TMBG/JoCo

So this is a little out of date as I’ve been busy with some stuff lately.

Last month I went to the They Might Be Giants concert in Chicago that Jonathan Coulton opened for. I love both groups, as they produce wacky lyrics with upbeat, catchy music, so I’d say that probably ranks as one of the top ten best nights of my life. I drove up with Justin from work and his girlfriend Novah, whom I know from the Myst fan community. It was a pretty fun drive, talking about TV shows and nerdy stuff. One of these days I’ll get to watch X-Files and find out what the deal with it is.

So the show was awesome, JoCo played some songs from his new album, Artificial Heart, and I really liked “Sticking It To Myself” – very catchy. I hadn’t seen him perform before, so it was great to see that, especially since he now has a couple of musicians backing him up. Of course he did “Code Monkey,” and some other old ones too.

Then there was the interminable wait until John and John finally made their appearance! I did buy a signed copy of their new CD, Join Us, which I think may be the best album they’ve released in 10+ years. Linnell looked pretty much the same as ever (except for his lack of Converse shoes! *gasp*) but Flans has apparently decided to grow some horrific facial hair which makes him look (imho) a bit like he belongs in a suspicious-looking white van. I was pretty startled that I did not once see Linnell do his signature “claw hand” gesture during the performance!

They opened with “Dead,” which was surprising – in fact, they did a lot of Flood music, despite it being about twenty years old now and much of isn’t their most popular stuff. I assume that some of that was because of the absence of their backup guitarist Dan Miller, which certainly changed a few of their pieces like the standard super-long guitar intro to “Istanbul (Not Constantinople)” and “When Will You Die,” which includes a listing of each of the musicians waiting for the person in question to die. I gathered from Twitter afterwards that Dan M had some sort of family emergency that prevented him from playing a number of the shows around that time.

Next up was “Can’t Keep Johnny Down,” which became one of my top TMBG favorites the moment I heard the opening measures. I was so psyched during the whole show, especially songs like this, that I kept jumping up and down (okay, normal behavior for me at concerts) and apparently my flying elbows made Justin fear for his life, as he was standing right behind me. Then they did a variety of older songs which were nice, including “Your Racist Friend” which I wouldn’t have expected to ever hear performed live these days, but sounded great, and a variety of songs from the new album. Of course, being in Chicago, they called up the Onion’s AV Club to do “Tubthumping” with them on stage. “Ana Ng” was another high point in the show for me, despite the fact that we all know it so well, it’s just so eternal! “Judy Is Your Vietnam” is also a great new one, and every time I hear it I have to ponder, “what makes Judy the singer’s Vietnam? Was he unable to conquer her, or what?” “Birdhouse In Your Soul” and “The Mesopotamians” were also expected and required listening, but are always always good.

By the time we left, I was running high enough to last me a solid week, despite being completely tired out from jumping up and down for basically the entire show including JoCo’s performance, and partially-deaf for about half an hour afterwards from standing about three meters from Linnell’s keyboard setup and even less from the speaker tower.

C-U Property Listing Site

I spent most of the summer working on this website for the new Champaign-Urbana area apartment listing website, RentPPL.com. The “fun” part was wrestling with the database software our client was using and retrieving the data from that so it would display correctly on the website, but we finally got the thing live. It still does screwy things if you put more javascript on the listings pages…

To read more about the process and see bigger images, check out my process PDF. I did the logo in about two hours! :< One of the downsides of small businesses like this is that it’s apparently hard to justify design stuff to them – they just want an internet presence.

Lightsaber

In August I was working on a project for work…

Early model of the handle.

First draft of the error page

At this point my boss pointed out it would be hard to recognize it as a lightsaber if you’re not a Star Wars geek.

A second draft with a more obvious lightsaber.

I was sort of disappointed at this point that the project specs changed, because I really liked the idea of using Typekit to change the error number while still making it look like the error number was part of the image. Personally I really prefer to know what the error number is so I can try again later or know that it’s permanently broken or whatever.

Final draft of mockup.

Onion Confetti

Well, I may not be that great at the “adding ingredients together in the right order” aspect of cooking, but when it comes to veggie slicing, I feel like a pro. Check out these little tiny slivers of onion for my recipe – and not a tear was shed over their slicing!

I made Pot Roast Stew in my slow cooker Thursday night, and due to my excitement over the onion slicing, I ended up taking some pictures. Growing up, I admired my dad’s sure hand with veggie slicing when he helped my mom cook, and I always wanted to be as good as him. It’s good to have aspirations in life, don’t you think?

And here’s the finished product. I think that while it came out tasting the way it was supposed to, it didn’t come out anywhere near what I’ve come to expect from living with a chef for a mother…

After getting an email lesson from my mom about it, if I were to do it again, I’d only use one half or two thirds of an onion, and sauté it first, and I cooked the whole thing on low instead of high (what the recipe says) for those six hours. She also recommends including mushrooms, bacon (and use the drippings when cooking the beef), red wine, and tomato paste among other things – all of which sound appropriate to me from my little knowledge of the taste of it and of cooking flavors. Adding beans, possibly puréed beans, or instant mashed potatoes to thicken the broth stuff might also be a good idea. I’m still trying to figure out a “high note” for it, to add a sort of perky top flavor, since she said Tabasco sauce might not be ideal and I think it needs something to wake your tongue up – but maybe with her additions that won’t be necessary. Still would like to find an option for it though. Otherwise I’m looking forward to trying the recipe again with her suggestions, once I’m done eating the leftovers!

Hair on Fire

The servers at work may have gone down for an hour or two this afternoon leaving me with little to work on. So I made this doodle instead. :D

I still love the stroke width tool.

July Update

Things have been quiet, not too much going on… but that’s fine with me. Had a good 4th of July with some friends, and saw my best friend’s mom perform at the local hippie grocery store. She and her duet partner sound really good! The weather has been stiflingly hot, but is cooled down for the moment.

Blues at Strawberry Fields

Monday night I went out with my best friend and had a great time enjoying tasty drinks and talking about all sorts of girly stuff. I really don’t get enough estrogen in my life these days! :) Work has been good, I’m getting a lot of good practice in with designing websites. I’ve been working with my first real CMS (much more powerful than WordPress, though perhaps not as user-friendly) and developing a website for a local apartment rental business. I made their design, and now the challenge is making it. Definitely good stuff.

Preview (and slightly pixelly) button from a website I'm doing at work.

I also got a new freelance client, and am doing a design for Peggy’s mom’s open education blog that she plans to start soon. I’m excited about both of them, we’ll see how they turn out.

So that’s life at the moment.

First Weeks @ Accuraty

A few weeks ago I started part-time at Accuraty Solutions in downtown Champaign. It’s been going well, although many days fluctuate between “wondering what I should be doing” and “frustration with the usability of our CMS” as I learn how to help with updating our web projects. Thankfully the senior designer actually likes web programming a lot and says I won’t have to do the skinning etc if I don’t want to, so there have been plenty of good days focusing on redesigning local businesses’ websites.

Over the past year or so, I’ve been learning how important it is to have the right toolkit on hand for web design. There are so many websites out there with freely available assets, from icons to swatches to entire Photoshop layouts. Since discovering this, I’ve struggled with the idea of this being “cheating” – after all, it’s using someone else’s work to speed up my workflow. But apparently this is just the nature of web design – as long as you play fair and only use free-for-commercial-use downloads (unlike Adidas, apparently, who used the awful freebie font Action Man to make the German national women’s soccer team’s jerseys…) Anyway, these days I’m having a lot of fun playing with and dissecting those freebies to learn how to make my designs more polished and detail-oriented. It really lets me concentrate on creating, rather than reinventing the shiny button every time.

Anyway, the office. I took some photos at work the other day, so you can see most of the inhabitants. There are seven people, including the two part-time employees. Everybody has that nice midwestern friendliness that makes working together pleasant. I’ll post projects I’ve done when the get cleared for release.

My boss, Jeremy

Anne, the project manager

Kerstin, the designer, and Justin, the programmer and musician

Matt, one of the other two programmers in the programmer cave

In other news, we’re getting solar cells on our roof, which is taking forever, but when it’s finished, it’ll be exciting! And I’ve actually started using my twitter, so keep an eye on that if you’re into that kind of thing.

 

Baby Birds

There’s been a nest right outside the kitchen for a while now, and I’ve been enjoying watching the inhabitants. I saw the robin bringing the first clumps of grass, and feeding the babies, and then the babies stretching their wings, and finally last night when I looked after dinner, they all seemed to be gone. It went startlingly fast, but I got some pictures of them!

Scandinavian Islets

Ellen in Sweden

As you can see, I loved these landscapes from the time I was this big. Also, those ladybug mittens were the best thing ever, along with my taste in clothing!

I absolutely love the Scandinavian landscape – especially those archipelagoes full of tiny, rocky, evergreen-covered islands. Even before I was a fan of Myst, I thought they were pretty much the most beautiful, mysterious, inspiring places ever. When I lived in Sweden, there was an old dry river valley behind my family’s apartment, with huge rocks growing up out of the smooth grass bowl. I loved the way they formed islands which I could sail between without any need of a boat. I spent hours clambering over them and imagining things while I explored the same patches of forest over and over again.

 

When I picture my “dream house” of where I wish I could live when I’m retired, it looks pretty much exactly like this. A Swedish-red farmhouse perched on a little island in the middle of a river/fjord/lake with lots of bare rocks sloping down to the cold northern waters, the whole thing surrounded by dark, verdant trees. Other people aren’t too far away, but there’s lots of quiet space to explore. ^_^

Myst in real life!! You see why I like this kind of landscape.

Some day I want to visit Caspar David Friedrich‘s north German island of Lübeck to see where he drew his inspiration from. The beautiful desolation, with all its mystery and loneliness, is conveyed superbly even with such simple images as a tree in a winter meadow. Maine’s coast looks kind of similar I gather, so I’m also interested in going there and exploring with my camera if I can’t afford to go to Scandinavia…

Although it can be said of many of the other scenes too, I like the stories I see in this guy‘s photography – of course these remind me of the brothers’ Ages in Myst IV, for obvious reasons. Click to see the post where I found them.

And these following ones by Peter Boel remind me of the most beautiful parts of Sweden… Again, click on one of the pictures to see his whole gallery from the trip.

Evil Dictatorships

Some weeks ago I started a country on NationStates.net. It’s been quite interesting, and I’ve been really enjoying the mix of bizarre situations on which I have to pass legislation combined with political education. It’s fun running my own country and seeing how my tax rate, civil rights, and so on respond to what I pass. I can even see what my citizens are dying from!

My country is The Matriarchy of the Mad Gods. I don’t have a particular agenda other than the sort of vague “what would the mad gods do?” although that’s sort of fallen by the wayside to my random whims. I must not be doing too bad though since I have a powerhouse economy and have won a couple of awards.

If you’re already on NationStates or decide to sign up, let me know what your country is so I can add you to my dossier!