eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
The Dog Stars by Peter Heller is the best postapocalyptic novels I've read since The Children's Hospital, in both form and content.

A few standouts:
The narration is excellently done: sparse and beautiful at the same time, like a dead tree. Barely any punctuation, bits of haiku mixed in with musings on trout and the narrator's dead wife. You get a sense of the character in full, even as he consciously struggles with his own erratic memory and syntax, which is not quite itself full anymore after his survival of a mostly-deadly plague.

The landscape is part of the plot, in the best and worst ways. It is used for tactics, and it is used for beauty, and it is used for a narrative of personal and worldwide loss; you get the idea that all of these things are, on a fractal level, the same, embodied in the ravaged land.

The book layout -- I got the deckle-edged hardcover from my library -- is fantastic and full of little jokes about stars and dogs: designer Kelly Blair is taking a page from McSweeney's design department in the best possible way. The front of the book's dust jacket features the constellation Sirius, obviously, but the smaller jokes are better. On the back of the dust jacket, the accent constellation mapped below the title is a 'new' constellation called 'the little dog,' which I would not have recognized had I not happened to read a book about star maps on the previous day. This book is published under the Borzoi imprint of Knopf, and on the back dust jacket flap the running Borzoi imprint logo is actually recreated as a constellation of a running dog. I plan on buying this book in hardcover for the jacket design.
The font is also spare and elegant.

There are only really five main characters in this book, each of whom could easily fall into the worst post-apocalyptic cliche, but none of whom do. Such a rich, full novel with such a sparse cast in such a sparse world is a fantastic achievement for a writer and is a delight for a reader.

The apocalpyse itself fits the book's narration and tone, in the way the best postapocalptic literature does: a creeping global warming, then creeping diseases; death as the mass failure of human understanding and technology at the limits of human understanding in the 21st century. But despite that, we see signs that humanity, in general, has not stopped wanting to understand.

This is a profoundly hopeful book. It is a profoundly sad book. It is about death, and being willing to kill for poetry, and powered flight, and dogs, and fly fishing. It is excellent.

Please read it.

Tasklist

29/8/12 20:05
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Dancing)
Taking a page from [livejournal.com profile] rax:

To buy sooner rather than later:
New SSHD for eee
Glasses (closeup and distance)
Digital Hygrometer/Therm. for Tokai's tank
Printer paper and Ink or professional business card printing 250 cards on order from vistaprint
Updated shade + finial + bulb adapter for restored antique lamp from great-grandmother K-Mart, of all places!
Sheets for my bed
Notary Public Exam Fee

Video games to buy eventually:
Wario DIY Wii
Replacement Pokewalker for the one I lost at the farmer's mkt
Pokemon Black or White?
Okami Wii/DS?
Fire Emblem Gamecube/Wii/GBA?
Gamecube controller for wii

Other stuff to buy eventually:
Silicon Dawn tarot 2x
An apartment
New modular bed+awesome futon mattress of awesome
Mac Webcam xBox Live webcam works natively in Mac for $10. Awesome.
Butterfly Socks

To find:
DS Charger Yeah it was in my DS case ...

To sew:
Dog coat + Hem B.'s jeans
Doll clothes
Baby hat for B. and L.
Bike basket
Redo world's worst-diagrammed crossstitch
Winter hat pack items
Mending

To list on ebay/craigslist:
Freaking model horse collection argh just break into your own storage unit by remembering that your parents' good intentions will never actually lead them to put aside the time to do things they said he would do with you
Spare piano (don't ask); remember shipping deal w/local piano movers Report craiglist scam to craigslist

To write:
Absinthe Writeup
TY notes to people for whom I have petsitted, for asking for a review
WWIA notes digitization
WWIA chap 5
WWIA chap 6
Email replies to friends
Write 3rd stanza Tesla in Love, don't worry about 1st stanza rewrite yet
Writeup and Submit Sumptuary to GURPS company
Movie/Book writeups: Philadelphia Story
Movie/Book writeups: all the crap I read this spring in the hospital (The Picture of Dorian Gray, Winter Triptych, Bird Friendly Building Design, Washington: A Life, Sex on 6 Legs, Jack Reacher novels, Sew-What Pattern Free Bags, Battle Hymn of Tiger Mother, Sound of a Wild Snail Eating, Animals Make us Human, A Fair Maiden, Goon Squad, America: You Sexy Bitch, Off the Cuff, One Man's Garden, At Home)
Ulysses writeup one good book
Gecko article
Revise sword in the hand
write up sword in the hand
post sword in the hand
Review of Dog Stars
Peachberry pie, 3-tomato eggplant parmesan, and stirfry recipe writeup + carrot-saffron risotto and sweet potato soup
Salty Mango Lassi Ice Cream recipe writeup + photo to flickr, LJ
Writeup of MWPAI exhibits

To read:
Finish Hare w/Amber Eyes
Restart Ulysses
Find public-domain bilingual copy of Brothers Dostovesky, read once Ulysses is done

To website:
Catification writeup + submission
Website design - doesn't have to be fancy, check pininterest re: color schemes
Addon website for Paws & Claws petsitting
Twitter design - should mirror website
LJ design - should mirror website - embed?
Upload final foxes video to Youtube, Flickr
Upload historical local house photos to Flickr in new set, email url to historic preservation people
Upload baby shower photos to Flickr, email url to C & B
1 hr Help mom with photo upload/CD burn
Upload B. bd party photos to Flickr, email URL to Bethany
Get Genderplayful setup with winter hat pack items
Email butter lady for mom
Fish photos, drop off camera to process scan in photos, upload to Flickr
Upload cat show photos to flickr
KeePassX

To design:
Business cards for Paws & Claws petsitting

To post:
Business cards for Paws & Claws
Return ASL DVD to library, get ASL book instead

Games:
Take Go books out of the library again, but this time one at a time
Continue playing through chapter-end book questions on Goban
Play Glitch again, determine if I still want my acct. there This game looks awesomer than ever; too bad it's too slow and keeps crashing my browser.

Jobs:
Notary Public Exam
MCPHS? list pro and con, talk with Peg J.
Check w/BMC CDO
IDG Copy Editor Framingham
Cooking vegan shit in Boston
Call back NH library though chances of hiring are slim since budget did not pass Yeah they hired people already
Catsitting gig 13th-Oct 1
Syracuse Public TV
Check out Peace Corps as a committment for various mental health and dietary reasons I don't think this would be a good idea for me at this time; something to keep in mind for future.
Sub. teaching
Hamilton Editing Position
Spring farm cares

Places to volunteer:
Call back zoo Docent Orientation Oct 14th
Call Boston zoos re: volunteer program http://www.zoonewengland.org/page.aspx?pid=242 apply for Keeper Aide when I am in the area
Get back in touch with BMC gender activism people - try emailing admissions again; get in touch with Wellesley & Holyoke alums
to this end call Rachel D. in Albany

Other things to apply to:
Financial aid for NBSS
Application for NBSS for spring 2013 pres. carpentry program
Tufts summer school session again should I again find myself in Somerville
Clarion 2013
Traditional Building Master's Deg. class at Boston Architectural College

Music:
Perform Für Elise for A. and B. while they are here This didn't get done
Finish composing "TimesNR" in Wario DIY & output to interwebs
Relearn Moonlight Sonata
Call Tina re: piano/organ lesson swap for vegan food? Left email for B.
Fix iTunes (Japanese & Russian transcription error correction, add correct composers for Holst & other classical for sort error correction. Upload entire CD library. Transfer cassettes not avail. on Amazon to MP3. Otherwise buy slowly w/change off of Amazon MP3. Sync iPod to use at gym.)

Exercise:
Go to the gym everyday. Use the time to listen to new music and relax. You don't have to prove any damn thing and if someone tries to make you guilty for spending time on yourself screw it.

Health:
Call foodstamps people and say your father is withholding necessary application info from you out of, apparently, sheer and total personal incompetence. Ask for next steps. Don't be embarrassed; It's not your fault the information has been withheld. Remember that getting rid of food insecurity and into food security will help you. You deserve to eat healthily. Read this article as many times as you need to to make the call.

Consult lawyer (K.?) to ask about statute of limitations on ENT doctor in Indiana who pumped me full of allergens after hospitalization Email K. again Look up stuff K advised me to

Call dojo that offers 1st month free + women's discounts to sit in on a muy tai or taichi class 6 pm beginner's class today Save up $ to restart martial arts

Call Alicia for Coffee

Pin down Brenda and mom for cat show times on 16th Sept. Hahaaa this is so not going to be decided until day of, but I try.

Call P. tomorrow re: catsitting 3 pm appt Sun done

Call D.K. re: fixing broken earrings Call Goldmine or Wilcox's jewelers & get rates Bring earring by, get estimate. Pick up fixed earrings

File:
Remaining stuff in filing cabinet.
Remaining email update list.
Combine buystuff email and personal email
Get new addresses for friends; update in Address book. Sync AB with iPod.
Sync AB with Google
Sync email list between private + personal email addresses.
Update all the accounts.
Stop Serbian hacker

Money:
List all accts in Manilia setup
List all accts in Mint
Balance checkbook + savings accts
Begin paying back remaining interest-bearing debts - call if necessary DONE
Begin paying back personal debts

Gender:
Tarot from Orion?
Consult self re: pronouns at end of year?
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
Dear [livejournal.com profile] postrodent,

I've been driving around here, around this old city, post-industrial, post-economy, post-life, I grew up in, and thinking how much you would love it. Nothing's whole; nothing's clean. The great granite block of the art museum tries to be modern, but is modern in the sense Stonehenge is modern: timeless, featureless, a square hewn from earth. The Calder on its front lawn gently sits and rusts. Everything is cinderblocks, or brick with crumbling pointing, or void windows into voided buildings. The sky is the same color as the parking lots I can see from both my bedroom windows. The sky's reflection here leaches the color out of everything: roofs, homes, cars. The only shiny things are the ones lit up at night. There's a block downtown, now, with tinsel wreaths attached to all the lampposts; the light there glows yellow onto all the storefronts: a diner, the Catholic book store, the strip club, all cozied up together, huddled behind their security gratings at night like old homeless men. That's one block, the only one lit. That street must be 20 or 30 blocks long. The whole thing is like the ass-end of the apocalypse: a brownfield on the DEC list sits in the center of town; the only legible sign nearby reading "Dry Ice" as if that were the biggest commodity going for a mile square around. The old brick houses have windows half-boarded with plywood that looks wet on the outside, like it would give way if you left it until the spring and then came back and pressed, just a little, your hand over the graffiti which would be the most colorful thing on the building. The warm commercial heart of the city was built on a paved-over swamp; the orchard was cut down and a shopping complex whose logo is a tree put in its place. The only warm and well-lit buildings, the ones the cars and people cluster in around like flies, are the places where people can go to buy and forget and consume, and the whole thing named for that latter process, without irony. We'd wander around talking in the constant freezing damp that always promises snow and threatens rain and produces nothing, and you'd be astonished every fifteen feet, delighted, taking out your cameraphone, giving some rusted-out truss the bright sun of a camera flash, and the architecture would think it was summer.

- [livejournal.com profile] eredien
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
The second sample Apartment Therapy post.

Sisal rope is cheap, easy to find and work with, and gives a natural feel to any room. Here's a roundup of six different sisal DIY projects for your place that look great, don't break the bank, won't take long, and don't involve the words "cat scratcher."

Design*Sponge's DIY Sisal Rope Art project shows you how to make a wall hanging or table centerpiece mat with barely more than scissors, rope, and a glue gun.


This sisal basket tutorial from Under the Table and Dreaming is fantastic, since you can make the basket any size or shape you need; it'd look great holding soaps or washcloths in the bathroom, fruit in the kitchen, or anything practically anywhere!


Grandmother's Pattern Book has this tutorial for a Crocheted Sisal Rug. This might be more than a weekend project, depending on how large you want to make the rug, but a smaller one would be great for a doormat or bathmat, since Sisal will stand up to harsh treatment.


Sisal's toughness makes it ideal for work in the garden. At the UK-based site Gardener's World, sisal and branches combine to make a rustic trellis for the climbing plants in your garden. They also suggest hanging it vertically from a pergola to get shade and privacy, but for those of us without pergolas, I imagine hanging it from a balcony would do just as well. This project needs a drill and a saw is suggested to make the branch ends uniform, but otherwise all you really need is sisal and branches--it's practically free!


This sisal rope shelf project from the Nate Berkus Show could be dressed "down" to look weathered or "up" to look modern, depending on what boards you decide to use. It looks a little nautical and would be great in a bathroom.
Tags:
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
This is a sample post for a job application for the Assistant Editor position at the Apartment Therapy blog.

Everybody loves the clean and classic, yet intricate and precise, look of an M.C. Escher print or drawing. If you're interested in decorating your space with the aesthetic look this Dutch artist made famous, but want to avoid that dorm-room-poster look, here are some elegant ways to Escherize!

Mirrored Spheres: Pile some mirrored spheres in a transparent bowl or vase. This subtle homage to Escher's "Hand with a Reflecting Sphere" and "Three Spheres II" won't break the bank, and adds a dramatic mirrored element to spaces--even those without a lot of wall space. Nova68 has them in a variety of sizes and finishes, from 6" to 20" inches.



Black and White Pillows: Most of Escher's lithography work was in dramatic black and white. To bring both the palette and the patterns of Escher's work into your home in a classy and timeless way, try some of these great black-and-white pillows from The Black and White Store's Plush Living Pillow Collection on your bed or your sofa. The "Daphne" pillow, with its subtle black-on-white or white-on-black tree branch pattern, is reminiscent of Escher's Three Worlds, and the "Crest" pillow, below, features the type of repeating tessellated pattern for which Escher's work became famous.



Interlocking Lizards Soft Puzzle Mat: This fantastic puzzle mat in shades of white and gray, from the New Britain Museum of American Art Museum Store in Connecticut, is a homage to the striking Escher lithograph Reptiles. You
can combine two or more mats for a table topper, bathmat, or rug--fun for a kid's room, and a classic look for an adult's!



Escher Wood Inlay Table: This colorful and beautiful inlaid-wood table from CMGArte in Barcelona, Spain is gorgeous but not ostentatious, with fantastic tapered legs. It's based on one of the many fish-themed tessellations that Escher drew throughout his career.



Update your staircase: Escher loved staircases as design elements. And while your local contractor, not to mention the laws of physics, won't allow you to put in a staircase Relativity-style, you can get that industrial-bannister look on your own stairs via the fantastic Karina space-saving stair kit from Arkè.

Tags:

Tasklist

31/3/11 13:50
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
Clean cat litter, take out recycling/boxes
Make calls to optometrist to find out if they take my insurance
Schedule optimal bus schedule for tomorrow's RMV/grocery store run
Finish b's dress:
- finish sewing
- learn how to use pleating foot
- prototype pockets w/buttonholes on flap
Make some kind of casserole with the frozen green beans that I haven't eaten for two months
Laundry (evening)
Research gphone with bluetooth headset while at laundry
Play with hyperactive fluffball who chewed on my fingers at 3 am this morning because she was bored
Write review of "You can't take it with you" while at laundry
Write to Grandma while at laundry
Email games person while at laundry
Mail card to Grandma
Shower
Feed and dip Tokai
Hex key on wiggly bed foot
Upload video of Tokai to youtube, link to gecko forum re: MBD/calcium
Figure out what the heck is happening with my roommate, landlord and lease since roommate has been talking to me about util/rent split for April but hasn't given me figures yet
Put anime onto shared drive
Ask R. again for Hataraki Man 3-?

Tomorrow:
RMV and grocery run
Stick hygrometer back onto Tokai's tank with double-sided tape
Determine if I can save my plants or if they're really just too dead despite watering/fertilizing TLC
Plant onion in backyard
Work 10h
Schedule skype call with parents
Schedule post-parental skype phone call with sister
Draft of letter to D
Reschedule Harvard library herptology research
B. dress fitting from 7:30 pm
Send dress photos to B.
Pay uhaul
Email movers re: uhaul cambridge to somerville
Order/find part for connecting VGA output to correct input at resolution
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
[livejournal.com profile] ab3nd and I went to go see the Edward Gorey exhibit at the Boston Athenaeum this weekend. It's $5 suggested admission, which means if you're super-broke you can get in for free, but if not it's definitely worth the suggested admission.

It was a little smaller than I expected, but that was ok because there's so much *in* the drawings themselves to see--all those little Gorey-esque touches--that it felt rather larger. There were also some manuscripts, which I thought were really interesting in terms of the fact that he seemed to compose the words separately, for the most part, from the drawings in his sketchbooks. I'd wondered how he created, and that was really great to see. He also loved using placeholders--for instance, the original name of "The Osbick Bird" is "The Something Bird," in draft; a few different name-choices were considered and rejected and re-considered in marginal notes.

The detail in the original ink drawings, themselves, was stunning, even moreso than in any of the anthologies you may have seen. I don't understand how his eyes didn't go bad in his mid-20's. There was a miniature book there no larger than a postage-stamp, every page hand-lettered.

Some of the works profiled there I hadn't read yet, and some of them I'll likely not see again--the hand-colored envelopes, for instance, in which he posted his college letters to his mom.

The Athenaeum itself is really beautiful, and filled with books (only members are allowed to go beyond the first floor). It's ridiculously hard for me to walk around a place filled with books and not actually be able to pick them off the shelf. It's kind of like a sting operation for readers, scholars, and book-hounds--well, you *can* read this book about Gropius, but only if you become a member....

I kind of want to be a member--for one thing, it looks like a fantastic place to do research into American history--but after being herded out the door, I got a clearer head and reconsidered. Not only are memberships expensive, but that kind of exclusivity to knowledge doesn't sit well with me (though I do understand that it is partially to protect and conserve the architecture and the books themselves, many of which are one-offs and antiques worth thousands of dollars). And Boston is so well-stocked with a wealth of libraries anyway...

I suppose that colleges, and indeed any school, in their way, are also exclusive, but at least most colleges don't outright ban members of the public from using their libraries.

...really, I just wanted to read and was annoyed that I was thwarted. But I don't think it's a bad thing to be annoyed at being thwarted at being unable to read a book.

Definitely an exhibit worth seeing.
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
The recipe for Tropic Sunset Peach Bread Pudding is up.

The rest of this post consists of three questions, two of which are for Boston-area or potential Boston-area people, and one of which is about clothing. Boston-area questions first:

- Does anybody have a space where they could take in a cat for a month or two? I'm hoping to get at least a part-time job soon, and have had an interview lined up for two weeks now which I am really hopeful about, but due to crazy circumstances that interview has been rescheduled twice--instead of knowing if I'm going to get this job, I've been on tenterhooks. I don't know when I'm going to be able to get an apartment of my own, and the current situation with Oolong is temporary. I'd pay for food, litter, any vet bills, etc, and come by to see her every other week or so. I'd hoped to have an apartment by now, and I've been in talks with realtors and job people, but it's been slow going. There's no lack of non-paying volunteer opportunities, and there's no lack of administrative positions, but I know I'm no good at doing that particular task-set and need something else to be happy; I'm not really willing to compromise my job-related happiness at this point since it looks like my job is going to be the biggest part of my life for a good while, and it's important for me to get this right, and as soon as possible.

- Is anyone in the Boston area (or anyone interested in moving to the Boston area) interested in splitting an apartment with me? I don't drink at all right now but am generally a fan of liquor, don't smoke but don't care if you smoke outside, and am looking for a place where I can have my cat and a lizard. I'm not interested in living with dogs or other csts, and Oolong is probably not a safe bet for birds, but other pets would probably be fine. I am thinking maybe I would like to live in the Teele Sq area or up near Alewife, or maybe real close to the Camberville border in Arlington. I don't have a car and don't plan on getting one. I plan on setting up a mini artstudio space for making and selling my artwork, wherever I end up. I'm LGTBQ, poly, and generally alternative-lifestyle-friendly. I am interested in cooking and gardening and would be happy with a farmshare or actually growing some food outside or inside. I'm vegan. Another vegan or vegetarian roommate would be ideal, but I'm happy to live with meat-eaters. I'm hoping to find a kind of quiet place to relax most of the time, but the occasional loud and noisy party is great. I kind of hope to host a big friendly dinner/movie night once a week or maybe once a month, and enjoy actually knowing and liking my roommates instead of just kind of passing each other in the hallway.Video gaming, RPGing, anime, music, artistic creation, writing, cooking, general nerdliness, graduate school, etc. are also neat.

If interested, or have questions, please email me, call or text, or private message me on lj. Or you can just leave a comment here and I will get in touch with you.

- For genderqueer, queer, transgender, gender-head people, people who aren't satisfied with what "men's clothing" and "women's clothing" is, and other kinds of people who were interested in the clothing marketplace idea that I posted about a while back--it looks like the Genderplayful Marketplace is raising itself up by its black and purple pleather boostraps. I'd like to sell clothing and accessories there. I already have some ideas for shirts, pants, etc, maybe some accessories. I'd like to do a dress with a built-in tie/vest top, for instance. Does anybody have any suggestions of anything they'd really like to see in that space? I'd love to actually, you know, create what you want and what I want, and market it to you.
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
So, I was thinking about 3D sterescopic viewmaster cameras earlier today (don't ask how I get into these things), and thought suddenly, "it should be easy to do this in Photoshop, right?"

Yay for online tutorials.

Yayer for Photoshop Actions.

Here you go, folks.
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
You could get one of these to go with your Gay Angel Therapist Ken, [livejournal.com profile] gaudior. It looks like poor Bob could use a good therapist.
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
This week's shirt.wooot.com derby theme is "crosshatching," and I got kind of inspired by medieval European beastiaries and the woodcuts invariably contained therein.

Vote for my entry, "A Beastiary!"
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
I was listening to a slowish 4/4 song today while doing grocery shopping; it had a slightly disjointed melody and a singer that sounded deep and sad, like a basso profundo whose kitten had just died being run through a moog [the basso profundo's sobbing, not the kitten]. It kind of reminded me of the Magnetic Fields, but it was, oddly, too peppy. And I was hearing the backbeat without really listening to it, and thinking about the coordinating designs I am making for my website/twitter/lj reworking, and thinking about feeling less defensive about people and things, and thinking, "people who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones," and then this image came into my head.

This is a song, not a poem. I hear the first verse in almost a chant, sort of a Days of Future Past Moody Blues-style

Glass House Rock Garden

Finely raked pebbles
patterns white on white
statue in the distance
panes letting in gray light

Stoop and pluck
and break the pattern
warm palm round cold stone
the garden's silent
rocks are silent
you are silent
and alone

Dusty fountains
dusted fingers
dusty door lintel
dust disturbed
across the threshold
your step
see the less gray place
where less dust fell

Try the lock/rusted broken
try the windows/bolted closed
white rocks in this
greenhouse garden
it's too quiet
you're alone

Now can't get out
how you got in then
the only key's
your stone

Try the lock/rusted broken
try the windows/bolted closed
just rocks in this
glass house garden
it's too quiet
you're alone

Zen rocks in your
glass house garden --
glass breaks easy,
is no home --
can't now get out
how you got in then
your key's palm-shaped
throw the stone
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
So, Tampax is sponsoring this website. Main character: teenaged boy who wakes up one day with a vagina and gets his period. Yes, I know that reads like a crazy manga plot.

There's video diaries, and a twitter feed. It's...really, really strange and a bit unnerving.

Is it misogynistic? Anti-feminist? Trans-phobic? None of those things? All of them, by turns? Is it actually...useful? Is it going to talk about TSS, given that a tampon company is sponsoring it? I can't tell.

Is it a brilliant piece of viral market research so that young teens will talk on the message board about getting their first period? Probably.

Is it interesting that they're providing a forum for young teens to talk on the message board about getting their first period at all? Definitely.

[Edit: Update from "Zack's" twitter stream: applied to a couple all girl colleges on the East Coast. will they let a neutered fox into their henhouse?

I think the most amazing thing about that is the word "neutered," when the whole point of the ad campaign is that he's getting his period. Yeah, getting your period is totally disconnected from the onset of sexual maturity. It's really just an excuse to buy tampons in fifteen different sizes. And then, the lovely man=predator, women=prey implication. The assumptions behind that two-line tweet/ad are fascinating/disturbing/actually pretty disappointingly normal.

Oh yeah. When this starts really hitting the blogs in 24 hours it's going to get...interesting.]

Edit: "Zack" isn't the only sensitive man trying to sell you feminine products.
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)
Go vote for my first-ever shirt.woot.com entry, "Tourist Attraction."

If you don't like that one, I will probably do another one--this derby theme is "Shakespeare" and I'm using these as an excuse to get good at Photoshop and Illustrator.

March 2016

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516 171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Page generated 2/6/25 19:12

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags