanks you for reading!! You're now one of his friends, he will give gifts of lacquerware to you if you do the same for him!
Wednesday, October 04, 2006
Creative Insight from Dali
If you're stuck in a creative pot hole, consider some thoughts into the creative process from the great man himself. Dali understood that the method of creation in itself was something which could not be understood and the significance of what he was doing could only be perceived much later.
"One day I hollowed out entirely an end of a loaf of bread, and what do you think I put inside? I put a bronze Buddha, whose metallic surface I completely covered with dead fleas...After putting the Buddha inside the bread I closed the opening with a little piece of wood, and I cemented the whole, including the bread, sealing it hermetically in such a way as to form a homogeneous whole which looked like a little urn, on which I wrote 'Horse Jam'.
And what does this mean eh?"
Therefore according to the master, do not be afraid of the unknown or absurd. Nothing can be as stupid as doubting one's own powers of creativity which is so far away from reason and comprehension. Kiddo's, it's time to be crazy.
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Flower Explosion
May enchantment and love be in your life, always.