Monday, 31 May 2010
Fine Little Day
Elisabeth Dunker is Fine Little Day. She has done work for the like of Urban Outfitters and has an amazing blog. She is from Sweden and produces some of the most influential photography I've ever seen.
Saturday, 29 May 2010
Monday, 24 May 2010
Okay, you've spent much time and money hunting down a somewhat sensational animal, but all you have to show for it is footprints, sightings, and maybe a fuzzy photograph. It was all hard work that took much patience, yet you feel you have gotten enough evidence. However, after having reported your findings, you've discovered that the work has only begun. Despite your evidence, few people believe it. If anyone takes it seriously, it's only to pick it all apart, and tell you what animal it really was that you or others saw. And if you've got a picture, it's certain that it will somewhere be branded a hoax. Objective examination will be about as rare as the animal you've been searching for.
The most likely opposition to be encountered is claims of fraud/hoax or misidentification. Such claims are sometimes true, yet usually are easily countered by common sense. Fraud is often fairly obvious by minor facts or details that are contradictory or incorrect. Sometimes hoaxes actually have too many details. Few hoaxes stand up to serious, objective examination.
Misidentification (seeing something known, but mistaking it for something unknown) is more likely to be true than fraud. However, it's not as common as may be supposed. If a witness knows the animals of his area, misidentification is very unlikely. Yet, the "armchair experts" have long lists of what people have actually seen. Some of the explanations truly are correct in some situations, yet, when viewed objectively, the scientist's explanations are often harder to believe than the observers' eyewitness reports.
ReCap
Saturday, 22 May 2010
Friday, 21 May 2010
Fishing
Amelie and the Whale
The sky was blue and the clouds were white
As Amelie awoke to the morning light
Stretching her hands and scratching her hair
She pulled on a dress that was sat on the chair
Click on the kettle and spring up the toast
Today Amelie was off to the coast!
“I mustn’t forget my watch”, she thought
The one in the market, yesterday she bought
She hopped on her bicycle and began to ride
Through towns and villages, towards the seaside
Amelie passed a giant lake to her right
So she stopped to take in the magnificent sight
Whilst leaning over the water, she saw perfection
But then off slipped her watch into her reflection
“Oh no, my watch!” She sighed with regret
“Now it’s going to be soaking wet!”
Looking around, there was no one to be seen
Expect for a boy, no older than nineteen
Holding a rod higher than him
Made of willow, long and thin
Casting out to the water, deep
The line was tense, strong and steep
“Excuse me, pardon me
My name is Amelie
I saw you fishing from across the lake
And wondered what you are using for bait?”
Reaching down inside his coat
He pulled out what was attached to the float
With a look of confusion and a flick of her hair
Amelie could do nothing but stare!
There in his hand was a marshmallow, pink
Rubbing her eyes she continued to blink
“A marshmallow” he said, “If used as bait
Will catch a chocolate fish, as long as you wait!”
Then all of a sudden there was tug
Pulling the boy to the ground with a thud
Scrambling to his feet he pulled
And pulled, and pulled, and pulled, and pulled
Until…
Out from the ripples emerged a beast
A humongous, magnificent chocolaty feast!
It was Whale for sure, Amelie saw
But a different Whale what she had seen before
“I don’t believe my eyes”, she said
“Quick” mouthed the boy, grabbing the thread
The sun was hot and high that day
And the pair did not notice the Whale melting away
Soon enough, there was nothing left
Just a large, melted, chocolate mess!
From under the puddle, Amelie saw something shine
A golden watch caught onto the line!
“Hurrah!” She celebrated, rubbing it clean
Although the water had left it a little sea-green
With her watch on her arm and a smile on her face
She climbed on her bike and went home with grace
Thursday, 20 May 2010
Sunday, 16 May 2010
Saturday, 15 May 2010
Thursday, 13 May 2010
Stress Induced Coma
Tuesday, 11 May 2010
Yeti & Robin Playing Hide & Seek
Monday, 10 May 2010
Illustration Index
1) Snowstorm over a town
2) Lucy in the snowstorm with her scarf blown off carrying a log
3) Yeti playing hide and seek with a robin
4) Lucy covered in snow, taking shelter on a snowy 'stump'
5) Stump starts moving
6) Stump turns into Yeti's head
7) Yeti stands up and she falls onto his shoulders
8) Yeti carrying her out the storm
9) " "
10) " '
11) Yeti sets her down by a lake
12) She tells him she doesnt believe in him
13) He shows her the lake
14) Loch ness monster!
15) He says "come on let me show you"
16) Pygmpy elephant
17) Okapi
18) Gorilla
19) Reaches the road
20) Says goodbye
21) She gives him her snowboats
22) She leaves
23) View of the town
24) View into Lucys window
25) Lucy talking to her dad of her day
26) He says don't be silly
27) View of the whole mountain and town, Yeti is pulling his stuffing into snow over the town
Getting There....
It's been a day full of experiments. It's been a while since I picked up a pen, sliced some paper and glued card...But we seem to be getting somewhere.