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Blog Posts for "my life"

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Still Life, Um, Standing Still

 

I took today off work, which was fabulous. I slept for a while, hung out with my kids, who are on spring break starting today, and I painted. Here's the current red pepper and onion painting, with a view of the transitions between each sit down.





But now what? It needs a background, but I don't know what I want to do with it... cutting board? Plate? Dinner table? Fade to white?

Beats me... I'll noodle it through.

Aaron has his friend, Sonny, over and they are conquering the Covenant in HALO 2.

He'll be staying for dinner tonight. Should be a great evening here at home.

I am so glad that I took the day off.

ETC: The kids all like this painting. My daughter, who is smart about things like this, suggests that I paint a black-and-white tiled countertop. That seems smart to me because it's a good background without detracting from the color of the pepper and onion.

ETC, ETC: After scrounging through Google images and doing some sketching, I think a gray marble tile countertop would be nice. A pattern, even as simple as black and white, would pull too much from the focus of the vegetables.

 

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Tags: my life | painting | watercolor | halo | aaron
by Brett Rogers, 3/18/2005 5:49:57 PM
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A Very Random Quiz

 

Kris has this up on her web site and as I babysit the newly coded morning process today, I thought I would throw in my answers. If you like, throw your answers in the comments...

What's your favorite kind of cookie?

Generally, the kind before they're cooked. It's terrible, but I like dough. Pass the spoon, please.

Who's America's most overrated actor?

Kris gave this answer, to which I must agree: "My opinion? Jack Nicholson. Please don't kill me, but it's been a very, very long time since I've seen him playing anyone but himself."

Amen, sister.

Name a guilty pleasure.

I like to peel the upper strip of paper off a new straw and then blow the bottom part off the straw. Outside, inside - it doesn't matter to me. Which means that I occasionally litter.

"Scrubs" or "Everybody Loves Raymond"?

Scrubs, no question. It's so random, it's hilarious.

Name two things you can't live without.

Music, and now a paintbrush.

Your first pet's name + first street you lived on = your pornstar name.

Harley Heights - lol... what a great formula.

What song are you listening to right now?

Low, by Kelly Clarkson

Name your celebrity crush.

I don't really do celebrity crushes - always seemed a bit silly to me. But a female celebrity with whom I would like to have lunch? Probably Marg Helgenberger, from CSI.

Favourite punch line from a joke.

In Scottish brogue: "I don't know where you were last night, lad, but I'm damn glad that you won first prize."

And I'll add a few more...

Secret, selfish wish?

A regenerating body for a life hundreds of years long.

Secret, unselfish wish?

That every child had parents who truly loved him or her and showed it by spending time with their child. Sidenote as I write this - my daughter gets home early from school a couple of days a week and watches Dr. Phil now and then. She watches the other day and this 9-year-old boy was getting into torturing animals and hitting his sister until she would bleed. Dr. Phil's formula to save this kid? Dad, start spending more time with your son and as a family, go out and do stuff together. And yep, that fixed it. What if Jeffrey Dahmer's parents had done that?

What duo in TV history are you most like?

Kirk and Spock. Sometimes, I'm that corny, over-dramatic human that Kirk was, and other times I am that seemingly cold, hard-logic guy that Spock was.

People would raise an eyebrow if they knew what about you?

I have to give two answers, because some people know the first one: I voted for Clinton twice and now for Bush twice.

Second answer: I take my showers in the dark. (Don't knock it till you tried it... but it has to be completely and utterly dark.)

 

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Tags: my life
by Brett Rogers, 3/16/2005 8:29:35 AM
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To Fidget and Dance

 

Tonight was Austin's 2nd grade choir concert, and he got to dance in part of it. I took my little Sony Cybershot and recorded some of the performance. You can view it here.

Just before the show opened, all of the kids, plus Nick's girlfriend, were standing out in the hallway and I told them to stand still for a picture. They didn't know that instead of a still picture, I was recording their every move. So after about 1 minute, they started to get a bit, um, antsy about standing there.

This next clip opens with Austin smacking Nick in the leg for tickling and pestering him. My daughter then wonders, "Dad - you got it?" Because, of course, there has been no flash. So, I ask that they stand there for a bit more, until Austin is floating in mid-air and grabs his sister's shirt for help.

Take a look ;)

 

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Tags: my life
by Brett Rogers, 3/8/2005 1:22:36 AM
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The Choice to Grow a Goatee

 

I'm overweight, and I hate shaving. What do those two things have to do with each other?

I made the decision in December to shave off my goatee and to keep it off until I lost the weight. I figured that the daily shaving routine would remind me to watch what I eat.

That would have worked, except that my back suffered a herniated disk in late December, and I've been completely inactive until the past week. But I'm still clean-shaven. But no more...

In working to get this blog ready for prime-time, I did a computerized caricature of myself. Here it is...

Which scared the crap out of me. So I added my usual goatee back on (because I can do that artistically...)

And that decision was made for me. The shaving is over.

 

4 Comments
Tags: my life
by Brett Rogers, 2/14/2005 5:57:59 AM
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Life Drawing

 

In wanting to get back into drawing and art, I'm trying to change my approach.

In the past, I would draw the distinct hard outlines of the subject. It's easier this way. We define the objects in our vision by their easily seen outskirts. But that's not how it is in reality.

I work in an office that has a ceiling of hanging fluorescent lights. These lights have gray metal frames and a gray metal mesh that house the tubes. The light casts its way upward to the 2' x 2' white ceiling tiles, and the network of these is broken only by an air duct every eight tiles. The hanging lights are spaced about every five tiles.

Now if I were to draw this normally, I would draw fine lines to represent the ceiling tiles, vectoring their intersection at some great distant point. Blank paper between the lines would represent the tiles themselves. The lights would appear harder, more strongly defined - dark pencil shades for the gray metal. Ta-da! Look at what I did, Ma!

But that's not how it is. The tiles, in shadow about four tiles from the lights, are about as dark as some of the gray metal of the lights themselves. The gray metal appears in various shades, ranging from deep gray to almost white, depending on its proximity to the light.

And so to draw this accurately, I would need to draw it without seeing the outlines. My pencil only needs to color the shades, the shadows. How these shades blend into other objects is irrelevant to the truth of the scene before me. No lines required, really.

We tend to see life in terms of hard lines and fixed objects. Children draw in this way. They outline the body in stick figure and we clap and hug them for their great depiction of the world.

I don't think our ability to portray our world changes much as get older. We still draw in stick figures in the way that we depict people in our minds - but in truth these people are shades of shadow that blend into the world around them. We look for the hard lines: Republican, Democrat, home owner, apartment dweller, big truck, well-groomed, bad hair, etc. The simple definitions for the quick sketch that gets the point across.

It's much harder to draw the shadows. Almost awkward. The picture doesn't look quite right.

But I notice that if you move the picture further away, it's actually quite accurate. The shadows blend together nicely and the picture is a solid representation of the scene as it is in truth. And funny, but the lined drawing, when seen from an increasing distance, loses its accuracy.

I was walking through Target with Bari last night, grocery shopping. I was being myself, bouncing around and humming/singing, being goofy.

"You're so weird."
"I'm just me. I'm having fun. I love grocery shopping."
"You do that, Dad."

10 minutes later, we were in the checkout and Bari wanted to buy herself two new CD's, but didn't have the money.

"I can give you some of the money that I would have spent on your Christmas present," I offered.
Her eyes lit up. "Really?"
"Here," I said, handing her two twenties. And off she ran.

I met her in the truck and on the way home she's blabbing about seeing a couple of football guys in Target, how she planned to finish her Spanish when she got home, how she loved the idea of getting home to listen to the CD's. And then I turned the truck into a neighborhood.

"What are you doing?"
"Look at all the Christmas decorations."
"Dad! It doesn't happen often, but I want to get home right away to finish my homework - and listen to my CD's."
"Same distance, different route." I told her. "I'm being sentimental."
"Well, you're a sentimental guy."
That surprised me. "Me?" I'm not normally into Christmas decorations. "You think I'm sentimental?"
"You're a thinker. You can't be a thinker if you don't care about things. People who don't care about things don't think about them."

Life is surprising. This morning I rode my bike to work in 20 degree weather with wet hair and short sleeves - no coat, hat, or gloves. My skin was shocked, but it felt exhilarating.

As I approached my normal parking spot for my bike by the west entrance to the building, I came up behind a woman who seemed determined to ignore me. My initial thought: she's either timid and afraid of me pulling up behind her and doesn't want to look at me, or she's simply unaffected and I'm of no importance to her - she's uppity.

I dismounted and parked, then walked in step behind her. She walked through the carded turnstile doors and I followed. As she turned to climb the stairs, she spun toward me, half-smiling and her face full of question.

"Aren't you cold?"
"A little, sure."
"How far do you ride?"
"About a mile and a half."

No one is drawn well with hard lines, eh?

 

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Tags: my life
by Brett Rogers, 12/8/2004 12:00:00 AM
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