If you've ever wanted to see people surfing on the Great Lakes, this weekend will be a great time to do it. Lake Michigan should see waves in the 10-foot range and Lake Superior will have some 15-footers. And while Sheboygan, WI isn't positioned to see the biggest waves, it will be hosting the Dairyland Surf Classic 2010 this weekend. My guess is that many of the best Great Lakes surfers will be drawn to places with bigger waves, but the event should be fun to attend nevertheless.
Check out the wave-size forecast from NOAA's Great Lakes Coastal Forecasting system here:
Friday, September 3, 2010
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Sauk County Historical Society's photo collection now online
Shortly after I helped upload the Reedsburg Library's historic photo collection to Flickr, the Sauk County Historical Society has decided to do the same. I'm happy to see that this great image collection (of more than 30,000 photos!) is now available for public viewing. View all of their image sets here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/sauk_county_historical_society/sets/
The Historical Society's collection, which includes 6 times as many images as the Reedsburg Library's collection, includes images from Baraboo, The Army Ammunition Plant, Merrimac, Leland, Lime Ridge, Prairie Du Sac, Spring Green, Sauk City, the Al Ringling Circus, Devil's Lake, and many more places in Sauk County. Check out the above link to see more.
Also, did you know there used to be a giant water slide at Devil's Lake?? Why would they get rid of that?
See some more of my Flickr favorites here (recent favorites are mostly from the above collection).
The Historical Society's collection, which includes 6 times as many images as the Reedsburg Library's collection, includes images from Baraboo, The Army Ammunition Plant, Merrimac, Leland, Lime Ridge, Prairie Du Sac, Spring Green, Sauk City, the Al Ringling Circus, Devil's Lake, and many more places in Sauk County. Check out the above link to see more.
Also, did you know there used to be a giant water slide at Devil's Lake?? Why would they get rid of that?
See some more of my Flickr favorites here (recent favorites are mostly from the above collection).
Friday, August 13, 2010
Cleaning out the closet
I have been cleaning out my belongings from the basement and have found some treasures including my 2nd grade invention, a 'reading machean':
To summarize, I told them in hand-written detail, "for the most part, your page is pretty good," but I had some words of advice, too: (1.) "You should try to get this page on to as many search engines as possible." (2.) "You should include sports, lakes, and more fun things to do (in Reedsburg), and (3.) "Also, what good is a chat room with no people? I went there and was the only one there. You should try to publicise this chat room or hire someone to stay in it to answer peoples' questions."
Well, it appears they haven't changed the site much since I wrote those recommendations. Their listing for Reedsburg still does not include sports, lakes, or more fun things to do in Reedsburg.
These two papers I don't mind putting on the internet now, but there were also plenty of middle- and high-school writings that I would not want published on the web. My question is how can kids and teenagers publish their papers, tweets, or blogs online without being embarrassed by what they wrote 15 years later?
"My second invention would be a reading machean (the first one was a 'time mashing'). It would read to me out loud and tell me the questions to reading"I also found a letter I wrote to USACityLink.com (for a class, I assume). USA CityLink was described by 'Virtual Reference Desk' in 1997 in this way: "The USA CityLink Project is the most comprehensive United States city and state listing on the web, as well as one of the most visited sites on the Internet today. It provides users with a starting point when accessing information about US states and cities."
To summarize, I told them in hand-written detail, "for the most part, your page is pretty good," but I had some words of advice, too: (1.) "You should try to get this page on to as many search engines as possible." (2.) "You should include sports, lakes, and more fun things to do (in Reedsburg), and (3.) "Also, what good is a chat room with no people? I went there and was the only one there. You should try to publicise this chat room or hire someone to stay in it to answer peoples' questions."
Well, it appears they haven't changed the site much since I wrote those recommendations. Their listing for Reedsburg still does not include sports, lakes, or more fun things to do in Reedsburg.
These two papers I don't mind putting on the internet now, but there were also plenty of middle- and high-school writings that I would not want published on the web. My question is how can kids and teenagers publish their papers, tweets, or blogs online without being embarrassed by what they wrote 15 years later?
Sunday, July 25, 2010
Artist highlight: Tania Brun, alias Babayaga
Today I came across a blog post about an artist I have been trying to learn more about about since I first saw her work in Peru. Artist Tania Brun of Arequipa, uses the pseudonym Babayaga, a witch from Russian folklore with a wooden leg who eats children. Her artwork, which I saw printed in intricate detail on t-shirts in Lima caught my eye.
Featured in the Buenos Aires, Argentina-based zine Money In My Pocket, Babayaga describes her work (translated here):
The influences for my drawings are the Mexican engravers, especially José Guadalupe Posada, the Mexican tradition of Day of the Dead, Catholic art of the era of the Viceroyalty, but also the cultural manifestations of people here in the mountains of Peru, like the way they decorate their combi-vans and moto-taxis and also the concert posters of different cumbia groups that can be seen pasted around the city.
In 2004 I left the faculty of art because it was not for me and I kept drawing on my own, then in 2007 after a trip to Mexico, where I found it incredible the familiar and daily ways they deal with death there, I started this series of illustrations with the theme of death.
The technique I use is ink on paper; I began to use these materials because I could then use the images for screen printing on t-shirts and that I think is a good way to make my work available to those who like it and I can share with them.
I love that she prints her designs on t-shirts. Seeing the shirts in Lima, a clothing manufacturing center of South America, her designs distinguish themselves from the other million designs flooding the streets. In Lima one can buy a Peru-manufactured Armani Exchange shirt for $5 before it is exported, and on the street it seems like everyone and their grandma (literally) is wearing a brand-name shirt that would cost $40 or more in another country. But when I realized that those Armani shirts were really just shirts (and their designs rarely consist of much more than the letter 'A' or 'X'), I gained a new appreciation for shirts with a great design, story, and artwork, like those of Babayaga.
View more of Babayaga's designs on Flickr here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/xbabayagax/
Saturday, July 24, 2010
H.H. Bennett Wisconsin River photos in 3D
On Tuesday, I took a canoe trip down the Wisconsin River starting just west of Blackhawk Island State Natural Area, ending near the River Walk and downtown Wisconsin Dells. I passed by several of the sites landscape photographer H.H. Bennett helped make famous during his career photographing the area from 1865 to 1908.
Afterwards, I made a visit to the H.H. Bennett Studio and Museum to see Bennett's work up close. One of the highlights of the museum was seeing Bennett's images for the first time in 3D as the stereoscopic images he started making in 1868. Bennett started making the stereoscope images because he realized "that the three dimensional aspect of the rock formations would be lost in two-dimensional photographs." (1)
At the museum, the Bennett stereoscopic images are viewable in 3D by using a set of glasses which separate the right-eye view from the left-eye view. I thought, "I wonder what other ways people people could see these images in 3D?" I recall that there are some 3D televisions out now, but that can't be cheap. Then I remembered that I had seen a post by Marcos Torres on abduzeedo.com using animated gif images to fake a 3D effect.
So, I present here the gimmicky (and mildy annoying) but cheap & easy method of displaying one of Bennett's photos in 3D. By quickly switching back and forth between the left- and right-eye views of the stereoscopic image, we can visualize some of the three dimensionality of the scene:
What I would like to try next is using some of the 3D features in Photoshop CS4 to create a limited 3D model using the stereoscope images. I have seen plenty of tutorials on making stereoscope images from 3D models, but have not seen any 3D models derived from stereoscope images. There must be a way to use something like the animated gif method to create a smoother animation showing off some of the three dimensionality of the scene.
It would be cool to have a slow pan from the left-eye view to the right-eye view for something like a documentary. Got any ideas?
You can read more about the Bennett collection and see more images on the Wisconsin Historical Society's website or on their Flickr page.
Labels:
3D,
H.H. Bennett,
history,
photography,
Stereoscope,
Wisconsin Dells
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Reedsburg area historic photo collection now online
I am proud to announce that the Reedsburg Public Library's collection of Reedsburg-area historic photos is now online for public viewing. The collection of over 5000 historic images from Reedsburg, La Valle, Loganville, Rock Springs, Plain and Ironton is now viewable HERE.
The image collection has been housed on CDs at the library for the past 10 years; now is the first time the public will be able to browse the images online. It is a remarkable collection, with some of my favorite images being area soldiers, 1970's Halloween costumes, big bucks, kids, wild fires, swimming holes, early settlers, Indian natives, cigarettes, fun people, the Badger Theater at its best, and local cartoons.
For the past several months, I have been talking with Reedsburg Public Library director, Sue Steiner, and staff about the challenges and benefits of putting the historic photo collection online. Our goal in putting the images online is not only to provide a valuable resource for area people, but also to provide more exposure to the collection and encourage sales of full-resolution versions of the images. The library currently sells full-resolution images for $5 through the request form on their website.
With support from the Reedsburg Public Library and a grant from the Sauk County UW Extension, Arts & Culture Committee, I was able to go forward with the project by transferring the library's 19 GB photo collection from 37 CDs onto my computer, use Picasa (free) software to organize, edit, annotate, tag, (even made a map) and then upload the collection to Flickr.
Here are a few photos from the collection:




The image collection has been housed on CDs at the library for the past 10 years; now is the first time the public will be able to browse the images online. It is a remarkable collection, with some of my favorite images being area soldiers, 1970's Halloween costumes, big bucks, kids, wild fires, swimming holes, early settlers, Indian natives, cigarettes, fun people, the Badger Theater at its best, and local cartoons.
For the past several months, I have been talking with Reedsburg Public Library director, Sue Steiner, and staff about the challenges and benefits of putting the historic photo collection online. Our goal in putting the images online is not only to provide a valuable resource for area people, but also to provide more exposure to the collection and encourage sales of full-resolution versions of the images. The library currently sells full-resolution images for $5 through the request form on their website.
With support from the Reedsburg Public Library and a grant from the Sauk County UW Extension, Arts & Culture Committee, I was able to go forward with the project by transferring the library's 19 GB photo collection from 37 CDs onto my computer, use Picasa (free) software to organize, edit, annotate, tag, (even made a map) and then upload the collection to Flickr.
Here are a few photos from the collection:
Please take a moment to browse the collection on your own, and if you find an image you really like, consider buying it at full resolution! Also, if you have information about any of the photos, feel free to leave comments.
Labels:
flickr,
history,
internet,
Ironton,
La Valle,
Loganville,
online,
photography,
photos,
picasa,
Plain,
Reedsburg,
Rock Springs,
stories,
treasures
Sunday, April 11, 2010
In search of Babayaga
Right now I am in Arequipa and I am continuing a search for the person behind some really cool shirt designs with the label 'Babayaga - Arequipa'. All of my search tactics have failed. The website listed on the label, http://no.jodas.pe/, is a joke, I assume, as it doesn't exist and translates to something to something like http://areyouf.ingkidding.com/.
I've tried Google, but only find info about the witch-like character from Slavic folklore who eats children. I tried searching for people mentioning Babayaga on Twitter; no luck. My best bets in finding Babayaga are through the 2 stores where I foundhis her shirts in Lima, Pulga (Miraflores), and Neomutatis (Barranco). Until I hear back from them, I'll continue wandering around Arequipa with my eyes peeled for Babayaga designs and asking people if they know anything about him her, "Do you know anything about this guy girl from Arequipa who makes really cool black and white t-shirt designs with day-of-the-dead-like images? I think he's she's in a band, too." Yeah, that's about all I've got to go on.
UPDATE! 7/25/2010: Eureka! Tania Brun, alias Babayaga talks about some of her work in a post here: http://bit.ly/9tX8J5. And she's on Flickr! http://www.flickr.com/photos/xbabayagax/. She informs me that http://no.jodas.pe/ is no joke, it's just a website that hasn't been developed yet.
I've tried Google, but only find info about the witch-like character from Slavic folklore who eats children. I tried searching for people mentioning Babayaga on Twitter; no luck. My best bets in finding Babayaga are through the 2 stores where I found
UPDATE! 7/25/2010: Eureka! Tania Brun, alias Babayaga talks about some of her work in a post here: http://bit.ly/9tX8J5. And she's on Flickr! http://www.flickr.com/photos/xbabayagax/. She informs me that http://no.jodas.pe/ is no joke, it's just a website that hasn't been developed yet.
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