Portland Graffiti
May 2nd, 2005 | Published in Out Loud
One of the cool things about living in a wetter climate is that you can do things like this. Moss graffiti, brilliant.
May 2nd, 2005 | Published in Out Loud
One of the cool things about living in a wetter climate is that you can do things like this. Moss graffiti, brilliant.
May 6th, 2005 | Published in Project Ideas
OK, now this could be done with either raw picture frame stock or moulding stock, I think. If the credenza or sideboard or whatever has simple, flat surfaces, then you can simply glue the pieces to the face of the sides & doors. Stain appropriately and I think you’ll have a really unique piece. And easy too.

Architect Luis Pons turns ordinary materials into unexpected objects.
Using mass-produced picture frame moldings, Pons applied bands of ready-made frame elements to 1950s furniture, transforming ordinary armoires and credenzas into attractive new pieces. For Metal Rain, he used a series of suspended stainless steel ball-chains to create a hanging lamp that resembles a rainshower. And Mutables is a series of pieces that “allow for the possibility of change and that, when experienced, touch all the senses” per the designer. One of these, the Pinhead Door (or screen), uses panels of metal pins that, when touched, create easy-to-change designs and images.
http://aponwaodesign.com/
May 20th, 2005 | Published in Out Loud
I saw this movie a few weeks ago, during a short run at the local Cinema 21 here in Portland. Having lived in California during this whole debacle, I was having a little trouble not being totally sick. But I grew up in Texas, so I’m also not surprised at all.
The thing that gets me is that I know that Skilling is still sitting around wondering how those traders screwed up his brilliant, perfect idea. He has no clue, and maybe whe the trial really starts next year, and every cable news outlet has its cameras trained on his every lip twitch, he will start to realize how many people’s lives he has destroyed. I don’t believe in the death penalty, because I don’t think it’s the right thing to believe in, but man, I look at Skilling, and I have to admit that this guy has worked his ass off to deserve it.
The most interesting part of the whole mess is the intricacies of trading electricity, which weren’t covered in the film much at all. When your politicians and regulators don’t understand what their governing, you’ve got a big big problem. And you can see the same problems with Internet regulation, copyright, etc.
What do you do when the world rises above the heads of the politicians?
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