Monday, April 22, 2019

Approaching To or Moving Away From




The last two hexagrams in the I Ching are about perfection.  Not to get too much into the whys and howfors but perfection (in the I Ching) is a transitory state.  Each of the two hexagrams talk about conditions that either lead to that brief state or are leaving from it.  Perfection is just a moment between the two other movements.


The two multiplied to become six and divided to become three.


So, even though everything is in alignment to become perfection, it's a precarious balance for the slightest shift starts the movement away the harmony of elements.

The WoodRat cut out this portion.  Everything really needs to be just right for the WoodRat to be used at this scale.  Blocked up perfectly.  Left to right must be spot on.  Securely clamped in place.  The router bit must be honed to scapelness for shavings like this.








The thinnest of knife cuts out to define the negative and positive shapes.  Each movement of the saw up and down is either approaching or moving away from perfection.  Still you try and become one with the movement of the saw.  The universe comes down to thin steel, a line and the wood.




Scared of failure, the decision is to cut shy of the line and sneak up it, one shaving at a time.

Trying to make that transition from up to across an easy trip for the eye so the ends are mitered.
We humans love right angles, I guess there's an economy of efficiency in that ratio.  A 45 degree sled is made to support the saw blade for the uneven surface of the live edge.






First look at what side of perfection I'm on. Am I approaching it or have I've already moved away from it to repair the damage?








A case of tequila is to prop open the gate at Chris and Ella's place.  Chris is an alcohol importer.
How perfect is that!!!

A couple coats of shellac have been applied back at the shop.
Clamped and left overnight.
So so easy think this is the perfect method/movement for trimming the tiny overhang.  So so easy to move away from perfection to repair with this method/movement.

Another coat of shellac applied at Chris and Ella's.  Still wet.




Everything in it's correct and proper place.  The six lines of each hexagram are either precariously perfect or at a state of ripeness to move back to perfect.  They are mirrors of each other.



The miter on the corner was a perfect idea.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

CAPO

Sheet music in shellac dissolving


The shellac dissolving photo should go with a post coming in a few days.  But it seems that life really just comes down to a few patterns that are drawn and colored in an infinite number of ways.

The flakes of the shellac as they fall downward through the denatured alcohol reads like a silent piece of music.
 
Saturday we opened up the doors and the heart of 3003 to tightened strings and rosined horsehair and varnished wood.
Dusted and arranged the place.  Just so.

CAPO.  Composers. Arrangers. Performers. Orchestra.  Each of the nine piece play one of their own. 

I'll take you up until the doors open and the line out the door is allowed in.  And the camera is put down to let the patterns of life and music once again caress and hold the center.

An hour of practice and correction.  Video and sound production being finessed.




 Re-noting.
Listening.
The sun as it goes away to allow the darkness back.
Crystal and Justin intent. 
They'll be more of these.  It was too precious, too beautiful, too special for there not to be.
Whether the next one lasts until 3:30 in the morning like this one will be seen.


Friday, February 22, 2019

No Low Income Allowed

The immediate neighbor to the West of us is dead.  Rhonda came by to say that.  Liver related she said. He drove up maybe six months ago and parked.  New address, new views.
He lived in the red and white RV.  That's his car in front of it as well.
Rhonda said he came from good family, had a house a couple blocks away but lost it somehow after the mother died.
That new place being built, all shiny gold, that one looking down on the red and white RV.  Views of our Six Palms.  No low income units going in there.  I guess it was urban legend that idea that all new development must include a percentage of affordable units.  I wonder if a certain percentage of money is being dedicated to put some nice public art on the building.  Probably.  Pretty sure that's a law now.
I can hardly say much myself, seeings how I'm part of the gentrification of the area.
Life and death rolls on no matter what.  Living high and looking down or the other way round.  Bad liver, good family, good heart, bad family.  It's all the same. There's going to be a final sunset someday pointing the way, through the palms, through the metal studs.
Color him gone.

Make it spooky he said, like a cemetery at night without a moon, with fog and mist and creaking branches.
The first of images from that shoot to go to press.  I know you can't really see it very well here. It's because it's dark and spooky and mystic. That's ok, like they say, "Always leave them wanting more."
This is up on the viewing/critique wall at ADG and should be able to be viewed/critiqued soon at your favorite place to buy wine.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Power of Ten

It's gotta be in the power of ten somehow.  Like that Eames video, The Power Ten, the scale difference between finishing up something the day before to today is vast.

From working with veneers that were shopmade to .040" to these two slabs requires different handling strategies for sure.
From using tweezers to carabiners and a come-along.  From not breathing so I don't breathe something out of place to gasping for breath.

A small jewelry box.


These two slabs were hella heavy to stand up.  They're 2.5" thick.  First one I muscled up with a clean and jerk and came close to dying from it falling on me.  The second one I pulled up with a come-along.  They'll stand there for a month until I get to them.
Going to be close to 8' of hand cut dovetails in the project.

Monday, February 4, 2019

Two Period Pieces

I guess the horizon is calling me.  Or least starting to whisper in my ear.  Most things I start I will eventually finish although there is a chair I started to build when I lived in Coldstream, British Columbia circa 1976 that is dead in the water.  That will never get done.

These two period pieces circa 2007 and 2014 though are up and running.

Praise the Lord!

The circa 2007 is the two year photo project which was finally delivered and hung.  Got to spend time with Taylor and Nick as well so that was enough to justify everything.

Trying to make sense of something I hadn't looked at for a few years


Couple from when I was making the frame.

The photos were numbered as far as date of shooting.  This is number one.  I was very high in the Sierra Nevada Mountains on a solo trip.









Circa 2014 I don't remember how it started.  Probably just from wanting more knowledge.
I purchased the hardware which also came with a set of plans for a saw used by French Marqueters since the 18th century.  The Chevalet de Marqueterie.
The knowledge came to me from Patrick Edwards.  Start your journey here.

Built a couple pieces of the saw and it started to gather dust from there.  Put into deep storage but I thought up a project to start on that would require me to finish the chevalet.

The plans as well as the box they and the hardware arrived in.


So you sit on it, put what you're cutting in the jaws and step on the foot pedal to hold it place and pull and push the saw back and forth to cut.
The whole object really just functions as an elaborate way to hold a saw.


Working to plans is super weird for me.  It becomes an exercise in doing something without needing to figure out why you're doing it this particular way.
I added leather to the seat
The saw has two adjustment points that allow it to cut square to jaws that are holding the work in place.

And the saw is held to rod by these wedges.  I made it tight enough so the carriage bolts really don't need to be tightened, that's why they're just sitting there.





Now let's see what comes out it.





Monday, January 14, 2019

Into the Mood

"I want to make sure it's nasty weather."
"Going for super moody spooky mystic dark imagery."

"Bring your Gore-Tex."

And that was about it for the creative brief.  The way I like it.
I asked if he wanted to say something more about the job starting tomorrow up in The Russian River Valley.
"Nope."
"Good, the less you say, the better the finished product."

And we went back to playing some music.

Supposed to rain the next few days, probably muddy as shit out in vineyards.
Hot coffee in a Thermos weather.  Hunched over cold.  I'm bringing pieces of plywood so the legs of the ladder have some mudshoes to keep from sinking.
Am trying to come up images for a wine label.

Love, love these types of jobs.

So, I've been biking around West Oakland the last couple days with a camera and one lens just to sharpen up a bit.
Into the Mood.
The Mystic.

 I couldn't tell but it looks like some PG&E nuclear waste holding area.

When I do bike around the neighborhood and photograph, I have a Exposure story going on so the new ones I sprinkled in here.  West O

Came across a street memorial for a drive-by that was front of a "Welcome to Oakland" sign
Still finding churches to shoot, can not believe how many there are in this part of Oakland.
Can't believe how many people are living on the street.  In their cars, in RV's, in tents, in America.




And after years of promising to deliver, I'm making good.
I had spent two years shooting a personal project, bought a huge ass printer to print them out and made five complete portfolios.  Gave two to my kids and promised a frame that the photos can be viewed and changed out for next one.
That was years and year ago.
Since I'm in a tying things up mood lately I wanted to get this one off the books and onto a wall.
Putting it off for years and took a day to make.  Seems silly not to have done this.  Sooner.

Making it smooth.
Shavings arranged.