Friday, December 31, 2010

2010

A Year In Review

Well it's been a long year chaulked full of stuff. The beginning of this year is when I started to get more involved with posting the things I do online. This post will review just what I have done in 2010 using links to those things I posted. Click away.

January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
  • I helped install Lead Pencil Studio's Ramp Drawings at a new library in Bellevue.
  • I took a hike.
  • I gave away the bells.
  • I made a new lens for my camera.
October
  • I got a new welding hood.
  • I saw this.
  • I spent 2 weeks up in Blaine installing Lead Pencil Studio's border sculpture Non-Sign II. Here is the video, and some pictures, and more stuff.
  • I came upon this in the middle of the night.
November
December 
Man when you write it all out that was a lot for one year. I'm sure I'm probably missing a few things as well, but these are at least some of the major things I did or saw in 2010. By far this was the best 2010 yet.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Even More Work


Detailed Wawona Video

Here is a longer video detailing just what goes into removing one of the planks on the Wawona.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Christmas Of Old

Christmas 1987

Oh boy, I uploaded the video of our Christmas morning that my Dad filmed way back when in 1987.

Some highlights of part one include:

In the beginning my sister sends me and my brother up as scouts to see if it's alright to come up yet, at the 20 second mark you can hear my brother give the all clear.

@ 1:35 You can see me look with envy at my brothers gift because apparently his had a little man and mine didn't

@2:30 I quickly forget about all my new toys and start to play with the candle snuffer

@3:20 Classic forgetting to turn the camera off while walking. It's great though because you get a good view of what the street looked like and there is still an empty lot across from the house which had the newspaper shack where I though the paper boy lived.

@5:00-5:40 you can hear me and my brother yelling at my Grandma to sit down, probably because my mom had told us that we can start opening presents when everyone has sat down.

@6:10 Me: "I want to open my big one now!" My Dad: "You don't get a big one." Me: "Uh huh"

@6:54 My Dad: "Who's it from Ian?" Me:"I DON'T KNOW?" I didn't know how to read yet.

@6:59 Sarah, why the hell are you grabbing my present? HANDS OFF! Seriously WTF.

@6:15 Mom:"The potato head family" Grandpa:"A potato peeler?"

@7:47 Dad: "Is that an old skirt?"

@11:50 Wrinkle cream

@12:50 My sister throws something at me, and my initial defensive reaction is to scream, but I stop mid scream either because she threw some candy at me or I get distracted by my stocking, I can't quite tell.

@13:20 The infamous Australian Plate is mentioned

@14:47 Me looking at a wrapped gift. My Dad: "What is it Ian?" Me: I throw my hand up. My Dad: "Who's it from?" Me: "I DON'T KNOW!


Here are the highlights from part 2

@1:04 My Dad: "Sarah come on were getting hungry."

@2:43 My Grandpa: "A Chinese host considers it their duty to get their guests drunk." My Dad: "It's their duty? In Japan they get their guests laid." My Uncle Dan: "I thought that was Hawaii."

@3:17 Dad: "Don't jump you'll break the floor."

@3:32 NSFW

@4:47 My present I made for my mom. It's not just a piece of wood. This year I also gave my mom a piece of wood for Christmas.

@9:20 Pants, and I quote "I hate these pants" I still hate corduroy.

@11:08 My Dad's present to my Mom is a video cassette cabinet, Just what my Dad always wanted.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Christmas

My Mom's Present

This year I decided to give my mom a piece I've been working on for about a year now. I've been working on it off and on every now and again while working on other things for my etsy shop. This piece was much more detailed and took a lot more patience to work on. The original design concept is based off of organic form doodles that I had been doing. The pattern consists of an intertwining, overlapping, multilayer form. It's all carved from one single piece of rosewood and is backed with a piece of sterling silver.

Christmas

Christmas 2010

Well, Christmas has come and gone. Here are a few pictures I took of the Gillville Christmas this year. The evening was filled with lots of good food, beer, wine, camera battles, more food, then even more food, then to top it off my aunt Julie gave everyone the finger, just another typical Gillville Christmas.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

View Count

Super Titi View Count

I've posted a number of videos to Youtube, most of which I post in this blog. After I post a video I never really check on it, I basically use Youtube as a video hosting site for this blog. Well recently I was looking at the view counts of my videos and one stood out with an unusually high number of views. That video is my Super Titi video from the blog post I did about it. Currently the video I made for that post has 4,533 views.

Here is the video


There are also a number of comments on this video that are all in French, here they are with a google translation along with them.
Ou est l'intérêt de poster ce genre de vidéo ? - Or is the point of posting this kind of video?
Mais pk maitre sa sur YouTube - But his master pk YouTube
Mais pourquoi ne pas savoir écrire français - But why could not write French
MDR ! - LOL!
 From what I can figure my video must come up when people are looking for this guy.


I guess he's some French douche bag that pranks people when they litter?

Monday, December 20, 2010

More Work


How I'm Spending My Days

This is pretty much all I do now.


Each plank takes about an hour to remove. Each section I'm working on is roughly 15 feet long and the plank is attached to 4 ribs. For each plank there are on average 4 Iron spikes and 12 wood pegs. The wood pegs are really easy to saw through once the plank is wedged up slightly to get the saw in. The time consuming part are the iron spikes. Originally I tried to pull the spikes out with a spike puller but it was not going well. If you look in my previous video you can see Emmett trying with no luck trying to get one up. Those spikes have sat in the same spot for 120 years and are happy where they are and don't want to come out. Trying to pull the plank up with the spikes in will actually damage the plank because the head of the spike will blow out the bottom of the board and can actually spit the board. So, I decided to square off the heads of the spikes with a chisel. My carbide tip chisel cuts through that old iron like butter. Once the heads are squared off the board easily slides up off the rest of the spike. So far it's the fastest method that results in the cleanest and best way to prevent damage to the planks.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Thrifty #14


Beauregard D. Hound Mug

It's been a while since my last thrifty post, mostly because I haven't been doing a lot of thrifty shopping and the things I've been finding aren't all that great. Well today that changed when I found the most random, weird, amazing, strange mug. Where to start, well there is a picture of a dog, whose head has been photoshopped onto a portrait of a confederate soldier. In fact his name is Beauregard D. Hound, Private, 2nd Louisiana Regiment CSA. Have a look at him.


If your sitting there wondering who is this dog? Don't worry, there is also a story on the mug telling his tale.


To make it easier to read I'll just type it out here.

Private Hound looked good in uniform.
Real good. Shallow and caring little
about the cause, he spent hours while
on the battlefield admiring himself in
the looking glass he carried in his
breast pocket. One sunny day near
Petersberg, VA, reflections from that
mirror inadvertently signaled his 
company's position to Union forces.
Following a brief skirmish, Private
Hound was taken prisoner by his own
comrades and turned over to the
enemy. Unfortunately for him, his
mirror was never recovered. 

Ok, got all that? I'm not sure where to even begin with all of this. Umm.... yea, I'm at a loss for words on this one.

There is also a website address on the mug dopeydopeydopey.com which links to this site www.cafepress.com/dopeydogart Go read their "About Us" page to get a better since of just what is going on here.





They do have this mug with the dog on it for sale.. They actually have a whole Civil War Parody section. Along with mugs you can get t-shirts, sweatshirts, notecards, mousepads, pillows, tiles, and more. Avalable in numerous dog breeds, all with their own story. If your there saying to yourself, but Ian, I don't have a dog. Don't worry they also have items for your cats, goats, horses, and iguanas.

Wait, why did I buy this again?



Monday, December 13, 2010

What I'm Up To

Flippin' The Wawona
(if you know what I mean)

Today I was working out at the site where the Wawona is and spent the day working with a crane to flip the sections of the ship. Most of the wood that John will use is the outer planking which is much more well preserved then the inside planking. A lot of the inside planking is rotten or cracked but the outer planking is pretty well preserved because of the paint and care over the years. The sections of the ship are about 15x15 feet and I'll probably spend the next two weeks pulling the planking off by slowly wedging and cutting the wood dowels holding them down.

I took a time lapse today of the flipping process, which was pretty strait forward. The crane operator said each section weighed on average between 13,000 and 16,000 pounds. I'm planning on documenting the removing of the planks quite extensively over the next two weeks. This planking has been in place for over 120 years and in just a week or two it will slowly be dismantled.


Here are some photos of the outer hull planking with a hint of the red/green paint still on.

Super Giveaway

Giveaway Bonanza

Today my friend Moorea is going to be having a giveaway of epic proportion. Throughout the day she will be posting new giveaways to her blog with a total of four giveaways with six items you could win. She will also be hosting another giveaway on LA-Tv tonight at 5pm where you have a chance to enter to win an additional three items. Go over to Moorea's Blog to read the rules and enter to win some amazing things, and be sure to check back throughout the day to see all the new giveaways.





One of her giveaways today will be for one of my looking glass pendants. This pendant is one that had cracked while I was putting in the last screw but I was able to glue it back together. I would be surprised if you can tell where the repair is. Because this piece is a repaired piece I feel much better giving it away rather then selling it. So be sure to check Moorea's blog throughout the day for a chance to win this pendant necklace.

Giveaway #4

Giveaway #4

Giveaway #4

Interested? Go sign up!



Thursday, December 9, 2010

Work

Dismantling The Wawona

If you need me in the next two weeks or so this is what I'll be doing.


More about this project here.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

New Items

Lots More Etsy

I've been posting a bunch of new items to my Etsy Shop over the past week. Some have been items I've been working on for a while and just finished. I've actually had them for a long while, I did a post about them back in February you can see here. I hit a snag with these items where I just could not figure out a easy way to make a bail for them. This was my original concept piece and I did a custom piece which I sold on esty that I designed a custom bail that tube riveted to the wood. The bail not only acts a a way to hang the piece it also acts as a cover for the knots at the beginning and end of the wire. The cap worked great but it took a bit to much finessing for me to want to try and do it for the other production pieces. I wanted a quick and easy, but still good looking, and custom technique for each one.

Here is the origingal bail design.


Looks great and works great, just takes time. I finally decided on a new design that I knew would be fast yet still look good. I decided to invest in a small propane torch that I could solder with some degree of control. Up until now if I wanted to solder something I used my camp stove burner which I have no control, it was basically on and off. Having control while soldering silver is really important, silver can be very unpredictable and it hard to judge if you are close to melting it before it melts. Using a propane torch for such small pieces would still be difficult but it can be done.

Here is a picture showing the top of the rosewood frame which has a small carved out nook which hides the beginning and end knot of the wire.  The tubes fit snugly into holes drilled into the wood and an epoxy resin is used to keep them in place. You can see the rough bail on the left which I soldered a flattened piece of sterling wire. I then use more epoxy to hold the bail to the wood and then I use a sharp punch to ream the inside of the tube to rivet it to the bail. Using a tube to rivet in this situation is necessary, I would not be able to use a wire rivet because hammering it might damage the wood.

Dream Window

I was able to make four bails in about an hour, where using my original bail design would have probably taken me a whole day.

Here are the four pieces I have posted to my shop with the new bail design. 

Dream Windows

Dream Window No.5

The square piece was a little challenging. The little nook hiding the ends of the wire were on the side of the piece and to make the bail symmetrical I needed to cover some of the stitching on the other side as well. There is actually a groove filed out on the back side of the bail to accommodate the wire. The tubes had to be placed after the bail was glued to the wood, but I think the placement of the tubes in this piece make it the strongest of all of them.

Dream Window No.4

I'm planning on making more of these now that I have the bail figured out. I'm probably going to be doing some more soldering as well now that I have that figured out.

Another piece I soldered is the clasps for my chainmail bracelets. With these pieces I'm able to use my camp stove. I've been using coins as the clasps for these pieces. I have some coins that my grandma gave me from her travelings back in the day. I made one braclet using coins from Thailand and one from Greece, these coins look great outright but with the patina I gave them and sitting on the chainmail bracelet make them look amazing.

Thai Baht Chainmail Bracelet

Greek Drachmes Chainmail Bracelet


I've also been making some wood rings. These are fairly strait forward and easy to make and it a good way of using up small scraps of wood I have. I decided to make some varying sizes and will probably replace each size as they are sold.

Hand Carved Bubinga Ring Size 6

Hand Carved Bubinga Ring Size 7

Hand Carved Bubinga Ring Size 8

And last, but not least, it this long etsy post are some rubber bracelets that were salvaged from some old camera lenses. You know all those lens pendants I've been making? Well all those lenses came from old camera lenses. So along with having a bunch of lenses I have a ton of random lens body parts lying around. Some of which are the perfect size to be used as bracelets. Like these two.

Rubber Focal Grip Bracelet No. 1

Rubber Focal Grip Bracelet No. 2

They are the focal grips from the old lenses that I took off and cleaned up a bit. These along with everything else in this post can be found right now in my Etsy Shop.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

What I'm Up To

ETSY ETSY ETSY

I've been filling up my shop with new lens pendants this week, go check them out HERE and snag one while they are still on sale. I'm also going to be posting some new wood rings I've been making and also some more chainmail bracelets.

There is one piece that I've been working on and off for a while now is starting to near its completion. Here is a little sneak peak at all its pieces.


It consists of three lenses, two hand machined copper covers, one wood housing and one spring loaded fully functional aperture taken from an old camera lens.

You will be able to look through the center at a fish eye view of the world through the three lenses and then be able to slide the aperture to your choosing, or just click away like you're taking pictures.


I'll probably have this one finished within a week or so, assuming I don't run into any problems. I have a few more apertures like this one from old lenses but I'm not sure if I will make more of these. I'll just wait and see how well this one is received. What say you? Is this something you can imagine yourself wearing?

Next Project

The Wawona

Since I finished up my last project, Non-Sign II, I've mostly been working on items for my Etsy Shop which you can see and buy from here. I've enjoyed finally having time to work on my own stuff, but seeing how working on my own stuff doesn't seem to pay the bills I have another project for John Grade lined up which I'll start here soon. It will first involve dismantling the old sailing ship the Wawona which is currently sitting in huge pieces out at Magnuson park.


Here is some back story on the Wawona.

Built in 1897 in Fairhaven, California by noted Scandanavian shipwright Hans Ditlev Bendixsen, the Wawona was one of the largest three-masted schooners built in North America. Designed to carry lumber from Washington State to California and more distant ports, the Wawona sailed with a mimimal crew and without ballast for the Dolbeer & Carson Lumber Company.
In 1914, the Wawona was sold to the Robinson Fisheries Company in Anacortes, Washington. She was refit to fit for cod, exchanging piles of timber for stacks of dories, and some of her immense cargo hold for crew bunks. Using the "dory-and-mothership" fishing system of the Grand Banks cod fishery, the Wawona and her crew caught more than 7.2 million cod over 33 years.

During World War II, the US Army took control of the Wawona, removing her masts and using her as a barge to transport lumber and other supplies along the Pacific coast. Following the war, she fished for another two seasons, then was retired and ultimately purchased by Northwest Seaport, then Save Our Ships, in 1964.
However, as a large wooden vessel originally built to last only a few decades, the Wawona eventually degraded beyond repair. After conferring with many experts in the maritime heritage field, locally and across the nation, Northwest Seaport created a plan to preserve key artifacts from the vessel. In March, 2009, the vessel was carefully deconstructed in a local shipyard and artifacts (including wooden knees, beams, and paneling) removed for storage and later display in on-land exhibits and memorials.
John Grade is going to be building a new sculpture using the wood from the Wawona. The new sculpture will eventually be placed in The Museum of History and Industry's new location at South Lake Union. What I will be doing is helping to take apart sections of the ship and select pieces that John can use.

Here are the pictures I took when I went out to check it out last week. Like I said, it's in pieces, many large pieces.


Here is a video of it being towed from it's location at South Lake Union to be dismantled.



and here it is being chopped into pieces.


Eventually the entire ship will be used for something. All of the important and historical artifacts from the ship were salvaged and saved waiting for a home in a museum someday. All the wood for the ship will be used for projects like John Grade's. Wood workers can submit proposals for projects using wood from the ship and eventually all the wood will be given out.  You can see more photos of the ship and artifacts here.