Thursday, 29 January 2009

Stencil


Just one more day to wrap up an illustration job, and then I'll be able to get back to making things! I've been snatching moments here and there to cut new stencils, and to figure out the whole technique thing. The cut stencils have been lying on my desk, spurring me on to get the work over with, and simultaneously tempting me to just leave it all and print.

Wednesday, 28 January 2009

Love Book

Photo by Samantha Hahn

Samantha Hahn has published a gorgeous little book, called 'Love'. She asked 25 artists and writers to contribute, and I was thrilled to be included! The book is available from blurb, a print-on-demand site, in either soft cover or hard cover.

View some of the pages here.

Tuesday, 27 January 2009

Contact lenses - advice, please?

Still pictureless, sorry. But working on it.

I've decided to try contact lenses again, but can't choose between hard or soft ones. All the reading I've done suggests that hard lenses are best for 'individuals who are particularly fussy about their vision'. (Read 'a pain in the butt for optometrists to deal with'.)

Does anyone have any experience with the two different types? Are hard lenses really that difficult to adjust to? They're said to provide crisper vision, minimise dry eyes, and last from 2 to 5 years. My optometrist says that none of this is true.

I'm trying not to be a knowitall patient, but googling 'hard vs soft lenses' brings up loads of articles that insist that hard lenses are superior, and very few that say the opposite.

Thursday, 22 January 2009

Out-of-office

PC problems, specifically 'looking at photos' kind of problems. Normal service will resume as soon as possible. Unless I smash the machine. Which could happen. And then it will take a bit longer.

Wednesday, 21 January 2009

The last machine

Another animation machine! This one's called a praxinoscope.



The 'filmstrip' is reflected in the mirrors. The edges of the mirrors serve as 'shutters', and the girl and the rabbit fight and fight and fight....

Gaffer tape was a major ingredient of this machine, too. The top part rests on a shopping trolley wheel, and so spins quite nicely.

I'm still having problems uploading film clips, but perhaps these two pics give some idea of what it looks like when it's spinning:


Credits: the machines were built by Jac, Ramon and Jesse. Jesse and Jac did the drawings, and Jac composed the frames. Ramon did most of the calculations and explaining; also the hammering and sawing.

Tuesday, 20 January 2009

Stills

Hmmm. Uploading video clips is more difficult than building a mutoscope. I've tried both YouTube and Blogger, with no luck. When I do get a video up, I'll stick it on the end of this post.

For now, some stills. We filmed some of the action for reference.





Monday, 19 January 2009

Glitch

Small technical problem with getting the animation up, but sure to be sorted out soon. Check back here tomorrow.

Thanks to Craftzine for sending so many people this way! Wow!

Friday, 16 January 2009

The tech bit (it's long!)

The 1000-page flipbook, balanced on it's end. The flat bit is for attaching to a motor. We wanted a crank mechanism that could be turned by hand, but designing and making gears and cogs was a bit beyond us. Gears and cogs would have been necessary, as the book is really, really heavy. This is how it slots into the machine. The inside of the box is painted black so that it won't distract from the animation. An electric light was attached to the 'ceiling', but it blew up about 5 minutes in to the official showing. Luckily we had battery-powered lights on hand, and stuck one in with gaffer tape.


Gaffer tape and putty solved so many problems! The book is attached to a cardboard drum, attached to a broomstick. It was bound in one long strip, and then glued to form a circular book. The drum was made and measured, and then the book was eased over it and glued on, so that it would fit tightly. Inside the drum are 2 circles of corrugated card, like the ones on the outside, glued and puttied to the axle for reinforcement.


Contact glue, wood glue (PVA glue) and luck. The pages are bound in pairs, one sheet of paper folded double. The join needed to be as flexible as possible, and the risk of pages flipping in clumps reduced. We made a blank book and then glued the images in. Any white edges were coloured in with black ink.

This final book was the third one. The first one was completely blank, made to practice binding, and to test animation - how many frames were needed to produce the illusion of movement, whether we needed to double up frames to slow things down, that sort of thing. We also glued frames into old phone books and flipped the pages by hand to test the animation. The second book went into a cardboard mockup of the final machine. A neighbour had thrown out the box their washing machine had arrived in, so we took it. (To some degree, the size of the washing machine determined the shape of the mutoscope.) The final book was only ready the night before the deadline. I think we tested it at 3 in the morning.

The most important part of the mechanism: the pacer. It holds the pages back, so the viewer can see the images. Without it the pages wouldn't flip. It needs to be strong, to hold the pages back till the very last instant, so that they fall fast when they're released. (In this photo it's not holding the pages back, but that's because the book isn't turning.)


Stoppers to hold it in place. Without these, the pacer got pushed out of line by the weight of the book. The pacer needs to stay perfectly central, otherwise the speed of flipping is affected.


Our pacer also needed to be adjustable. It has to be barely visible to the viewer, but protrude far enough to be able to exert some force on the turning pages. This was something we could only set once the book was in place. Clamps were the answer. And putty, of course.


Micro adjustments to the pacer stoppers. You can measure all you want, but when you're cutting things with a hacksaw, you're measuring in centimetres, not millimetres.


The book wasn't absolutely perpendicular to the viewing angle, and so the pacer had to be adjusted to be parallel to the pages, or it wouldn't be able to hold them back evenly. Micro adjustments, again. That splendidly thick card was a lucky find: the art shop were out of card, and I probably looked about to burst into tears, because they offered me the card that their card was shipped in. For free. They were going to throw it away!!! It was so thick it had to be cut with a hacksaw - lovely lovely stuff. We used it for the pacer and the sides of the drum, and on the prototype machine it was used for a huge wheel that served as a way to turn the book by hand.


The viewing tube, a rolled piece of card, taped up tight with gaffer tape, puttied to the viewing hole, and neatened with strips of brown paper dipped in wallpaper paste.

Actual animation coming soon, I promise!

Thursday, 15 January 2009

The mutoscope


Initial plan drawing for the mutoscope.

Yesterday's 'thing' is a mutoscope, a Victorian animation machine. We built it in about 2001, I think, and there was very little information available. A book of 'Optical Toys You Can Make' from the library had a short description, but ended with the warning that it was impossible to make at home. Well!

We managed to find a few pictures online (nothing like you can find today - there are even videos) but didn't really understand how it worked. (Can you imagine - no Wikipedia, no YouTube! Kids have it so easy these days.) I put the moving image in the wrong place in the plan, and other things like ratchet cogs and bicycle pedals fell by the wayside as we figured out how to construct it.

It took a huge amount of work, with no power tools, very little money, and lots of experimentation. But in the end we showed a 2 minute animation on it!

I might be more upset about the imminent destruction of the 'scope than I realised - yesterday's post definitely had a tone.

**Some more great images of flipbook viewers here, if you're interested.

Wednesday, 14 January 2009

What is it?


Depends who you ask. Some might say it's something to trip over. Others might call it a naive, stubborn attempt to build by hand something that's designed to made from machined parts. There's no denying that it certainly is big, and unless attached to an electric motor, pretty useless.

But it does deserve to be properly documented before being broken up and dumped in the trash. (Or maybe I could plant something in it?)


Closeup, going in for the kill....

More on this white elephant tomorrow: what it does, and how we made it. And maybe even why.

Tuesday, 13 January 2009

Pretty practical

Journal by painted fish studio

Coasters by purpose design

Two very lovely and practical gifts I got for myself this Christmas. The journal is, despite it's gorgeousness, not at all too intimidating to scribble in. The pages are thick and lightly textured, providing a very satisfying 'tooth' for a pencil to glide over.

Please don't laugh when I say I've been looking for coasters for ages. I have the kind of furniture that requires them. But vintage coasters just look too retro, as if I've dressed my house up for a party. Modern ones aren't simple enough. These are functional, simple, and slightly quirky - they have magnets on the back, so they can be stored on the fridge, and you can write on them with chalk!

Monday, 12 January 2009

New art for old



Want to buy art but have no wall space left to hang it? Then pop along to Curious, Whetstone & Frankley's Bring and Buy show on Wednesday. I'm curious to see what people put up for sale - and wondering whether I'll see any of my work there....

Sunday, 11 January 2009

Ducks

Shawl for my mom. Pattern: Muir. Yarn: mystery acrylic that will not block properly.

I've been trying to get all my ducks in a row before I started blogging for the new year - catching up on illustration projects, stocking my shop, designing new prints. Possibly I'm not a very gifted duck herder, or my ducks are more disobedient than other people's. All they want to do is sit and read the new Neal Stephenson, Anathem, while knitting lace (Muir, from Knitty).

It's been a productive holiday, gardening, picking weeds and drawing them, painting doors (only 4 to go... should be done in another 2 years), sewing doorstops, hanging pictures; but not designing a new website, learning Illustrator, finishing a handbag design.... So those are things to look forward to this year!

Someone asked me for links to design blogs, and I realised that I don't read many of those. But craft blogs are a different story. Thinking about the kind of things I like to post about, looking back at my 500 posts (!) and the comments on them, scanning the blogs I like to read, I see a definite focus. An article in Craft clarified it for me: "Crafters value objects that can teach them something new. A product rich with stories about it's origin, maker, materials, and techniques of manufacture is infinitely more interesting than a product without a history. "

So that's what I'll be thinking about and trying to communicate this year. It was the generosity of all the people sharing 'how to do things' that drew me into the internet in the first place. I want to add to that, as much as I can.

(I carved a stamp set for a little boy for Christmas, depicting the cars from the movie Cars - there's no point fighting an obsession. When I gave it to him he said: "Did you make this?" in a slightly puzzled tone. "Yes" I replied. He considered this for a bit, and then asked "But how did you know about the cars?" My answer, that I went on to the internet, seemed to satisfy him. Maybe it's a start.)