Blast from the Past
June 3, 2008
I’m back, and to kick off my renewed blogging here is a wonderful website about iconic and historic designs from the Arts section of The Guardian Unlimited. From barber shop poles, the slinky and the red postal pillarbox, this blog by Jonathan Glancey covers design classics (mostly British). Thanks to my Aunt Janice for the link ;)
The Classics of Everyday Design
Designer Cadin Batrack
May 7, 2008
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Cadin Batrack is a motion graphics designer who created the Pencil Farm. Besides this and his showreel, I have no idea who Cadin Batrack actually is. His showreel is lively and full of graphics you will have seen on popular TV channels and movies, such as X-Men so do watch it. The music for the reel is happy and entertaining and starts off “Hey, mister fancy-pants…” I liked his work right away.
The Pencil Farm has a cheerful demeanour and contains games designed by Cadin, each with cute little graphics and quirky gameplay. The ideas expressed are fun, simple and beautifully executed. It even has a “Game builder” with which you can customise a simple collect and drop game to put onto your blog or website.
I made a game with dragonflies to put on here, but it won’t show properly so I’ll have to figure out how to get it working. In the meantime, visit the pencil farm and www.cadinbatrack.com
PS: Cadin’s surname makes me think of the batmobile and snowboards.
A Lovely Laptop
May 5, 2008

The Overlap Tray by OFFI is my idea of an ideal home desktop. Unlike a regular tray table with foldaway legs, the Overlap Tray is meant to stand out and be used. Functional, aesthetically pleasing and great for breakfast in bed – it even has cork mats for cups of tea and a place to keep your books & papers while you’re carrying it! This is my kind of tray!
The price has gone up since I first discovered it ($149-$189 US), so again I await the sales… Available here in Birch (below right) or Walnut (above)


Photographer: Daniel Powers
April 30, 2008

From the dynamic Skies in Motion to the serenity of Mystic Waters, Dan Powers knows how to captivate a viewer with his well-timed photography. The five images are shown here are my favourites so far, the most captivating is the curving skyscraper (above) from Skies in Motion. To me, this image says majestic, sweeping, a part of things larger than itself.
Originally from a medicine background that saw him through service with the US Marines, Dan is a self-taught photographer whose work has won several awards. His speciality is photographing time and he says about this topic,
“Most photographs are two-dimensional pictures of a three-dimensional space. But when a photograph is taken with exposures as long as fifteen minutes, time becomes a part of the image. Suddenly, the three-dimensional space is moving through time, leaving a trail of its former presence on the photographic canvas.”
“Previously, photography was heralded for its capacity to render a moment in time…The Perfect Moment. My photography reveals not only what is there, but what was. Only film photography, or its modern digital equivalent, can capture this so precisely.”
In this age of digital photography and inkjet printers, Dan Powers also retains his skills as a darkroom professional and he “spends hours reviewing and editing every shadow and highlight, every nuance of color, and in choosing the right medium for the image. There is nothing in one of my prints that was not intended to be there.” His attention to detail and quality are paramount, and he guarantees his prints for a lifetime. Now that’s a guarantee!
Dan currently lives in Newburyport with his family, where he continues to work with his camera and slow shutter. Most of his photos were taken in and around Massachusetts where, noting from his blog, he takes a keen interest in the local photographic community and gallery events. The music selected for his own photo website matches his imagery very well.
The image below is from Mystic Waters, and reminds me so much of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader from The Chronicles of Narnia. I love because it’s as the shore on the other side might disappear and the water carry on into forever.
These three pictures below do not go without comment! I find the contrasting soft whites and solid blacks of the clock tower image very striking. The centre photograph (part of the Language of Morning collection) could be sold to Mac as a desktop background, and the creeping mist by the lighthouse makes me think of breakers and the salty smell of the sea. Fabulous images Dan, I look forward to seeing more of your work!



All of Dan’s prints are available for purchase from his website, www.danielpowersphoto.com
All images used with the kind permission of Daniel Powers.
A little light reading
April 29, 2008

This bookshelf is almost worth the ridiculous price (if you buy it online from Europe and have it shipped) for the kudos it’ll get you when people exclaim “Hey! How did you do that?!”.
One by a sofa makes for a cool talking point, but why stop there? Be one of the supercool and get several – I recommend either 3 or 5, odd numbers look the best – to create an aethetically pleasing artistically awesome floating library. There is another kind called “the Selfshelf” which has ‘Ceci n’est pas un livre’ as the title, ‘this is not a book’ in French, but it doesn’t look quite as cool in groups (why would you have 3-5 copies of the same book?)
Almost, but not quite worth the price from Europe*, however I found the Invisible Bookshelf in US dollars here.
*unless they decide to have a massive 90% off everything sale


Never in a month of Sundays…
April 29, 2008
You may have noticed that I don’t blog on Sunday. This is because I figure I spend too much time on my computer as it is and I’m trying to give my eyes a break at least one day a week. Seeing as I am at my laziest on Sundays *cough* this is the best day to chill out and not blog so much. Sorry if anyone’s been disappointed cause I didn’t blog – now you know.
You should enjoy a break from the computer too :)
Jenn





