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Video Trade Show Booth For Intermarine

Below is some video of a trade show booth we designed for one of our clients. It was a cool project. We got to do everything from the design of the cabinetry to the selection of the furniture to the production of the video content to the design of the printed materials.

Mostly, I’m just testing out Vimeo for video publishing but I figured why not leave this here? Can’t hurt can it?

From the 2008 Breakbulk convention in New Orleans, Louisiana.

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Stay Local! Gets Some Nice Press

WDSU TV did a nice story on Stay Local!

Definitely worth a watch. More proof to believe in your own ideas. Can’t tell you how many business people and local politicians just couldn’t grasp this concept back in 2003.

Congratulations to David and Dana and everyone at Stay Local!

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First Glass Slides

image of my first three glass slides

I’ve been working on my slide playing lately and have been fascinated by all the mystery and folklore associated with slide guitar. The choice of a slide seems to be one of those things that brings out the curiosity, the experimentation, and the tinkerer in all sorts of people.

Get people talking about their slide and you quickly find yourself in arcane discussions of metal vs. glass, copper vs. steel, wine bottles vs. medicine bottles, store bought vs. old craftsman socket wrenches.

All the discussions got me wanting to try out various sizes, shapes, and materials of slides. Only problem is, there doesn’t seem to be any good local outlets for them. It makes sense, I guess. We are talking about a category of good that generally sells for $5 to $20 (generally — they can be MUCH more expensive!), has hundreds of permutations and variations, and very few people will walk in to your store and buy one in any given month. So everyone seems to stock the same few middle-of-the-road options.

Of course, there is always the internet. But given the very personal nature of the quest you can go through a lot of options before finding that right fit. And since — so far — there is no Zappo’s for guitar slides — you order it, you keep it.

So today I dug through our mound of recycling looking for glass bottles that might be converted into slides. New Orleans is no longer picking up glass and K doesn’t want to throw it out so I had a pretty good selection to choose from.

After some internet research — again countless methods for separating wine bottle necks from their bottles — I got ready to try the most promising options. I started using a method of scoring the neck with a glass cutter and then running hot water on the score, shifting to cold water and then tapping the neck to break the score. This method didn’t work for me.

The successful method involved scoring the neck, then rotating the scored neck above a candle flame until sooty all the way around. At that point, you put the bottle under cold water and it pretty much snaps right then. While this method works fast and easy, the results are still what you might expect. The break is simultaneously amazingly crisp and clean and still more jagged than you would like. I don’t know if this can be improved with technique. Or do you just do enough bottles until one breaks perfect?

After the break, I used the dremel tool to ease the edges to make sure there were no sharp points. And voila! My first glass slides.

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Right Hand Meet Left Hand

New School Zone Sign on Saint Claude Avenue in New Orleans

Am I missing something?

Crossing St. Claude Ave. on my bike the other day I noticed something new and shinny. A brand-spankin’ new School Zone sign complete with flashing light and solar panel. ‘Hail Progress! Some recovery work has arrived on St. Claude’, I thought.

Construction tracks around the new school zone sign on Saint Claude Avenue in New Orleans

Well, sort of.

See, while the school zone sign is in fact brand new and is in many ways impressive, if I’m not mistaken the school that it marks is no longer a school. The school zone sign sure seems to be marking the approach to what used to be Colton School but which has become the Studio At Colton. And it doesn’t appear slated to revert to being a school any time soon.

From what I can tell, Colton is slated to return to use as a school in Phase 2 of the Recovery School District Master Plan. And since Phase 1 of the Recovery School District Master Plan appears to be continuing until 2014, I don’t see Colton being a school again before 2015 at the earliest.

So by the time Colton is a school again, I suspect it will be about time for another city contractor to get another deal to install some new school zone signs.

And what exactly would be the deal with getting ticketed for speeding through a school zone with the flashing lights if their is no school there? Good thing I ride a bike.

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A Weekend of Projects: Large and Small

A great weekend, even if the temperature dropped 30 degrees. K and I managed to get a lot accomplished and still have time to watch Young Frankenstein.

On the large project front, we are taking the next big stab at the back yard which involves busting up the concrete slab where a lean-to shed used to sit. Been a while since we had a reason to pull the sledge hammer out of the attic so we made the most of it.

busting up the old concrete in back yard

And for a project of a much smaller scale, I took some time on Saturday to work on a guitar pick. Talking with John Rankin the other night about my tendency to drop my pick during complex rhythm playing, he suggesting several modifications to my right hand technique as well as some mods I could try on my picks themselves. These included gluing sandpaper to the pick, getting some grip tape for the picks (taking me back to my skateboarding days), and drilling holes in the pick to increase its friction.

I opted to try drilling holes in the pick as well as easing the upper and lower edges of the pick just a bit with some sandpaper to assist the pick in crossing the strings. Results so far are promising.

guitar-pick-modified

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