Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Renoir -- yes we opened our Umbrellas in the House Yesterday, Friday the 13th






Cobalt Blue 4oz bag $215 USD

Brief description of Cobalt blue:
Very costly and extraordinary stable pigment of pure blue colour discovered by Thénard in 1802. It is now the most important of the cobalt pigments.

Names for Cobalt blue: Pronounciation: ko • bawlt bloo Alternative names: Thénards blue, Dresden blue
Word origin: The name "Cobalt blue" comes from Middle High German kobolt = an underground goblin (cobalt was thought to be detrimental to silver ores).
Non-English names: Italian Kobaltblau
Chemical name: Cobalt(II) oxide-aluminum oxide

The Umbrellas (1883)

by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
[Source]
The Umbrellas (Les Parapluies)
Renoir, Pierre-Auguste
c. 1881-85

This painting was painted during the restless period in Renoir's work. It is immediately apparent that the picture exhibits two distinct styles. The group of figures on the right is painted in a soft feathery style reminiscent of his work of the later 1870s, while the umbrellas and the couple on the left are painted in a harder manner with more distinct outlines and subdued steely colors. The exact date of the painting is not known, but it is generally accepted that it was worked on over a period of several years.

Notice how the fashions illustrated in the Umbrellas differs. The women in Renoir's paintings are usually dressed in the latest styles. The dresses and hats worn by the figures at the right conform to a fashion that appeared in 1881 and which became popular in 1882. The vogue was superseded the following year by a more sever style of dress with simple straight lines. THe woman with the band-box is dressed in this latter style which was the height of fashion in 1885-6, but which had fallen out of favor by 1887.

Renoir appears to have changed his palette significantly between the two stages. Examination of the cross-sections has shown that in the earlier phase he used exclusively cobalt blue, his habitual choice during the 1870's and early 1880's, but in finishing and revising the composition he used only French ultramarine.

Monday, March 16, 2009

We were looking for..



In the name of NASA Spinoff we were looking for a new paint medium.. with space age qualities. We found this one:
[SOURCE]
This safe, easy to use insulating, powdered additive will add heat reflecting properties to the paint dramatically reducing heat transfer into or out of your home. You stay warmer in winter and cooler in summer.

The thermal and acoustical comfort within your home is improved AND you Save Money on your heating and cooling bills each and every month, year in and year out!

Hy-Tech insulating additive for paint will add insulation properties to any type or brand of Interior or exterior house paint, roof paint, wall paint, ceiling paint, industrial paint, ANY paint, oil base or latex.

rolling upon each other, thus allowing the coatings to flow more easily.

Conventional paint pigments are sharp edged and pack down loose as the paint film dries leaving paths for heat to pass through.
The jagged edges also make for a rough surface which grabs dirt and soils easily.
The ThermaCels ceramic microsphere blend creates a tightly packed dried film with minimal paths for heat transfer resulting in very efficient thermal barrier.
The hard ceramic shell resists dirt.

HY-TECH Insulating Paint Additive
Makes Paint Insulate
Lower Your Utility Bills...
Improve Your Comfort...
"Home Insulation with the Stroke of a Brush "

One single ceramic microsphere is so small that it looks to the naked eye as if it is a single grain of flour, (slightly thicker than a human hair). This tiny "bead" has a wall thickness about 1/10 of its diameter, a compressive strength range of 6500 - 60,000 psi, a softening point of about 1800° C. Insulating ceramics are fairly chemical resistant with a thermal conductivity of 0.1 W / m / Deg.C and they are non combustible.
The hollow interior is a vacuum and physics law states that nothing can move by conduction through a vacuum, since it represents an absence of matter.
In effect it is a miniature thermos bottle... a microscopic hollow vacuum sphere that resists thermal conductivity and suppresses sound.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Subject: Line Drawings

BlogNod-Roots Music and Fret Logic | [HERE]

Very recently, Pribek.net started a new category called “BlogNod”.

Leap Year | Pribek says: "A while ago, I had a conversation with Pat Darnell about a theory that I have. Over the years, I have noticed a clear connection between musicians (guitar players in particular) and a thought process that goes far beyond music talk and enters the realm of real, accessible philosophy. Pat came up with this original artwork as a result of that conversation.

So, when I feel the urge to point out evidence of that guitar/life philosophy/logic connection, I will use this image as a sort of mile marker.

And, if any of you find yourselves calling attention to examples of “Fret Logic”, feel free to use this artwork to signify. I’m sure Pat would be delighted if you did."


YEP ! Sure enough... you'se!

Childhood Sketches Hermetically Sealed in Mayonnaise Jars for 40 Years



It would appear I have been stuck on the subject of the "Back Forty" for a very long time.

Little quaint cabin on a grassy hill, under a shady 100 year old oak tree....

Tag: Mayonnaise Morality