# Sunday, December 17, 2006
Not the comfy chair!
Not the comfy chair!

 


Posted by Reeves  Sunday, December 17, 2006 1:38:02 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
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# Wednesday, December 13, 2006
I read your mail... if you send it to me... sometimes.
I read your mail... if you send it to me... sometimes.

 


Posted by Reeves  Wednesday, December 13, 2006 12:52:39 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
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# Monday, December 11, 2006

I'm betting that you, like me, have been to plenty of cool places where your eyes could adjust to a dark space but getting a picture in the poorly-lit space was nigh-on-impossible.  A flash in many cases will create a harsh effect and (if you shouldn't be taking pictures) may draw unwanted attention (shhh!).  If, however, you carry one of the new, powerful flashlights you can get some great shots.

When Paula and I were in Salzburg we visited the catacombs at St. Peter's and came across this wonderful altar in a cave that dates back to medieval times.  The room was quite dark with a bit of lighting behind the items of interest.  Fortunately we now carry a great flashlight given to us by Phillip, Paula was able to light the center of the altar while I snapped a couple pictures.

altar

The flashlight was also helpful for examining the faded paintings on the walls (and before you get on us about deteriorating the paintings... Paula has a masters in archival studies, we were sure to not do any damage. smily face).  While traveling we've used the handy light to look into shadowy nooks, light up hidden signs and generally find our way in the dark.  At first Paula made fun of me for my geeky obsession with carrying the new toy, but she soon came to appreciate the added light-on-demand.


There are a whole mess of HI (high intensity) flashlights out there, but I'm quite smitten with the unit Phillip gave us, the SureFire G2.  It's carry-on friendly (no complaints from security yet) and despite being very small and light it packs quite a punch - the thing puts out so much power that you can burn yourself if you leave it on too long!

 


Posted by Reeves  Monday, December 11, 2006 2:55:22 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
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# Thursday, December 07, 2006
Want to see the Gypsy Kings and Metalica... together?
Want to see the Gypsy Kings and Metalica... together?

 


Posted by Reeves  Thursday, December 07, 2006 7:12:13 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
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# Friday, December 01, 2006

Lighthouse at Hoth

The Economist's review of the world for 2005 has Ireland ranked as the best place to live in the world based on quality of life indicators.  The US failed to break the top ten but wasn't far off at 13 in the survey of 111 countries.

You know the reason, right? 

Guinness Brewery Entrance

Via BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4020523.stm (thanks for the pointer Laurence!)


Update: A link to the full report thanks to Casper: http://www.economist.com/media/pdf/QUALITY_OF_LIFE.pdf

 


Posted by Reeves  Friday, December 01, 2006 2:00:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
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# Thursday, November 30, 2006

Here's the thing... travel to Europe from Dublin can be crazy-cheap.

Last Monday (November 20th) Paula turned in her final project for her masters degree and a celebration was in order.  Knowing the event was coming we started preparing well in advance.  We figured the frugal thing to do would be to drive somewhere and haven't been to western Ireland yet so Paula started looking into places to stay.  We assumed it wouldn't be too expensive, November is windy, wet and cold in Ireland isn't high season for travel.  The hotels were, however, pricey.

Out of curiosity we decided to price a flight to somewhere warmer.  Cha-ching!  Airfare to Rome: 100 Euros... round trip... for both of us... including luggage.  A full tank of gas costs us 55 Euros, the hotel was less and (here's the kicker) the weather in Rome is hovering around 70 degrees Fahrenheit versus around 50 degrees in Ireland.

Can you say "no brainer"?  I knew you could.

Paula and Reeves in Rome

 


Posted by Reeves  Thursday, November 30, 2006 5:34:23 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
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# Monday, November 20, 2006

For a while now I've been wanting a caricature of myself.  Several friends have cool buddy icons for messenger or as a tile on their blog.  Two things stopped me though: 1. my artistic talent is mediocre at best and 2. I'm too cheap to hire someone to make one for me.

So, what's a cheap hack to do?  Why, come up with a quickie technique to make my own picture, of course.

0. Basic training

Before we get started, here are a few tips and notes:

  • I use Photoshop - it's what I have, it's what I know.  If you're a photographer or an artist and looking for a great program, I highly recommend it. Many other paint, however, will work just great for this.
  • Make lots of layers - anytime you think you're doing something new, make a new layer, you'll thank me later.  Besides... CTRL-e (CMD-e on Mac) will merge a layer down so there's no downside.
  • If you don't like the results, try a different picture.  You'll be surprised at how quick this can be and trying again is no trouble at all.
  • Small is good - starting with a little picture (I used one which is 150px by 150px) means less detail to distract you.  A cartoon version of you shouldn't have much detail, Snoopy didn't have whiskers, did he?
  • I figure you know how to use your paint program, so I skip a lot of detail.  If you have questions, ask, I probably need to clarify these steps.

1. Pick a pic

First, I selected a picture of myself I like.

Reeves and Paula in Goshen

I recommend using a brightly lit picture, I've re-tried this technique on a few different pictures and found dark images are hard to work with.

2. Double your fun

The next step will take all the color out of the picture, and you'll want that color, so make a new layer.

Layer -> Duplicate Layer

As you go along and create new layers I highly recommend naming them. Later, when you want to edit a specific layer, it will be easier.

3. Xerox it

After drawing my first cartoon me on paper I figured out where the hard lines for my face were... but there's a shortcut.  Use the Photoshop "photocopy" filter, it's under sketch.

Photocopy

For this picture I simply set the detail all the way down (1) and the darkness all the way up (50).  You should play with it on your picture to get some good lines.

4. Trace elements

The photocopy filter has now given you a set of lines to trace.  It has probably given you too many, in fact, so don't get greedy.  Try to draw the minimum number of lines.

Make a new layer (don't duplicate this time, make a clean, new layer).  I named this layer "face".

Grab the brush tool and set the color to black and set the size.  You'll want to get a size which feels kinda cartoony, you can play with it to see what you like.  Go thinner for less drama, go thicker for a more Scanner Darkly look.  As a starting point, go with about 2% of your image size (my picture was 150x150, I used a brush size of 3px).

5. The straight and narrow

The trick to make this fast and easy (and make it look kinda cool) is to not draw freehand.  Pick a place to start (the jaw, under the ear, is a good one) and put a dot.  Next, pick a place along the jaw, hold down the shift key, and click again.  Photoshop will draw a line between the dots.

Photocopy

Continue along the outside of your face, a couple clicks on the jaw, one on the chin, back up the jaw, around the ear and follow your hairline around.  Once you've done the full face shape, add the hair using the same technique.

6. Eyes and ears and mouth and nose

Once you've finished the shape of the head, move to the eyes.  You should be able to get the shape with 3 to 4 clicks.  Start at one corner then click a couple more times to get the other corner. Draw a small box for each pupil. For my eyes I didn't need to draw the bottom, just the top.

If you're smiling in the picture you'll likely have some smile lines, add those in. 

Eyes and nose

A few quick lines under the nose is all that's needed to highlight the bottom and then one line for the side of your nose.

7. Color by numbers

Hide the photocopy layer so you can see your original picture under your lines.  Create a new layer above the photocopy layer but under your drawing.  Triple your brush size (9px in my case) to give more coverage and sample the color from some place on your face using the eyedropper.

Color away!

Eyes and nose

Now you need to add a little depth.  Create a new layer on top of the coloring you just did.  You'll need a darker tone of flesh than you used before, so click the color palate (if you drop the "B" in the HSB section by about 10, you should be golden).

On a new layer use the shift-click technique again to trace the outer edges of your face, along your smile lines, under your nose, along one side of your nose and over your eye lids.

Eyes and nose

Sample your hair color and fill it in (I used the magic wand to speed up this step).  Adding a second hair color will also help (hide your hair color, create a new layer and sample some highlights to paint in with a medium-sized brush... say 5px).

Eyes and nose

8. Mad props

If you have a hat you always wear or (like me) you wear glasses, add those in now.  For glasses I recommend a thin brush to draw the frames (on a new layer, of course) and then draw the shape of the lenses in a neutral gray (on yet another layer).  Put the lens layer behind your face layer so the eyes appear to be showing through the lenses.

Eyes and nose

9. That's all folks!

Now all that remains is to be sure your original picture and photocopy layers are turned off and save your new cartoon you.

Eyes and nose

 


Posted by Reeves  Monday, November 20, 2006 3:05:14 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
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# Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Paula already knew it.  Trina already knew it.  Aw heck, it seems most everyone else already knows... Buffy The Vampire Slayer is hilarious.

buffy.jpg

When I was back in Seattle last month I picked up seasons two through seven for Paula... and ended up watching most of the episodes with her.  I'd never really seen more than a few episodes here and there, Paula, however, had watched most of them and was hooked.

If you haven't seen them you should.  Go sign up for NetFlix (no, I don't get a kickback for pushing them) and load up your queue.  If you're feeling like it you might as well throw in the movie that started it all.

Why, you ask? Because it has great lines like this:

"Martha Stewart isn't a demon. She's a witch. [...] Nobody could do that much decoupage without calling on the powers of darkness."

 

TV

Posted by Reeves  Tuesday, November 14, 2006 3:45:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
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