Archive for January 17th, 2008

Made in China with Lead Paint

What are we up to now? Millions upon millions of toys recalled due to being made in China and suffering from low-quality/no-quality standards? Just one toy (eg. Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway Friends train set) can amount to a million and a half units recalled – that’s just one toy line.


Made in China with Lead Paint

Our family protested by not buying many of the things we would have bought our children for Christmas and birthdays – but the list keeps growing it’s hard to know what is next and since estimates are that 80% of children’s toys are made in China… it’s hard to find alternatives – not that it’s not worth trying to.

Here’s another one of my twisted ways of protesting the situation:

Made in China with Lead Paint TShirt



Nostromo n52

Originally uploaded by blipfish.


The Nostromo n52
(There’s a newer version out now)

www.Belkin.com

It’s generally marketed as a controller for PC games. Competitive players like the fact it has multi-function keys and controls but also the fact the software allows for macros (performing difficult moves that require many precise, coordinated key presses) with only a single button push.

For me, it’s all well and good – Battlefield 2, Call of Duty, and all that.

However, this little gizmo really shines when used in Photoshop.

I already have repetitive stress and that’s not unusual for a graphic artist, especially one that works on the computer. I use a multi-button mouse, keyboard, one of two graphic tablets, and believe me the stress and strains on one’s hands, wrists, and forearms can be a lot after a long workday.

The Nostromo n52 controller allows me to work in Photoshop CS2 and complete many of the macro commands I use regularly with perhaps half (or less) the button presses.

I’ve managed to reduce my hand/wrist stress a LOT by using this. I often place it on my left leg (as I use it with my left hand) and it’s very comfortable. It allows me to perform multi-key tasks with only a button push or two and that is definitely worthwhile.

So, if you’re getting tired of having sore hands and hitting CTRL-SHIFT-Z or whatever in your software applications – try hooking up with one of these and get used to just pushing a single key.

Since I’m a fan of tshirts



I got it!

Originally uploaded by blipfish.


I got it!

I got my first, officially licensed Major League Baseball Chicago Cubs Practice Jersey (by Nike). Yes… ooh, ah. Behold. Behold.

Hey, you gotta be a Cubs fan when in Iowa because we have the Minor League Cubs (to the Chicago Cubs) here. I think it’s a State law?

WIP



WIP

Originally uploaded by blipfish.


(Work in Progress)

Just reflecting back a year ago.

2006-2007 Holiday Season:

I’m working with some extremely talented web designers over at Peon Productions to get a new online storefront built. There are a lot of loose-ends to tidy up, but essentially we’re into the “sea trials” where we bang on the site and see what holds together and what needs work.

It’s all part of my “day job” – I run several online apparel companies of different kinds with different suppliers. This particular one has been a theme I’ve been looking forward to carrying forward but haven’t had the time. It takes a lot for a graphic designer to hire a team of web designers… shows how busy I am. However, I’m thinking the results are going to be wonderful. I can’t wait for the roll out.

Very happy to say it rolled out nicely and looks great to this day.

Thanks Audrie!

Seems appropriate today, somehow.



I suppose webcams take photos, yes?

Originally uploaded by blipfish.


Running the blipfish corporate empire requires work, work, and coffee.

Well, it requires a few other things but few are more important than the above three things (or would that be two?).

Working for one’s self from a home office has many challenges, perks, and oddities. This picture (well, webcam shot) shows one of the oddities – my graphic desk in all its cluttered, cabled, and blinking light glory… or as much as this shot shows those things.

Three mice? Well, the G7 is partially for gaming and times when I need the high-resolution precision but the greatest benefit is to relief of my repetitive stress syndrome! It has saved me from pain so much. The black/grey model came with the wireless keyboard. It doesn’t “fit” my hand well and hurts to use too much. The grey one is wirelss that goes with my smaller Wacom tablet (the cord underneath goes to the tablet). I actually have a 12×18 tablet and the mouse for that is much more comfortable than this one.

Silver disc… 4 port USB hub / Coffee warmer! ha ha! Seriously! A gift from my “boss” at Cafepress.com – lovely folks.

Baseball – Rawlings Official League RPBX 9 inch, 5 oz. practice ball. Sand-fllled hackey-sack underneath it.

Glove hand – Old habit with a purpose. “Back in the day” when I’d draw with pencil/ink a glove was useful for not smudging the paper. Now, even though using Wacom tablets have no such issue it helps keep my hand movement across the plastic surface smooth and quick. Enough hours of using the tablet and your hand gets a bit warm… sorta’ squeaking across the surface. The glove helps avoid that.

The KCCI tower cam – I’m not positive, I think that’s the new Wells Fargo Arena? Someone can hopefully correct me. Check out their very cool webcams at KCCI.com – let them know how much you enjoy what they offer. I love their tower cams.

Aquarium Cam – Serene Screen’s ever-so-wonderful saltwater virtual aquarium. I’m partial to the lionfish, personally.

I’ll bet I’m not the only SOHO that has a desk that looks like something out of a mad scientist’s lab?

TornadoRepublic.com



Tornado Republic

Originally uploaded by blipfish.


Just testing the quality of the new, vinyl signs. This isn’t for sale – just needed something to get in my hands and gauge the print quality and color fastness. It’s a quickie conversion of a tshirt design from one of the stores.

Quite nice – it’s a heavy vinyl, very solid printing, good saturation, crisp lines, and overall a good product.

Blipfish is pleased.

Original image on actual, for sale product:

Tornado Republic Adventure Charter Tshirt

“The Back Page” 1

Believe it or not but there’s a lot that goes into writing this column. There’s less to do when publishing it to this blipfish blog, but there’s stuff going on behind the scenes, let me tell you.

Not everyone is up to the challenge.

I have to open up deep, dark, secret parts of my psyche and drop them down in front of you. Did you hear that thud? That was one right there. Damn, that sounded deep and dark, didn’t it?

Fortunately I have coping mechanisms that help get me through each day. You have to when you work for yourself.

My day begins with my first cup of coffee. My wife says it’s more like a science experiment. I think she’s referring to the fact that I have a precise formula I follow to make it “just right” each time. Fresh ground coffee (whole bean, extra bold), two spoons of sugar, splash of creamer (the good kind, of course), one and a half spoons of chocolate syrup (again, the good kind), and then I fill up the stainless steel travel mug within one and a half inches from the top. This leaves just enough room for a little milk to top it off. (I think I’m starting to see her point).

It’s important to start the day right when you have the responsibility of creating this brilliant column, selling tshirts, creating masterpieces of art, consulting for businesses, marketing affiliates, and playing Tiger Woods golf with Mike or Ajay. As a matter of fact I insist on only using that stainless steel mug for my coffee. The first reason is that it holds more than a normal coffee cup. The second reason… it looks like some high-tech container that alien embryos might be stored cryogenically inside of. (Now you’re starting to see why I need coffee). But, this is all due to the fact that I have have such vast responsibilities and frankly, because you people stress me out. It reminds me of when I was milk-monitor in grade school. My powers were absolute. There was a lot on my shoulders then, too.

With coffee number one in hand I head to the office. My think box. The Crow’s Nest. I log on to the computer and check mail.

I must be getting old. I remember when “checking the mail” had only one meaning… going to the front door, opening it, sticking your hand inside the metal box and pulling out paper envelopes and letters from Ed McMahon. Now, it means something different to many people. It’s a shame too because sometimes you get lucky and get a really attractive mail-carrier-lady-person like mine who has nice legs. (“mine” – like I hold the pink-slip on her).

Anyway, I digress…

I check the “mail” in roughly this order: email from friends first, mail from friends second, email lists or groups I subscribe to third, physical magazines I subscribe to fourth, and then any mail marked “urgent” gets looked at last.

I like getting mail. I like email especially. The Internet allows me a great way to reclusively socialize from the comfort of my office chair, drinking my coffee, sitting in my underwe…

I’ve said too much.

I also like writing these columns for you every month. I like saying that I write them every month when they don’t really get done that consistently. It’s a great way to communicate without having to get dressed up (or dressed) or having to set my cryogenic container down (coffee mug).

It makes me feel important. It even makes me seem… mysterious.

“So, what do you do Dan?”

“I… write… I do other things too.”

“Wow, that’s very important, even a little mysterious.”

See? I like that.

On to the other things…

I have a friend, we’ll call him “Hector” (that’s not his real name). Hector likes to give me ideas about what to write, products to add to the stores, pictures and paintings to create. Now, it’s easy to come up with the greatest poster design since Andy’s Campbell Soup Cans (at least “think in your own mind that you’ve come up with a great design”). It’s an entirely different matter to be the one who has to create such things.

You see, when Hector (not his real name, remember?) says things like: “Hey! You could do this really great ball of fire that jumps off the page, and has this 3-D effect that when people look at it they can’t believe it’s not real!” I tend to turn a deaf ear to him because you just know that that can’t possibly work in spite of how grand it sounds. I mean, it’s weirder than those paintings of Jesus or Elvis where the eyes seem to follow you around.

But, I humor him and smile. He probably thinks he’s the driving force behind my artistic visions. I also think he likes to tell people that he would be my “phone a friend” guy if I ever made it on that television game show that used to be hosted by Regis.

He isn’t and he wouldn’t.

(I wonder what the liability issues would be for a poster that actually burned the tops of people’s heads as they walked by?) Hmmmm…

(Have you noticed that I write parenthetically a lot?)

I admit it. I do (write parenthetically way too much). It’s like typing what I think. I like writing this way. I like having a friend whose name I won’t tell you. In fact, there’s no reason on Sting’s green Earth for me not to tell you. Yet, it all makes me seem like I have stuff going on that’s just too important or mysterious to tell you about. Like those guys that write to Penthouse Magazine, or so I hear. Yah, they have mysterious and action-packed lives, let me tell you! I mean, that’s what I hear.

Having a friend that is named “Hector” is no big deal. There’s lots of Hectors out there and they must be friends of somebody, right? But, telling you upfront that it’s not his real name makes me seem like I have “people” that you shouldn’t know about. Hey, I can have people. I can… like Hector (as you recall—that’s not his real name).

Nope, I wouldn’t tell you his name. Not even if you begged me or large sums of money were involved. You could even bribe me with a visit from Gillian Anderson wearing nothing but a bikini and tinfoil hat and I still wouldn’t tell you. It would ruin the image you have of me – coffee, parentheses, mystery and all.

I like my coffee. I like writing parenthetically. I like them almost as much as referring to Ajay as “Hector.”