I hadn't heard about the fourfour!
From Tim's take:
What I loved about Uli’s design was the risk. When I saw her select two disparate prints at MOOD, I was flabbergasted: one was Pucci-does-Battlestar-Galactica and the other was giraffe. Either one of them would be a challenge, but two? Silly me. I didn’t realize that Uli is a genius with prints. Truly. The only other designer I know who can compete with her is the incomparable Diane von Furstenberg. Congratulations, Uli!
"Pucci-does Battlestar-Galactica"
I love Tim.
Calli, good luck on your interview!
"Pro-male"?? Have males been so desperately discriminated against lately that they need their own privilege-preservations societies? And it is just me or is it weird how all those different categories -- faith, maleness, family, patriotism -- are presumed to have anything to do with each other, just because they are strong together in the same sentence?
Because those of us who are part of the "tax-hiking, government-expanding, latte-drinking, sushi-eating, Volvo-driving, New York Times-reading Hollywood-loving, left-wing freak show" aren't true patriots, like the New York firefighters were....
Oh and re:
Bradley's outfit,
Tim was totally reminded of
Daniel V's Inspiration piece
but didn't seem to feel that
Bradley had been quoting and
seriously, the judge's loved it. Hey, I was just hoping that
he wouldn't be eliminated.
To get to the Top Three was a bit of a Birthday Present.
Calli, is there any way you can vague up some of your manual writing enough to make a sort of generic portfolio? Remove all the identifying information, and cover with a note saying something like "this is a representative sample of my skills but the original is NDA'ed from here to next Tuesday; do not fold, spindle, mutilate, or pass on to anyone else beyond the immediate search."
Timelies to everyone! Loved last night's PR challenge, and thought that Bradley's
little terrier was the cutest dog of all. Also glad to see him do well on his birthday, especially since he pulled that shirt out of his hat at the last minute.
Oh, and Kat, great thesis topic! Also loved the idea of the Victorian Lit and Science class--my Victorian Lit class was a blend of poets and essayists (Ruskin still makes me want to claw my eyes out), with some Lewis Carroll thrown in, but we did spend some time on the whole Pre-Raphaelite movement, both lit and art. As for Chaucer, enjoy! I wish I could take another Chaucer class--that was my first upper-level English class in college, and one of my favorites. I still remember most of the opening of the Canterbury Tales' prologue (our teacher recommended memorizing it for recitation to aid our comprehension of Middle English the rest of the semester, and it did help tremendously).
Kat asked last night:
bon bon, are the hives from the hot? I'm just curious.
I don't know what they're from! My skin might be dry, but I'm fairly used to hot weather. I had some more this morning but they seem to have calmed down.
Eerie 'nativity' scene
You know, just the other day, I was thinking that I don't really seem to have any "Uncanny Valley" reactions.
Thanks to ita for proving me wrong.
Thanks to ita for proving me wrong.
No problem. Least I can do, really.
My thesis? I'm looking at cookbooks and housekeeping manuals from the 16th and 17th century to see if and how they had an impact on women's literacy. As women became more literate, they published more of these books so I want to see the impact on literacy and, ultimately, on culture. Though the time period might change, given the availability of early modern cookbooks.
Cook for Kats! That reminds me of Nü Shu - the secret chinese writing system for women which I think was often used in recipes.