This Modern Era

This Modern Era

An experiment in light and colour, this. The photo (an extreme close up of a bust of Joyce) was shot in golden evening sunlight, but I wanted something that looked a bit more like it was taken at night, under artificial light, because that seems more fitting for one of the fathers of modernism.

(Yes, I know that modernism isn’t strictly about artificiality. Go with it, please.)

I’d be curious to know how sucessful you think I’ve been with this one.

I’d also like to know what emotions you think it evokes, and whether you think it does Mr Joyce a service in that regard. This is one of those shots that I think will either work very well, or fall flat on it’s face, and I’d like to know which you think I’ve done.

Last.fm wash and brush-up…

Gosh, it’s a bit nicer looking these days, isn’t it? I can almost forgive them not even interviewing me back when I applied for a job there. Bastards. Etc.

Anyway, now that they’ve got the social features up to the point that they’re slightly interesting, I’ve friended those of you I could easily find on there. The rest of you: leave your last.fm username in your comment if you given enough of a toss.

(I’m alasdairw on there, by the way.)

Laudanum and Poteen

Laudanum and Poteen

A bust of James Magan, on St Stephen’s Green in Dublin. The first of a few holiday pictures – I thought I’d try and present them in roughly chonological order…

Not a lot to say else. I’ve taken some of the green out of the foliage, to make the bust more vivid

UI Geek.

Have to say, the new iTunes flip-through-covers function is bloody marvellous. I’ve just packed all my jewel cases into boxes and put them into storage, and this has put back the only thing I might possibly miss about never thumbing through my CD collection.

In Memoriam

It’s five years since the single most memorable terrorist atrocity committed on American soil.

Here are three things that the current American administration has been up to in the last year, in the name of the War On Terror that you might not have heard about, especially if you live in the US.

US operatives have tortured people to death.

The Pentagon has taken yet more steps to ensure that it can’t be held accountable by journalists.

A Haliburton subsidiary has been paid quite of lot of money for building detention camps in the US.

Remember: if it’s done in the name of dead civilians, anything goes.

Unless the dead civilians are foreign, obviously.

To Further Elucidate:

I don’t really like animals. In my mind, the non humans kingdoms of the world divide down more or less like this:

Animals (food) – I have no desire to coo over anything I might one day eat. This, I should add, would include human babies, were cannibalism legal and safe.

Animals (dangerous) – Anything that might leave me in pain, really. I don’t want to admire that at a distance, because you never know when one of the bastards might have snuck round behind you. Or worse: behind the sofa. Nature documentaries are just a cunning hunting ruse, invented by a particularly lazy lioness, you know.

Animals (allergic) – This pretty much covers the all the smaller land mammals, who I basically loathe and or fear.

Animals (aquatatic) – I don’t like fish. They are in league with Cthulhu and are not for eating. No.

Animals (avian) – basically boring. They have nothing to say to me, and I nothing to say to them. Except for a few of the smarter parrots, and even then, my interest will wane once the thing has learned how to swear properly.

Animals (creepy) – I am suspicious of things with more than four legs, unless they are Strandbeest.

Animals (a few of the smaller reptiles) – Which is more or less everything that’s left.

I Am Out Of Step With The World

On the day John Peel died, a quick script I ran up this afternoon to check the archive counted 22 mentions of him on my friends list.

Already today, 23 people have mentioned Steve Irwin dying (yes, I know I have just made that number 24 – fuck off). The day is some hours from over.

This is, I feel, indicative of the sick, sad state of the culture we live in.

I recently vowed to watch no more TV that pandered to my worse instincts. Nothing that appealed to my sense of snobbery, or schadenfreude. Nothing that humiliated people, or pandered to the proletarian. I shall be quite happy to drift further and further out of cultural touch.

Recognition at last!

So, the site(s) I’ve been working on for the last six months (and will likely be working for next six months) have just been made New Media Age’s site of the week this week. We score badly for branding, but that’s as a result of the client’s choices (made, I should add, for perfectly good business reasons). The bits I and my colleagues spend time on, usability and monetisation (how easy is it to use the site to the point where you get what you want, and the site gets money from you) we score pretty bloody well on.

A nice start to Friday.

Strawberry Swirl

Strawberry Swirl

I change my mind every other minute about the curls of red in the foreground. One second I like them, and the colour contribution they make, the next I’m cursing myself for having them in the foreground out of focus like that, getting the way of the lines of the girl’s face.

Regardless, though, I love the colours in this one. I’ve made the blue a little darker, to better bring up the pale skin, and I’ve added a bit of extra saturation to the reds – if that thing is going to be in the foreground, then it’s bloody well going to jump…