August 30th, 2009
Browsing through the job postings in the past few weeks, in an attempt to gauge how bad things really are, I’ve noticed an interesting trend. I’ve seen a number of job postings, both for freelance and full-time positions, that specifically indicate that the company would like to pay a decent wage but “due to the economy” are unable to pay as much as they might normally.
While I’m all for transparency when it comes to job postings, especially with regard to compensation, the whole idea of suggesting that one can’t pay a decent wage due to the overall economic situation seems a little absurd and dishonest to me. It’s my opinion that by using the economy as an excuse, some businesses hope to get professional services at a fraction of their cost. Those companies can’t be blamed, because they’re probably right. The freelancers and contractors out there are the ones that tend to hurt the most when economic hard times abound. Said freelancers are more likely to take a lower hourly wage in order to compensate for the lack of work that’s available.
Hopefully the concept of “you get what you pay for” comes back to haunt a lot of these not-overly-honest businesses and, in turn, will causes a nice boom in pay and opportunities for creative types in the near future.
Tags: Business, Design, economy, freelance, Jobs
Posted in Business, Design, Jobs | No Comments »
May 5th, 2008
I got a short, 2 to 3 week, contract job at Studio3 doing digital retouch on product shots for a consumer item that’s launching soon. Although I can’t really talk about the specifics, the one item I’ve seen looks like it might be pretty successful. I’m doing clipping paths, dust/cleanup, and color correction for proofs. I guess in the last round of proofs there will be some critical color work done, but I’m not sure how involved in that I’ll be.
It’s funny, I interviewed and did a Photoshop test at Studio3 on Thursday of last week and then one of the owners called me on Friday night, leaving a message about needing someone unexpectedly for the coming week through the end of May. He called me again Saturday at 9:30 in the morning. He said that they had been interviewing and testing people for future projects that would require help and that it just happened that this project came up. He was very kind and said that he felt I was a good candidate and he even said I was over qualified and that he’d understand if I turned it down, but it worked out: I needed some freelance work to pad my portfolio (plus I love retouching) and Gwynn and I needed a legitimate excuse to motivate us to get our own baby sitter, finally.
In other news, Gela broke the world record in the “Hanging onto the Shower Curtain Rod, After a Bath” event, this evening. The standing record was 4.5 seconds and tonight she held on for 7.47 seconds, thus beating the previous record by over 1.4 seconds. That record was set back in 1987 by one Daniel M. Jabowski, from Ellington, CT. Danny was 1 year and 5 months at the time.
Good night.
Tags: clipping paths, contract job, digital retouch, freelance work, product shots, retouching, shower curtain rod, Studio 3, world record
Posted in Business, Family, Jobs, Life, Work | 1 Comment »
April 28th, 2008
We had some errands to run today and we ended up at one of my favorite spots to buy used records. It’s cool because it’s not really a record store and I don’t think a lot of people know that the place actually sells vinyl, since the store always seems to have some great and eclectic records, usually for around $2. I would imagine that their selection would be much more picked over if people knew about some of the things I’ve found there.
Here’s what I bought this afternoon:
I was disappointed by some of the things I saw today, though. They had a copy of Bob Dylan’s Nashville Skyline, but when I looked at the album it had deep gouges going across both sides, like some literally took a knife to the surface of the record; it was obviously unplayable. They were asking $5 for the album, which tells me that someone saw the cover and slapped a price tag on the jacket without looking at the actual vinyl. It was pretty sad.
Tags: A Whiter Shade of Pale, Blood Sweet & Tears, Bob Dylan, Brothers In Arms, David Bowie, Dire Straits, Elton John, Honky Chateau, Hot Rocks 1964-1971, Jeff Beck, Joe Cocker, Mad Dogs & Englishmen, Madman Across the Water, Nashville Skyline, Procol Harum, Starting Point, Vinyl, Wired
Posted in Music, Vinyl | 1 Comment »
April 27th, 2008
In 1992 I was one of the guitarists in our high school jazz band and we went to San Diego, along with the marching band, for a large regional or national competition. While there, we went to Sea World and did other touristy stuff around town. After one of the competitions, there were a few bands playing a free show at, I believe, SDU.
We had some free time, so we all went down and watched the show. I remember there was a really mellow Grateful Dead-esque band named Jambay, who’s CD I may still own. One of the other bands was Rage Against the Machine. All the members of the rhythm section of the school’s jazz band were metal heads (as shocking as that might seem) and we were all blown away by RATM as Zack de la Rocha screamed “You’ve got a fucking bullet in your head!” and Tom Morello made sounds with his guitar that were other worldly, using only pedals. Their performance was so raw and vibrant…they had the whole crowd getting into the music and the message it carried.
I was sold. I plopped down the last few bucks I had and bought the cassette they had for sell. Even the black and white cassette cover was crazy; xeroxed stock quotes littered the cover as a background, with “RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE” floating above the stock quotes in bold, all caps sans serif font and rotated at an angle . There was an unlit match, that had been hand taped to the cover, as a finishing touch.
According to the bio on the official Rage Against The Machine webpage, the band recorded, produced, and released the 12 track cassette in 1992. A very impressive 5,000 copies of the tape were sold at shows and through their fan club. Most of the tracks on the tape later became the rough sequence of songs for the band’s self-titled, major label release on Epic records. Three songs on the cassette have never been re-released.
I had an entire home’s worth of stuff sitting in storage for almost a decade. Last year I had all that stuff shipped to me from El Paso. A couple of night’s ago I was going through the boxes, looking for a bunch 4-track recordings I made back in my youth, and I stumbled across this:


The tape still played and sounded just like I remember it sounding on that long bus ride back to sunny El Paso. It’s funny to think that now anyone can slap together some drum and bass loops on their computer, sing a few lines, add some effects, and then burn a CD of their work, all with very little overall effort. Knowing that makes me appreciate this tape just a little bit more.
Tags: bullet in your head, cassette, el paso, epic records, jambay, rage against the machine, ratm, san diego, self produced, tom morello, zack de la rocha
Posted in Life, Music | 3 Comments »
April 24th, 2008
I’ve been listening to the mp3, “Discipline,” that Nine Inch Nails released on April 22. I think it’s a pretty decent track and it seems to be in line with the recent progression in NIN’s sound since With Teeth was released (not taking the recent release, Ghosts, into account), even if it does vaguely remind one of the band’s first album, Pretty Hate Machine.
“Discipline” isn’t weighed down by tons of samples or prominent background noise like in The Downward Spiral or the textures in some of the cuts on The Fragile. Instead the song is a light mix of vocals (lead and background), club like beats, piano, fuzzed out bass, and some very subtle atmospheric effects which only appear toward the end of the song and are pushed way back in the mix. The track reminds me of the song “Only” from the With Teeth album, in that both have roughly the same beat and that fuzzy and distorted bass line that seems to have become more common in Nine Inch Nails’ songs. With hi-hats signaling every beat, the song sounds like something you might hear in a club, leading me to think that this song has a lot of remix potential for dance DJs.
Surprisingly, the track has a raw and under-produced feel to it — there are a couple of unintentional sounding false starts in the vocals. It’s actually pretty interesting, in my opinion, that it was released (even if it was only via the web) with those quirks, since I’ve always read and heard that Trent Reznor is quite the perfectionist. Maybe now that he’s freed himself from the binds of contractual agreements, he’s loosened up a little bit and feels like instantly sharing his creations, even when there are little, Bob Ross inspired, “happy accidents” in them. I’m all for this, it’s better than the past alternative: waiting years for a single, tightly produced, label “OK’ed,” track.
Overall, this new offering by Trent and company is a pretty straightforward pop song and a nice teaser of what is, hopefully, to come.
Tags: discipline, Downward Spiral, ghosts, NIN, Nine Inch Nails, The Fragile, Trent Reznor, vocals, With Teeth, Year Zero
Posted in Music, Product Reviews | No Comments »
April 22nd, 2008
April 19th was Record Store Day and I missed it completely, unfortunately. The indie stores that participate usually offer sweet discounts and some limited releases (this year there were limited 7″ and 10″ from REM, Built to Spill, and a few others), plus it’s just a cool way to promote vinyl. I believe that anyone who enjoys the subtleties of music should own a turntable…as a bonus every fifteen minutes, or so, listening to music becomes interactive!!
Speaking of limited releases, The Black Keys album “The Big Come Up,” is now available as 2 sets of limited color pressings via Alive Records. The 2 albums are pressed in pink and yellow and each is limited to 500 copies.
I’m slowly getting away from the whole colored vinyl thing, because it’s been my experience that most albums sound pretty crappy on colored vinyl — my copy of The Beach Boys’ limited edition Pet Sounds LP set was horrible and that made me very sad. However, a few of the colored pressings I’ve gotten from Southern Lord records sounded pretty damn good. Maybe’s it’s just the luck of the draw.
Tags: alive records, beach boys, black keys, colored vinyl, limited edition, Music, southern lord records, turntable, Vinyl
Posted in Life, Product Reviews, Vinyl | No Comments »
April 14th, 2008
How time flies. This is my daughter 1 year ago, about 10 minutes after she was born:

Gela this past Sunday, at 1 year and 2 days old:

It blows me away. She went from barely moving and hardly able to keep her eyes open to walking and trying her best to talk. I once was able to hold most of her body in the palms of my hands, now I grunt when I try to lift her up.
She’s turned my world upside down and made me see everything in so many new ways. I could never imagine how significantly she’d change my life, specifically my outlook and my goals.
She’s the greatest thing I’ve ever been a part of.
Tags: 1 year, birthday, daughter, Gela, life changing, newborn, old, talking, toddler, walking, year
Posted in Family, Life | 2 Comments »
April 10th, 2008
I spent 30 minutes on a bus from downtown to south Seattle and for the entire ride I listened to two high school aged kids bragging to one another about how gangster they were, even though they both looked like choir boys.
One talked about the adrenaline he gets when he fights to which the other responded that he doesn’t even get adrenaline rushes when he fights anymore, he just laughs. The whole conversation seemed to weigh on upping the last sentence spoken by the other: you punched someone? I got shot at! You got shot at? I shot as some fools. You shot at someone? I know a dude that tried to blow up his school, so they expelled him from the state. (I’m not making the last one up…they didn’t arrest the guy, they expelled him from the state.)
Slowly the conversation got more and more inline with gangsta stereotypes: talk about being shot at, drive-bys, various gangs in the area, people they know outside of the city and state who are in or started gangs, how other local gangs are lame, random theories about the gunshots they heard last night and whether they were AK-47 shots or whether the shooting was done with a “MP,” since a real gangsta needs to know the differences…cause seriously, I know I don’t want to get hit with a blast from an AK-47, but getting shot with an MP, not so bad.
Anyhow, at one point one of the kids was talking about how he was totally going to kick some other dude’s ass, “just now,” but the bus showed up and he couldn’t pop the kid because he’d miss the bus. The bus we were riding comes every 10 mintues, which I seem to recall being plenty of time to talk trash and throw some punches before walking away shaking from the adrenaline referenced earlier.
My favorite part of the conversation, “So that dude you were going to fight, he’s goes to a public school, right?” I took this to imply that the well dressed and well spoken gangstas were private school kids.
Tags: bragging, drive bys, gangs, private school kids, real gangsta, south seattle, stereotypes
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April 3rd, 2008
Today seemed really long, but not for any particular reason.
Gwynn (my wife), Gela (my daughter), and I ran some errands and we visited our friend Jeni, mostly to hang out and catch up and, a little, because Jeni wants me to re-redesign a logo for the plumbing business her and her husband, Brad, own.
I designed them a few logos a while back, then they decided to change the business name; which they ended up not doing, and finally they decided they’d like to go a different direction with the look and feel for the logo. Here are the rough logos we stopped at before the ‘almost’ name change back in September 2007:

It was cool hanging out, sketching ideas, and brainstorming. We ended up staying there almost 3 hours. When we got home I spent about an hour and a half or so doing some research and rough sketches of some of the ideas and themes we talked about. I’m not sure how it’s all going to turn out, but some of the concepts we all came up with have potential.
At 9:30pm or 10:00pm I decided I wanted tortillas, so I did what any self-respecting tortilla wanting person does: I made some tortillas. I used the recipe from “How To Cook Everything” by Mark Bittman. His recipe is:
- 1 1/2 cup flour (plus some for rolling the tortillas out)
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 2 tablespoons lard/butter/oil — I used Canola oil
- Water to make dough
- Profit!
They turned out alright, maybe a little too flour-y, but they didn’t take very long to make at all. My tortilla desires have been fulfilled.
Tags: brainstorm, Business, Design, homemade tortillas, logo, mark bittman, name change, research
Posted in Business, Design, Family, Life, Work | 5 Comments »
March 31st, 2008
For the last several days, I’ve been trying to update my blog to use a layout I created. Each time I sat down to work on changing WordPress’ default template (named Kubrick), my brain would seemingly click off and refuse to concentrate. It was as if looking at CSS and PHP was the same as those crazy anime scenes that gave all those kids seisures. Half the time I would just stare blankly at the screen waiting for something to happen. I kept searching for tutorials with the hope that maybe there was some super easy way to do what I wanted and that, somehow, I’d skipped over it the last time I did the same exact search.
Fast forward a few days, several glasses of iced tea, and a lot of research later and here’s my newly updated blog. Of course once I figured out the bigger picture, like using my own header image or using a custom background for the page element only, the little details started to kick my ass…like, how to make that whole header image a link and why that custom page background didn’t seem to be repeating correctly. I found work arounds to most of the problems I encountered.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: body, CSS, Design, header, page, template, tiled images, WordPress
Posted in Design, Internet, Life, Software | No Comments »