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The Pencil, Inspiration, and the Blogs I follow

Whenever I need to be lifted out of my world or be more aware of it, I draw. In the last few weeks I’ve found some great new blogs on drawing and I thought I’d share them and others today.

Drawing Inspiration:

Visual Basic

a doodle a day

 

A great Fashion Blog:

Kendi Everyday

Friend & Creative Blogs:

Pencil In Hand

Travel Sized Living

Silver Fox Pottery and Art

Quiet World Creative

Health Blogs:

Eat Live Run

Healthy Tipping Point

Then, I read an article that pertains to architects designing with a computer mouse, versus the very natural and creative design that comes when you put your hand to paper.

The Washington Post article Computers are great for tools for architects, but don’t let CAD go wild by Roger K. Lewis.  PDF link: computertoolscadgowild

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Thin-Slice Modular

When asked by my sister, What is Modular? Is it more expensive, can it be green? I thought, not necessarily and sure it can, and here’s a quick rendition of how!

One of my favorite Modular House designers is Michelle Kaufman. She has a Basic Process section of her website that you can click to here.

A group that I am a part of does Modular housing too. We are called Online Green Design. Click that to see our website. If you go to Interiors, that is me. Online Green Design is a group of Engineers, Landscape Architects, Architects, & Energy people, that give you a holistic approach to building new. The idea is that all of these people play an integral role in the building of a sustainable building. We work with Haven Homes, a modular builder in Pa.

You can custom design your prefab home or get a predesigned plan. Modular just means that most of the house is made in a controlled environment. That the wood and materials to build the home aren’t exposed to the elements of weather during construction. Your construction loan period is less, there is less waste when homes are built this way and companies have a factory-like system for building your house in parts, then delivering it onto a site, setting it on a foundation, then ‘zipping’ it up. Because the foundation of the house and the house can be built during the same time frame, the construction loan can be less.

The cost of construction is comparable when comparing a ‘modular’ to a ‘stick built’ house. Because Modular is more assembly line in the making, the price is easier determined prior to construction.

Check out the plans Michelle Kaufman has on the bottom of the site I sent you to. Glidehouse Breezehouse, & Solaire.

All ‘modular’ and ‘stick built’ buildings can be green. It just depends on what materials you are selecting. I’ve got an extensive list on my blog. Click that to see. It also matters when building green that the right building systems work together. Plumbing, HVAC, Electrical, Position of Building/House, Coordination of architectural and interior elements to maximize space, and natural light.

Go Fab, Be Mod, FabMod, think Modular.

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New Poet Love Poem

I came upon Dora Malech’s Love Poem. It made me think about the common figures of speech that I say every day, that really make no sense. I’m collecting my own figures to try a poem with them.

Love Poem

If by truth you mean hand then yes
I hold to be self-evident and hold you in the highest—
K.O. to my O.T. and bait to my switch, I crown
you one-trick pony to my one-horse town,
dub you my one-stop shopping, my space heater,
juke joint, tourist trap, my peep show, my meter reader,
you best batteries-not-included baring all or
nothing. Let me begin by saying if he hollers,
end with goes the weasel. In between,
cream filling. Get over it, meaning, the moon.
Tell me you’ll dismember this night forever,
you my punch-drunking bag, tar to my feather.
More than the sum of our private parts, we are some
peekaboo, some peak and valley, some
bright equation (if and then but, if er then uh).
My fruit bat, my gewgaw. You had me at no, duh.

Dora Malech

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My Love Affair with Language and Italia

Friday, February 11th, was a good day. I found out my sister and brother-in-law are due to have a boy in July. I got to write, and I saw the sun. That evening lead to an impromptu dinner at my favorite restaurant in Wheeling, Later Alligator, with 5 girls and Phil. I caught up with an old friend, brought along some new ones and met a young girl staying here. She is an exchange student from Italy. So, I began to remember the language and it brought me back to the first day Phil and I spent in Italy.

Day 8, Interlaken to Como

We left Balmers after our meal ticket breakfast and jumped on a bus to get to the train station in the rain. We ran into a grocery store nearby to get pig rolls, (?) nuts, dried blueberries and snacks for our trip into Italy. We boarded into our comfortable seats. I read and wrote. Phil made a video that included music from his ipod buds. We had a train exchange in Luscerne which left us about an hour layover to explore the town. Just like eight years before, it was cloudy and the picturesque mountains were out of sight. We walked the crowded 14th century Chapel Bridge and grabbed a cup of coffee at Starbucks where we nearly didn’t escape the excited tourists gals wanting their photos taken, then another one with the barista, then another one… just because they were in a Starbucks. Fortunately we didn’t run into them near the Chapel Bridge.

8 years ago I took this picture in Luscerne Switzerland.

This photo of Botta’s work, The Chapel of St. Mary of the Angels was also taken in 2002. This time in Italy Phil and I gazed up at it from our train.

A bus photo taken on the move in 2002. Then, my first time in the border town of Como, Italia.


Terragni, Terragni, Terragni. The fascist architect whose public work we toured in o2.

As you may be able to tell… I look a bit younger 8 years ago.

Side trips into the country-side for one night or two. These are from Parma, Pecia, and other hill-top towns outside of Florence.

Phil and I finished a 45 minute loop tour and then jumped on our train to Como.

I wrote:

A birds wings tapping the water

skipping like well-worn rocks

The train a Lugano awaits me, Italia!

After eight years I arrive again.

Ah, Italia and film. Stone washed houses, pink facade worn.

Trains are good for us, through the mountain tunnels to the lump hills of the northern country.

The land of terraced grapes and olives.

.

In the plan of things, looking at a map, a simple 20 minute bus ride to the down town of Como looked easy enough from where our train would take us to the Switzerland/ Italy border. We had our passports ready… and then Italy began.

An odd start to Italy. Not even border control knew what to do. It was 4 or 5 in the afternoon on Friday and after walking along a sidewalk into Italy, then, walking back into Switzerland to talk to the Polizia, and again following the sidewalk out, we were entering into another country without a passport stamp. Ok. Then, we decided to walk to Como. Highways were the borders and I knew this was kaotic for Phil. This in-between place, the farthest outskirts of each country touching, no one seeming to care where we walked. We found Via Asiago on my Como map and decided to wait for a bus. After it didn’t come for 5th time the schedule said it would we decided to continue walking. We just weren’t exactly sure we were walking in the right direction. If only we could see the lake. Welcome to Italy, my secret garden, iron gate doors, cobblestone courtyards, skinny women in tight black clothes. It was ok that this was the entrance, it could only get better and I was in love. We walked and found someone to ask which bus to Como Central. The bus took us to the places along the lake that I recognized -sail boats closed up and wrapped tight in the sunlight. (But even the bus ride wasn’t without hiccups. Phil and I tried to pay, but the bus driver kept waving at us.. we noticed the money machine finally and being quite exhausted took a seat.) Then, here was Como Central! We stepped off, heard music in the piazza, found our hotel, the interior clad in ceramic tile, two men I addressed in Italian. One man showed us to our room and showers. Thank You! We left our luggage, opened the shutters and made a quick video to remember our crazy day.

We didn’t walk far for food -ordering Italian pizza in a courtyard set up for a reenactment of a renaissance dinner. Phil got funny and the men with roses, fuzzy animals, and glow sticks didn’t know how to treat a man singing to them. These men were relentless. Some men bought their girlfriends the whole bouquet. In love. I was happy and with my marito. We discussed how we needed to be better aware of what we did at home, walk more, like ourselves and what we did more. We walked arm in arm wrapped around one another as the streets became rainier.

Then, we tucked ourselves into our… bunk beds! What? Yes, the Twin Private Bedroom, second on the list of pre-planned choices of how to choose and book a bed while traveling, was not the option for honeymooners. Oops, oh well.  It’s a good think we don’t mind sharing a tiny bed.

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Water World

Water World

The gray world, the inside of a palm

cupping the surface of a still pool

a world of water enclosing on me

it’s seeking victim

dive in, surrounded by something unnatural

this buoyant liquid I find my time through

sift into and become entranced with

like the willow tree’s soft arms

hairy branches at the bayou covered in moss

curly angel hair

the world when I was a child

only as large as I could see.

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Easy to go Green Building Products

Solarbord, and DensShield Tile Backer. These two easy products are in most construction projects where you need OSB sheathing or moisture resistant board below tile. Easy to be green here.

Looking for plywood that is formaldehyde free? Look local and find that Columbia Forest’s PureBond Plywood can be found at cabinet makers as close as Moundsville Wv. My friend who hosts her own blog at Chemallergy.blogspot, tipped me off about finding this plywood at Gouldsberry Cabinet Shop or Leewood Products.

Get into all of these cabinets with Rocky Mountain Hardware. I looked into the company after reading in my latest Architectural Record that advertised hardware with 90% Recycled Content  50%  Post-Consumer Content(!) & 40% Pre-Consumer Content.

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What do you Keep on Top of your Microwave?

Lately, a bell jar, a turquoise blueberry basket and my coffee pot.

Is it the thought of coffee, or the color of turquoise that makes me happy? I like clear glass dishes too. Just thought I’d share.

Today is Farmers Market day at the St. Clairsville Mall. I’ll be there with my husband and two friends before we take off on a bike ride. My friend and I training for the Sprint Splash ‘N Spin in Morgantown at the end of August and have one month to go. We ran 36 minutes last night, finishing up the run with a sprint competition. We seem to be at the same fast pace, and my legs feel it. Today, a bike ride will keep us on track.

A shot of our potato garden, and a quick rinse in the sink.

We recently purchased this faucet attachment by PUR. It gives us 3-stage cleaning power before we use the water to drink or cook. It has been much nicer than having to remember to purchase two gallons of water a week from the grocery.

And what has Smudge been up to while we’ve been running and growing a garden?

Not much.

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Running with 16,000 People over Bridges and Rivers

At the Pittsburgh Marathon!    

My family went up the night before to carbo-load with my brother at Bravo’s.    

       

 It is his first Half Marathon and he has been training to run this for about three months, so we had to be there. Round two of two glasses of water later, he was ready for a coffee break then  bed!    

         

We began the morning before six, waking up with a downtown-hotel-full of runners. There were so many people, we waded through the crowds before finding my brother.  He did some chatting, then we all watched on and took pictures by standing on the railings to get the full effect idea of what its like to run beside so many people! (click this photo to see it better!)  

The count down began, and they were off… 10 minutes later my brother started across the start line!   

     

We couldn’t tell where he was at all, so my sister and I ran to the 16th street bridge and grabbed a rail to sit on and wait for him to go by at the 3-4 mile mark. We waited about half of an hour and spotted him.   

        

By this time everyone was drenched, us included. He looked great, barely winded at all! We ran with him for a few seconds to grab a shot and then ran on to cut him off at the 7 mile mark, (He ran about a 10 minute mile pace for the duration of the race!)    

and… we got there just in time!  He spotted us first, and by this time our parents were long gone. We figured we’d all have the same goal of finding my brother at the finish line so we weren’t too worried!     

       

   

From that point my sister and I dashed to the finish line and waited under the water-fall-off-of the dry people’s umbrellas to see if we could spot him.  We were freezing by this point but were glad to have at least run 1-2 miles through out the day while trying to see him at different points.     

Then, just after the first Marathon runners came in, he was there!  Red in the face, but by the time we caught him under the Convention Center he was completely recovered and so happy.  Everyone that ran the race received a medal!    

 

     

Chip Time : 2:12:05     

Clock Time: 2:22:12  (Meaning a full 10 minutes to cross the starting point!)
     

Placed 185th in his Division, he’s a 20- 24 year old Male!     

Placed 1,733 for Men     

Placed 3,334 overall!            That’s the top quarter!

  Brother   Pittsburgh PA USA Men 20-24     2:12:05 2:22:12 3334 1733 185

        

Of course then, we all went out to The Library and he celebrated with the darkest beer on the menu!   

Go Brother!!!

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…and from the Young We are Inspired!

I had the opportunity to discover Architecture again from the eyes of a young man. He recently turned 14 and knows how he wants to spend his higher education.  Having met him once to talk over coffee and cappuccino I knew his developed interest in the heavy and detailed parts of architecture as it related to Roman architecture.  At that meeting, with my fiance’s help we laid out work of our own and presented the wonderful world of drawing as it is imperative to creativity, architecture and landscape architecture. Next, the boy wanted to come into my firm and see working as an architect first hand.

I had prepared to go through a set of drawings in-office of a project that had been completed within the last year, show renderings and initial sketches of schemes so that we may compare what was proposed to what was built. I showed him CAD and Sketchup, commanding the computer to draw rectangles and doors, and pop out windows in planes of three-dimensional models.  We traveled and photographed a site in which we are proposing a new building fit in with the existing architecture. We visited Elmhurst the project drawings we had reviewed earlier. After touring the old mansion and the addition we took some time out in the sun to draw. We drew for about half of an hour and he proclaimed that he hadn’t realized how long it took to draw.

We talked about Starchitects and I went home to search through my europe photos to send to him a few of the Names-to-Know in architecture. I thought I would share here some of those photos after realizing how many different architects contributed to my development and awe in becoming apart of this profession.

 

How to keep on drawing: My fiance and I spend Art Saturdays together in an attempt to find, learn and draw together, and to work through our thoughts on design. It’s also a way to spend quality time with one another, or to include something else I’ve recently learned about, it is one of our Love Languages.   I’ve also enjoyed my good friends charcoal sketches I’ve found in her blog Pencil In Hand.