10.31.2010

Georgia!

Oh, unusual musical collaborations. You make me so happy.
Atlanta resident and captain of cool Cee-Lo Green has a new single from his upcoming album "The Lady Killers." This one pays homage to his home state and extols its virtues, of which there are multitude. Duh.
Anyway, so Band of Horses wanted to pay the same kind of tribute to Georgia, where lead singer Ben Bidwell's parents grew up, so they covered Cee-Lo's new song. They even asked the University of Georgia's marching band to help out on the track (for this, they can be forgiven). And then Cee-Lo was all "me, too! me, too!" and covered Band of Horses' "No One's Gonna Love You" for his new album. The two musical acts have released a duo single with two A-sides featuring the covers. And it is awesomeness. You must download them here.

10.28.2010

Calendar girl

I'm obsessed with beautiful, crafty handmade calendars. Luckily, the blog Decor8 has done all my shopping for me.
Check it out:
Calendar round-up part 1

Calendar round-up part 2

Calendar round-up part 3

Calendar round-up part 4

A few of my favorites:

This letterpress desk calendar from Paper Source.

This beautiful fabric calendar from Lisa Rupp Design.


A beautiful pillowcase calendar from le papier studio.
 

Tea towel calendar from Bookhou.



This wall calendar from TwoDotTwo.

10.12.2010

Oh, baby!

I'm helping host a baby shower for my lovely friend C in a couple of weeks. Since C is solidly anti-blog ("I just don't get them," she says), I'm not worried about this spoiling things for her.
To start, I decided to make the invitations echo the bedding C picked out for her baby boy.
Here you go:



So, I dashed to Michael's to see what craft paper they had. I couldn't get the exact colors, but I got close enough that I was pretty happy. Then came the fun part. Cutting and gluing! I blew up the image of the bird and cut out each piece individually, tracing it on the various patterns of craft paper. I pasted it all on one piece and scanned it into my computer. I made the design fit 8 1/2 x 11 paper so that it would look high-res when I shrink it down.
Ta-da:



Then Hot Pants helped out because he's a genius at Photoshop and I am rather clunky with it. (Pause here to scratch Oscar dog's head. He's rooting around in my lap.) HP shrank the photo, added a place for type and then let me do the rest. I immediately headed to 1001 Free Fonts, which is the absolute best website for DIYers. Memorize it. Love it. Get all crazy about it.
I selected Protection, downloaded it and went about my merry way. I decided to print two to a page to save cardstock. Then I put the paper cutter and corner rounder I bought for our wedding invites to work.
Voila:



I think I spent a total of $40 on supplies (not counting the cutters and other crafty stuff I already owned) and was incredibly pleased with the outcome _ probably much more than I would have been had I ordered them online or from a store.
More baby shower crafts  to come! Stay tuned.

10.06.2010

Wired

I've developed a minor obsession with the story behind Facebook, sparked, of course, by my deep and undying love for all things Aaron Sorkin. Hell, I love the man so much, I watched every episode of "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip," even the terrible ones at the end.

When I first heard he was penning the screenplay for "The Social Network" (the seedy and somewhat questionable back story of Facebook), I was beside myself. I needed to prepare. Luckily, Hot Pants (remember him?) has the two books about the ubiquitous social networking site: the one that Mark Zuckerberg approves of and the one he thinks is a steaming pile of poo. They're both great reads but are COMPLETELY different books.

"The Accidental Billionaires" by Ben Mezrich is racy, gossipy and downright seedy. It's fast paced _ I read it in a day. And it's only from the point of view of the four guys suing Zuckerberg over Facebook's genesis. One is his former best friend who he totally fucked over when the company was still very young and so were they. The other are three Harvard classmates who seem rather whiny and spoiled, stomping their feet and saying "He stole our idea!" even when he kinda did and he kinda didn't. Mezrich makes no bones about admitting he never once spoke with Zuckerberg for the book despite the author's repeated requests AND he confesses to condensing timelines, recreating scenes and generally making shit up. Take it with a grain of salt, but read it anyway. It's fascinating.

The second book is the Zuckerberg-approved tome "The Facebook Effect," which looks not only at the company's start but also at the impact it's having on the world. This time written by journalist David Kirkpatrick who spent many, many hours interviewing the boy genius himself and many others at Facebook. The writing is much drier, much more direct, and it's not as good storytelling as the other book, but Kirkpatrick really dives into the meat of the company rather than simply relying on the he said-she said bullshit that's emerged since the website started. It's a stark contrast to Mezrich's soap opera, spending very little time on the lawsuits against Zuckerberg and instead focusing on the company itself.

Now the movie. *happy sigh*

Really? It was fantastic. Smart, witty, fast-paced. All the things that Sorkin does so well, wrapped up in an adorable little crimson bow (Harvard jokes! Love them!). Forget facts and what's real. This is great storytelling at its core, and Sorkin has not ever said the story is completely factual. In fact, in a New York magazine article, he actually said he argued with director David Fincher to go with inaccuracy when it improved the story. In one scene where it's well documented that Zuckerberg was drinking Beck's, Sorkin said he wanted to have the character consume screwdrivers because that made it appear that he was trying to get drunk. Fincher won in the end and Jesse Eisenberg, who plays Zuckerberg, chugs down beer as he hacks into servers across Harvard.

Go see the movie for sure, but if you've got the notion, pick up the books, too. Join my geek army.

10.05.2010

Calling do-over

Let's try this again, shall we?

After talking with friends, the husband and many others about the direction this blog should take, I realize now what was missing. Me.

Somewhere along the way I got the idea that this blog should be about something, that it should have a direction and a theme. Well, that's just a bunch of bullshit. This blog was always about what gave me pleasure, enjoyment, hope and happiness. It was about what made me tick. It's my big ol' canvas. I just forgot that I don't have to paint within the lines (or some terrible analogy like that).

So what if I don't post every day? So what if it's horribly uninteresting? So what if I get no comments? This blog isn't for you. It's for me.

So there.