A Slice of Chai

At the beginning of the year, I planned on brewing my own beer. I have a few friends who brew on the weekends and thought it would be fun to create my own. Then I ran into this crazy time crunch. Luckily I discovered a recipe for spiced black tea, chai tea, my favorite. At the same time, I was doing some research for another project and discovered the rather odd tale of Sir Gammer Vans in the collection More English Fairy Tales by Joseph Jacobs. It goes like this:

Last Sunday morning at six o’clock in the evening as I was sailing over the tops of the mountains in my little boat, I met two men on horseback riding on one mare: so I asked them, ‘Could they tell me whether the little old woman was dead yet who was hanged last Saturday week for drowning herself in a shower of feathers?’ They said they could not positively inform me, but if I went to Sir Gammer Vans he could tell me all about it.

‘But how am I to know the house?’ said I.

‘Ho, ’tis easy enough,’ said they, ‘for ’tis a brick house, built entirely of flints, standing alone by itself in the middle of sixty or seventy others just like it.’

‘Oh, nothing in the world is easier,’ said I.

‘Nothing can be easier,’ said they: so I went on my way.

Now this Sir G. Vans was a giant, and a bottle-maker. And as all giants who are bottle-makers usually pop out of a little thumb-bottle from behind the door, so did Sir G. Vans.

‘How d’ye do?’ says he.

‘Very well, I thank you,’ says I.

‘Have some breakfast with me?’

‘With all my heart,’ says I.

So he gave me a slice of beer, and a cup of cold veal; and there was a little dog under the table that picked up all the crumbs.

‘Hang him,’ says I.

‘No, don’t hang him,’ says he; ‘for he killed a hare yesterday. And if you don’t believe me, I’ll show you the hare alive in a basket.’

So he took me into his garden to show me the curiosities. In one corner there was a fox hatching eagle’s eggs; in another there was an iron apple-tree, entirely covered with pears and lead; in the third there was the hare which the dog killed yesterday alive in the basket; and in the fourth there were twenty-four hipper switches threshing tobacco, and at the sight of me they threshed so hard that they drove the plug through the wall, and through a little dog that was passing by on the other side. I, hearing the dog howl, jumped over the wall; and turned it as neatly inside out as possible, when it ran away as if it had not an hour to live. Then he took me into the park to show me his deer: and I remembered that I had a warrant in my pocket to shoot venison for his majesty’s dinner. So I set fire to my bow, poised my arrow, and shot amongst them. I broke seventeen ribs on one side, and twenty-one and a half on the other; but my arrow passed clean through without ever touching it, and the worst was I lost my arrow: however, I found it again in the hollow of a tree. I felt it; it felt clammy. I smelt it; it smelt honey. ‘Oh, ho,’ said I, ‘here’s a bee’s nest,’ when out sprang a covey of partridges. I shot at them; some say I killed eighteen; but I am sure I killed thirty-six, besides a dead salmon which was flying over the bridge, of which I made the best apple-pie I ever tasted.

I loved the story so much I incorporated the ridiculousness of the tale and the original illustration that accompanied it into the label design. In the end, it was the best chai tea I had ever had. I will definitely be brewing more in the future perhaps to share with those sophisticated penguins.

A SLICE OF CHAI

MISDIRECTIONS:

AGITATE BOTTLE IN AN UNFORGIVING MANOR, PERFERABLY A GLEBE.
EAT DIFFERENT PARTS CHAI WITH SPARE PARTS OF MILK.

OUT ON A JEOPARDY:

EAT CHAI WITH WHITE RUSSIANS, IRISH COFFEES, AND SOPHISTICATED PENGUINS.

ATOMS COMBINED FROM:

CINNAMON BABIES, GINGERS, BLACK LUNG PEPPER, THE MOON, NUTMEG ON A ROPE, BLACK TEA CELLS, RUSTY BROWN IRON SUGAR, CURIOSITIES, DEAD HONEY, AND HEART OF VANILLA.


Light as a Cloud

The internet is full of lies and deception. Not that this should be of any sort of revelation. I stumbled upon a fantastic image of a cloud made from cotton batting, brilliantly lit from the inside by a couple of electric tea lights. I thought, what a simple and cool project. So I made one.

Everything went splendidly until it came to lighting my cloud. Even if I had had twenty tea lights there was no way it would be as bright as in the photo. I was left deflated, a semi-failed project because I trusted a random tumblr image. I’m still in search of some LED lights that might be bright enough. I might just end up placing a wired lamp fixture inside and see how well a simple light bulb lights it up. Till then here is the cloud lit by placing it under a canister light.


Sketching the Minds of Masters

I’ve lived in a cocoon of art and creativity practically all my life. So when a friend asked if I wanted to go to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), I agreed eagerly.

A few years back, I took Marshall Vandruff’s composition class, where we broke down the structure of paintings and learned that the great masters sometimes spent more time composing their infamous paintings than they did actually painting them. This little bit of knowledge had me seeing paintings in museums in a whole new way. Now, whenever I visit a museum I am always armed with a sketchbook and pencil, ready to unlock the secrets of the masters.


The Ben-Day Knight

One artist drove me to brave card catalogs and explore the dusty aisles of my high school library. I wrangled numerous tomes, then slowly I began to absorb the artwork and words of Roy Lichtenstein. It was then I first caught a glimpse of my future self. A future self that had taken the skills I was just beginning to hone and turned himself into an artist. That meeting shaped many choices in my life that eventually lead me here.

At the time I was so into comic books I practically pictured word balloons above peoples’ heads when they talked. So it’s no coincidence that the first time I saw Roy Lichtenstein’s paintings derived from comic panels that I was immediately transfixed. I didn’t know fine art could be so cool.

Through the years, I have wanted to do a Lichtenstein Ben-Day dot painting and this project was slated to be just that. However, due to limited time, I decided to just spec out the project digitally for a future large painting. Still the process of researching comic panels, sketching them out, scanning them, and digitally painting them has been very rewarding.


Etching with Ions

My brain switches into mad scientist mode as I slowly lower the unsuspecting tin into the electrified salted water. I shall manipulate these alloys, and out of these bubbling corrosive waters I will birth an etching of my own creation!

Now, I’ve created sculptures from metal before, shaping them with everything from a plasma torch to tiny files, but this, my first experience electrolytic etching, had me cackling with glee, praising the glory of science. Sitting back, I watched the saltwater bubble as the charged chloride and sodium ions ripped the metal from the surface of the tin. The smile never left my face as I imagined the possibilities of future etchings.


Igniting the Spark of Yesterday

Once there was a moment. A moment of enlightenment. A moment where man harnessed fire. Nothing thereafter would ever be the same. Even though we like to think that was a long time ago, in a grander, universal perspective, it was merely yesterday.

One day a year, here in America, we step back into the shoes of history and indulge, among other things, in that harnessing. The sparkler is the most simple and the most personal of the instruments in our symphony of flame.

My curiosity in how things work, brought me to a position where I didn’t want to just wield the flame, but construct it myself — A totality of control over this ancient, living, breathing entity. I gathered the chemicals and components, precisely measured them out, and carefully adhered the mixture to a wire.


Killing the Quilling

Papercraft has always been my nemesis. Origami interests me, but not much more than learning some basic designs. When I stumbled upon quilling, I was transfixed by the amazing visuals. I began this project excited, with high expectations. It didn’t take long before I despised everything about it.

Quilling is frustration, long, monotonous work. I began with my design and started down a path I wasn’t happy with. But so many hours were already invested, I felt continuing on was better than starting from scratch. Then I began a new job, stripping most of my free time away from my project. It sat for a long while untouched. I would cringe when I would accidentally catch it begging for completion.

I attempted a few times to make it come together, but my heart was no longer with it. So I decided to let it go. These weekly projects are meant to force me into creativity as much as to teach me more about myself. In that, it has succeeded.


My Iron Giants

My dad is an engineer and a machinist. He spent most of his life working at his own metallizing business. Growing up he always wore a faint smell of metal, like he just walked through a cloud of vaporized batteries. So, for this Father’s Day, I decided to create a portrait of him simply using rust from steel filings. It seemed fitting. As did the second image I created of The Iron Giant, one of my favorite animated film characters. The process was simple, I threw down the filings on some watercolor paper where I wanted the rust, sprayed some water on it, and waited for it to oxidize.


It's who you know

College is as much for networking as it is for learning, if not more so. You never know who your fellow classmates might become. That drink you bought that guy from your sociology class at the campus pub might end up being the best decision of your life. We live in a world of, “It’s who you know.”

Now, don’t get me wrong, I definitely would say “it’s what you know” as well. College (specifically a 4-year degree — i.e., BS/BA) is about learning to think, rationalize, and socialize more than mastering any specific skills.


Trouble and Runny Dribbles In Stenciling

It was bound to happen. This week’s project failed. I came across an Instructables project for a DIY Spray Paint bottle and thought, that would be quick and easy. So I grabbed a soda, acquired some bike parts from a friend, opened up some Sugru, amputated a spray paint can, and went to work.

It did come together quickly, before I knew it I was filling it with paint. I was super excited as I affixed my TARDIS stencil to the wall. Then I pressed down and out came a dribble. The spray nozzle leaked from the bottom, I thought perhaps the paint was too thick, so I watered it down. That didn’t help. So, I gave it more pressure. Nothing, just more dribbling. Finally, getting frustrated I over pumped the bottle and blew the seal. Fed up, I grabbed a real can of spray paint to tag up my neighborhood with a very special police box.

I definitely want to revisit this project someday, maybe try different types of paints or a different nozzle head. Until then, my leftover house paint will continue to be splattered on canvas.