Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Billy's final update 2/27/07


So, let's let productivity pact 2007 officially wind to a close.



This is the last thing I made. This brings my totals to 4 new lamps, and one necessary "display model" I cranked out along the way. I also did some pretty helpful tactical research. I also wrote 5 chapters of a young adult novel. But now I'm thinking about poetry, so go figure.

Did I complete my goals? Certainly not. I wonder where my leisurely winter went. The first week of this thing, I felt like I had a million hours to spare, but that turned out to be the exception, not the rule. I also hamstrung myself by getting pretty contemplative (overly so?) about why I was doing what I was doing. Perhaps that was a mistake.

In any case, did I achieve the basic goal of doing more than I would have otherwise, without a pact? Yes, I did. I hope some of you felt the same way. If anyone is interested in keeping going in one way or another, or perhaps just connecting periodically about the Progress we feel we're making in one avenue of life or another, we should talk. Rachel and Julie, in particular, I'm looking in your direction. Post-college young folks need more prodding than anyone, and though I'm somewhat shackled by my collegiate-calendar job, I'm always interested in being challenged.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

VICTORY

Victory might be overstating the case, but I am choosing to enter the swiftly approaching spring term time at Bennington by feeling good about my winter accomplishments. Let's review:

1. I planned to reinvigorate the Weather Report.
Well, whatever I meant by that wasn't what I thought it would be, but accidentally, it happened. I still keep the Weather Report every day, and since celebrating the 1-year anniversary on Jan. 24, I can now look back on what I did today last year. For instance, on Feb. 13 last year I was anxiously awaiting the beginning of the spring term. Sounds a lot like today. Coincidence? I mean really.

2. I wanted to write "a proper artist's statement for the Weather Report."
Naturally, this goal got warped too. But I have 10 pages of fiction, 10 pages of memoir-y essay, 4 pages of an essay about loving the cold, 2 little baby poems and a bunch of weird dream recordings. This is more writing than I did in the entire time since I graduated. And it's all a lot less in the category of whiny journal writing than normal, so that's a good little boost. Hell yes I love writing.

3. I wanted to knit my mother socks.
Shamefully, I have not knit my mother socks. I have fixed up a pair of jeans and a new shirt for myself, though. I have also sent a couple letters and postcards to people who needed them and visited my parents and my sister in person on two consecutive weekends-- perhaps showing my face and spending several hours in the car is enough to trade for a pair of socks.

So. That's how things look in my productivity pact today. I am still working as always, and I for one vote that productive things keep happening even when it's the term at Bennington. Let's not let academia stand in the way of personal creativity, etc. If anyone's with me, let me know.

Monday, February 12, 2007

Oops

I just realized I have not updated this in many moons.
I was in Burlington this weekend, and New York the week before, so I did not get as much done as I do sometimes. I think I need to be bored into action.
Anyways, I've been doing a little knitting but it's pretty half assed. Last night I decided to make a button-down shirt, which is probably my most ambitious sewing project so far. I got maybe half way done and I'm hoping to finish it today. So far it's not that hard but takes a long time. Maybe they save the really hard parts for the end.
I also got fabric to make pants, which are even harder than shirts, apparently.
I also fixed one of the billion dresses in my pile of dresses that would be nice if I only fixed them.
My banjo is gathering dust. My banjo teacher invited me to come over for dinner and banjo practice but I am too ashamed of how bad I am since I have not been practicing. I can never show my face in this town again.
I have been cooking a lot of delicious food which counts for something. I love delicious food.
So here are some revised goals:
Finish my shirt
Fix up at least one more dress
Practice banjo for at least a little while every day until I move. I am moving home for a month at the end of this month, and there are many more people there who will shame me if they find out I haven't been practicing.
Keep applying to jobs. I'm doing ok at that. I want to apply to at least 5 more in the next two weeks.
Get rid of a lot of my stuff. This will be hard because I am a packrat/collector.
Maybe I'll post some pictures when I get home.
Shame on me.

Thursday, February 8, 2007

turning over a newer new leaf

i have my very own 8mm projector now and watched almost all of the 8mm home movies my grandpappy left me. they are over saturated and blurry around the edges and have a nice crisp sort of graininess to them. i got the projector running, after only burning part of one film. just one frame. everything in them is uber 50's. women in dresses at parties and shiny pastel cars, lawns, cowboys and indians. it's nuts. and movie projectors are really cool.

still not sure how or if i'll use any of it in a project.

goals readjusted:
transfer a few more tapes to DV
send film stuffs to be digitized (i tried taping right from the projection but it was dark and just seemed sad somehow. i want full quality) have them send it to bennington. w00t.
send my friend alexei a fry daddy deep fat frier like i joked i would as a present for him letting me lay on his couch and eat all his food and do all his drugs. maybe i'll fill it with spam before sending it.

i can't wait to see so many of you in 1 week.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Six.5

I have to admit, the productivity pact slid into the back of my mind in the past few weeks. However, most of the things I've been up to fall into the realm of productivity....

First, I had a shit ton of business-ish things to take care of and I did them all- I was pretty proud of myself for that because most of them could have easily fallen into a corner and not have been taken care of for a long time.

Second, I made a gift for someone- I never do shit like that, but I thought that part of my effort to be less selfish with my time is to do things like that. I know this person will really appreciate that it meant enough to me to do it, so I'm glad for that too.

Third, a trip to New York has been on my to-do list for FWT, and I finally made it down there- reluctantly. I used to love that place, but anymore it's more of a pain than it's worth. I went, again, to try and not be selfish with my time. My oldest friend- we met when we were 2 and three, which means we can say we've been friends for over 20 years; I like the drama of that- lives there and we ran into each other completely randomly in a grocery store in Brooklyn a year or so ago and because it was such an out of the blue reunion, I keep reminding myself of the importance to not take that for granted and try to see her, however obnoxious it is for me to make the effort.

Four, I salvaged some canvas stretcher bars from VAPA and have been spending a lot of time reassessing how I approach my paintings. I've also sewn a few pieces of fabric that are pretty much ready to be experimented with- my current approach to making what I make: experimenting. I need to get to know the materials a bit better.

Five, I bought a roll of black and white film, put it in my camera and drove around looking. I got up early before work (my schedule doesn't leave me open to doing much besides just hanging out or going to bed after work, so I'm getting pretty good at taking advantage of the mornings. FWT is almost over, though, and I'm in a bit of a pickle- do I spend the last week being lazy while I can and not tiring myself out before school even starts, or do I keep trying to take advantage of every little moment?) took a few pictures, and I want to finish the roll before the term begins. I have a bit of work to do on that.

and Six, just today I did a ton of grad school research. That's one of my big projects for the next six months, or even a year and I'm making myself feel like I can handle it by starting now. I decided in Glasgow that I do want to go straight for grad school- it gave me a plan and I like plans. I've been researching schools for both MFA's and MBA's. I want to eventually get a masters in non-profit organizations and management. I think I might shoot for the MFA first, but I was on a roll for both.

That leads into a kind of Six.5, in researching schools, I found out about a graduate scholarship that I'm hoping to get in the running for via the Dean's office.

Climate Art

























Ok. So Basically I went into work on Monday, got happily roped into making a huge commissioned "mural" on this huge ramp/entryway in less than fifteen hours.
Here's what happened:
The Climate Project, charity organization trying to end or at least slow down pollution and its effects on the environment (via the teachings of Al Gore) were holding this big celebrity cocktail party thing at my work on Tuesday night. The woman who organized the whole thing saw some art that I'd made in my boss's office, and decided that they wanted me to make some for their event. Of course I said yes, as it was being covered by tons of major magazines and newspapers, and besides, who wouldn't love to get paid an hourly wage to make art.
Anyway. I worked from four in the afternoon until one in the morning, went home, got three and a half hours of sleep, got back to work at six-thirty, and worked until ten in the morning, and I was done right as the press started to arrive. You can see a couple of the photos here, but if you want to see more, click on the link and see my flickr account.
Love,
Julie

Tuesday, February 6, 2007

Billy's Update 2/6/07

This week I made this:










This is what it looks like upside down:



I specify because, really, I don't know how it'll be oriented yet. It isn't totally finished, because I need to rice paper over the open air sections to diffuse some of the light. I just don't know how to do that while making as few mistakes as possible right now. My inspiration was plaid shirts and Neko Case. The red wood is fir, which when I say out loud, people always hear as "fur", and then they make a face. But it's wood, I swear. If I was physically attracted to lumber, it would be really thin fir with light behind it, much like in this lamp.
To your right is a close-up. In real life it looks sort of like that, but warmer and sexier.

Hey, "if." I said, "if."

I've also been learning some long overdue fundamentals, or at least vocabulary to talk about fundamentals, from a book about residential lighting design. You might have thought from my fancy college degree that I would've looked at books like this already, but no, I actually never even considered that there were books on such things. That'll learn me.

Thursday, February 1, 2007

jeans

so PS, I made some new jeans on Sunday. Lauren pointed out that I could proudly post that here as part of my productivity pact. It was especially satisfying, because I woke up on Sunday wanting a pair of light-colored jeans, and by the time I went to bed, I owned them. I went to Goodwill, bought a pair of bell-bottomed teeny-bopper jeans, and then spent the duration of two movies hand-sewing them to fit as the trendy skinny-jean look. Here's to the spontaneous side of productivity!
Rachel

Monday, January 29, 2007

Billy's update 1/29/07

I have a sad, practically non-update this week. I spent my weekend enjoyably but mostly non-productively, except for when Lauren taught me to knit. Thanks, Lauren. So I'm 1/3 done with the biggest scarf in the world, but no additional lamps. And this visiting art program has now taken over VAPA for the week. I thought I had another day to sneak in and make some progress, but they've already set up and I'm not allowed in. So I'm a little stalled.

In other news, this week I read the worst young adult novel ever, page-turningly horrible, and decided to write my own young adult novel, which would have to be better than that. If I get more than halfway finished with this task, ever, I will make some lazy attempts at getting it published. What I have in my corner is the immense number of young adult books I've read in my life, and the fact that I have absolutely no artistic scruples about writing, and would be willing to write about any hot button issue that I thought would sell. I have a basic plot outline and chapter one. What more could I need?

My career trajectory might now be: Keep about 6 different pots on the stove and wait for one to boil. I'm having a lot of trouble with focus lately.

Tired but painting

I forgot to mention that I'm applying to be a special ed teacher through the NYC teaching fellows. There's a less than one in eight chance that I'll get in, but I thought I might as well try, because being a receptionist is eating my brain right up.
Regardless, I started painting another portrait, it is big, about life-sized, but i can't get the eyes right. Also, I've made about 35 drawings in the past week, which I'll post as soon as i can, but i have to find a scanner first.
Anyway, that's all,
love,
Julie

Rachel's update 1/29

Hi guys,

So, just updating you. After a two-week hiatus following my meltdown, I was able to start work on the regular old Weather Report again. I caught up with the days I missed, and I think I've realized that it serves me best when I use it only as an index of sorts; it's really just data, after all, and it's great that it's in this accessible one-page-a-day format, so I can go back and find out the sequence of events when I'm trying to remember something. I think my original goal to reinvigorate the Weather Report was actually misguided, in that I expected the Weather Report to be able to hold the work I want to make and do with my life, when really, it's just a place to record stuff that happens to use as material for what I make and do.

And wouldn't you know, but during the two-week hiatus, I actually felt moved to write. Like, actual stuff, not just lengthy emails. I'm not ready to share any of it, and I have the new roadblock of not owning a computer that actually works (I'm using the computer at work right now, and every other time you hear from me, as my own computer has been reduced to little more than a footrest) when I want it to. Didn't used to be a problem when I never wanted to use it. Anyway, I've been excercising my writing hand, and maybe before this productivity pact is over I'll have a little story or a poem or some sentence to share with you all. I think this is very exciting and productive, even if it's mostly mentally productive.

As a parting gift, here's something Cyle said on Friday when we were at the WalMart: "I just flop around when I'm not wearing socks."

-Rachel

Sunday, January 28, 2007

Lauren's update 1/28/07



Hi guys,
This week I made this elephant, gave the seal a face, and made this skirt. The skirt was a pretty big accomplishment for me, since I don't usually use patterns or finish my sewing projects. Also I used fabric that's been in my fabric bin since high school which is good. I have a very large fabric collection and if I don't use at least some of it in the near future it will be hard to justify hauling it all the way to Portland.

I also worked on a sweater I'm knitting, but a couple hours ago I realized I had skipped an important part so I had to rip out everything I did this week. Oh well.
I also taught two boys to knit which isn't one of my goals but I think it oughta count for something.
I applied for two jobs in Portland.
I played a little banjo.
I think I am going to redefine my crafty goals a little. I'm not as excited about making things to sell on etsy, although I do still want to set up a little store. Lately I've been having fun making things to keep or give to my friends so I'm just going to go with that.
Also, thanks to everyone who posted stuff this week. My job is pretty boring so its always fun to see somebody's way cool project. It gives me hope that we won't all work boring jobs forever but instead will make way cool projects that will somehow make us lots of cash monies and life will be one big party. damn the man, or something.

Thursday, January 25, 2007

the ice melts onto ice cream onto the floor. fingers.

Maia here.
Well, quite a breath without much productivity.

I have been slowly making progress on my sweater. The rows are so painstakingly long, it seems like eons before I finish a started row.

oh dear, I think this might be the time to mention I will need to cut down my list of goals. I am leaving in four days for bennington once again. That does not mean I have to conclude my projects, however!

let's see if I can get back on track.

I think of you all, and your respective work.

love from Maia!

Monday, January 22, 2007

Billy's Update 1/22/07

I don't have any photos this week, because so far I've only cut the wood, not assembled it. In the works are:
-A lamp modeled after plaid, with a front panel made of a woven pattern of red and yellow wood of two different widths
-A taller, functional version of the curvy little guy I made last week
-The first stage of a lamp/bookshelf combination unit
I also got a book on interlibrary loan called Residential Lighting: A Practical Guide, and I can pick up The Martha Rules tomorrow. I'm up to item 200ish out of the 999 best designed objects. This far in, I can confidently say that some of these objects are boring to read about, and some are even downright ugly. Also, the book itself is very poorly designed, which is humorous. The font type and size sometimes change drastically from page to page, which makes it very hard to read for long periods of time. Unless it was designed to make me need the ultimate designer accessory: glasses.

Maybe there's something in the water in Bennington right now, but I've found that I, similar to Rachel, have been doing a lot of frantic thinking lately. Specifically, I am reconsidering almost everything I have come to take for granted about my life and future. So if anyone has any suggestions about what I should do with the rest of my life, don't hesitate to let me know. I am more open to advice now than ever.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Finally Here (sort of)








Hi Team,
it's taken me forever and ever to get on the ball, but now that I'm on it, I think I got it rolling pretty well now.

*I have been painting pictures, but I think I need to step it up and paint some more.

*I think I need to keep better track of all the drawings and things I make throughout the day, instead of just leaving them in random places (although last night I was at this weird party in this fancy house in Long Island, and I made an ugly child out of cocktail toothpicks, and a champagen cork, and then hid it in a cabinet. I like to think that they will be profoundly confused when they see it).

*Also, I have been writing down my dreams lately, then I started to illustrate them. I'll post pictures soon. In my last memorable dream (and subsequent illustration series) i was a 700 pound white sow.

*I think actual documentation is going to be a big part of my plan too.
Love,
Julie

crap

the thing cut my pictures in half. oh well.

HTML, what?

I was introduced to one more of the features Google offers that makes it the internet super power that it is: GooglePages. I've wanted to try creating a website for my work for a while, but I don't know much about computers (and can never seem to be interested in spending the time to learn the real way to do it. Call me lazy maybe, but my attention span gets like that of a 4 year old when you say "HTML".) so I thought I'd wait until an easy DIY (and free) option came up. Google gave me that DIY option and now a new goal for the Winter, is to get it started. This week, I have. It's at http://cylemetzger.googlepages.com/ Tell me what you think- again, I know nothing about how to put something like this together or what it should look like.

Lauren's update 1/21/07

Hi everyone,
This is my first time using a blog, and I'm trying to put pictures in here, but I'm not sure if I know how.
My updates:
I made some things which you can see here.
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting>
I've been making weird little pins and some earrings, and last night I was looking through this weird book from the 70s of stuffed animals, and got inspired to make this little seal.
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
It still needs eyes. I realized I like making little creatures even though just this tiny one took like three hours and i got stabbed in the finger 17 times. It was really fun to make anyway and i am very happy with it. Once I finish this blog i think i will make some more.
I also worked more on this scarf which is pretty ridiculous looking but I decided to think like that cake photo Billy showed us and just keep plowing through it. I still have to figure out the digital camera I got for Christmas because the colors are really off in these.
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
The colors are just as silly in real life but a different kind of silly.
This week I did not practice the banjo very much. dang.
I now have a workspace.
I did some of the applying for jobs work, but I need to do more.
I love all of you.
Over and out.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

So Cyle can attest to the fact that I had a 2-weeks-into-FWT meltdown yesterday. If I were a man living in Europe, we would call it an existential crisis, but since I'm a girl in Vermont, we'll stick with meltdown. I bought a sketch book that is too big, and it made me feel like my life is small. I spent the morning sleeping late and taking my time getting dressed in order to heal from this experience. I plan on acquiring a more manageable recepticle for the Weather Report and approaching it with a bit of caution.

That said, here are a couple things I learned in my first few days of the revived Weather Report:
-avocados are botanically classified as a berry
-florescent colors are so bright because they capture rays of UV light that we can't normally see, and project them back out in a visible spectrum

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

C'mon slow poke.

I need to publicly state that I don't feel I have done enough yet. Granted, I'm still settling back into being at Bennington, but I'm coming up on a breaking point where I could just never start working.

So here's what I've done. I have had to re-familiarize myself with some of the writings that are going into the personal history project, and I've done that. Just re-reading them got me back into it, so there's hope. And I keep looking at my old sketch book and getting a little turned off by it, so I think I'm going to start a new one all together. I think I also want to try to come up with a better way to use a sketchbook. I need a system, so I'm going to come up with one.

There, that made me feel a bit better about what I'm doing. Thanks Productivity Pact.

Monday, January 15, 2007

Billy's Update 1/15/07


This week I did okay, certainly not great by my own standards. I had a lot of free time.
I did this. It's about 14 inches high, which I learned was sort of short. It was mostly an experiment to make sure that it would stand up that way, since the thin, thin strips are all that's holding it up. Now that I've made it, though, I want to see if far larger. Like, a 5 foot high floor lamp made out of 1.5 inch wide strips rather than .75 inch wide like this one. That's a stupid thing for me to make when I'm going to move in 6 months, but I might make it anyway.


I also made these little guys. The one in the middle is the correct version of what some of you have seen the wrong version of hanging on my wall. The proportions were a little wacked. This is the "display model" for how it ought to be. The two little curvy guys on the side were experiments to make sure that the strips wouldn't snap when I curved them. They didn't. Now I don't know what to do with them. They're a little too small to function as is. I made half of another lamp too, but then the other half failed miserably and involved me pulling a piece of rice paper back and forth for ten minutes to get it straight, then having it unstraighten itself under the tremendous weight of a tiny strip of Elmer's glue. I swore and kicked some things and then wrote it off.

I didn't make this this week. I won't lie. I made this a couple years ago, and had to bring it home this week because I was afraid the construction workers in the Upstairs Cafe would trash it. It's made me realize how I miss making things that looked like this, and I've added a goal to my list to again try and make something like this but more portable, and with fewer giant problems. I may also switch to incandescent lighting for the next one. Cross your fingers it doesn't light on fire.


In other news, the library at Bennington got this giant 3 book set of the 999 best designed objects in history. I'm pledging to read the descriptions (short as they are) of all 999. So far I'm up to 131. This week's highlight: ancient Chinese scissors. Look at a pair of scissors some time. They're so clever.

Who we are and what we do

So far the productivity pact has brought us this far: we have met each other and shared our goals. For blog posterity, here they are again:

  • Jesse's Productivity Pact '07
1. Get home movies from both sides of the family transfered to MiniDV. Find a place that transfers film. Transfer videos from VHS. Start logging the footage. Figure out what if anything to do with it. Other than being amazed by my parents stylish hair in the late eighties.

2. Write a video game with Joe Holt's help.


  • Cyle

1. fill one sketch book (or the rest of one and get well into another). I want to start next term with a few potential projects instead of wasting time in the beginning figuring out what I'm
actually going to do. I'm thinking of the sketchbook as something like an idea bank that I can put all of the passing project ideas that I usually don't have the time for when I think of them. Even if I lose interest in some of them, at least they'll still sort of exist.

2. research picture frame project. there are details to come on this one, but I want to do a project using picture frames, and it would help the idea if I spent some time thinking about different elements of it and researching the history of others to find out where exactly
I want to go with the idea. I never feel like I do enough research, or never have enough time to do it as thoroughly as I'd like. I also want to actually mess around with the items themselves a lot, because even if I feel like I don't get enough research done, I feel like a lot of the time I over conceptualize the idea without considering the material early enough in it's development.

3. keep going with the personal history project I started in the fall. not sure exactly where the project is going, but I started putting things together and I want to see it through.


  • Lauren

My main goal is to do a lot of crafting in the next 6 weeks. I am not choosing the "what" at this point, but I'll be knitting, sewing, making jewelry, and whatever else I think of. I'm not forcing myself to be specific at this point so that I can go with whatever inspires me on a particular day. I also want to open an etsy store (etsy is sort of like ebay for handmade things) and experiment with selling some of the things I make. I don't like workin for the man anymore than the next lady, but I do like making things. I hope that one day I can at least partially support myself through art or crafts or whatever, so it will be good for me to play around with selling stuff and see how it goes.
My immediate goal is to set up a comfortable workspace in my apartment. Right now I don't have anything resembling that, and I know that my environment definitely affects how creative and productive I feel. So by the end of the weekend I will clean up the living room and set up an area that's fun to work in and has all my materials easily accessible.


  • Andray
for the month of January im working on two short stories that ill like to make significant progress on. the first, on st. lucian folklore, id like to have a rough, pre-first draft, so that ill have enough momentum to eventually complete it. the second, a personal essay, id like to have a complete arc so that it's at least readable from beginning to end.


  • Emily
I think I’ll promise to finish five short things until I love them. They can be descriptions of imaginary diseases or poems or anything else, as long as they’re small. I can make as many as I want and also work on longer stories, but I have to have five small things made of words and love them all by the end of the pact. Five seems like a small number, but it might take me many tries to turn them into things I love.


  • Billy

1. Make at least 5 new lamp designs. Produce them all to "completion" even if I realize about halfway through that they won't be any good. Display the good ones in the President's Gallery during early Spring Term. My new design themes are to try and make things more simply/quickly, make things more stable/shippable, and to "love my enemies", in the form of the cords, bulbs, and other stuff that I haven't ever really integrated into a design, just tried to tack on a solution to.
2. Make a "display model" for each of the lamps that people commonly ask for, that I will mark as a display model and not sell, even when it would be really convenient.
3. Take catalog-esque ad photos with human models that can stand up to Real Catalog scrutiny. Like, there won't be stacks of CDs and empty soda cans in the background, unless I place them there for some particular artistic purpose. This will require a lot of fancy footwork and arranging in my apartment. I also want to take some around those fancy leather couches in the New Houses.
4. Get more educated about what I'm doing by reading books/magazines about: small businesses, design, and woodworking. The only thing I'll say specifically on this right now is that I plan to read The Martha Rules by Martha Stewart, because she made herself a fortune, she's gotta have some good advice.


  • Jeff(erson)

I'm working on an album and a movie. My goal is to have something boring and something interesting done every Wednesday. Tomorrow for example I hope to have a preliminary budget (boring) and a mask for the killer in the movie (interesting) finished. My focus is currently on the movie side of things, but a minimum of two interesting things are going to be songs for the album.


  • Sally

independent study goals

1. continue crawling around grandfather's attic looking for albums, finish scanning all my grandparents' old crumbly photo albums (without damaging them) by next week, categorize and start indentifying the people in the pictures with help from grandfather/mom and make notations

2. start cleaning, cropping, adjusting pictures on aperture

3. start researching questions to ask grandfather for life history interviews (ask mom, aunts, etc.); set dates and times for hour long interview sessions..set aside time to transcribe each interview, prepare and label DV tapes, check audio equipment, etc.

4. start mapping out blueprint for dvd digital archive

non-independent study goals:

1. clean up all audio on most recent video project, fix small glitches, re-do dvd

2. if bored, start transcribing and logging every DV tape i have, because it will help me in the long run but it's a pain in the ass to do

3. design and make new dvds of selected works to give to family/friends

4. watch a lot of good movies via netflix

5. read at least 3 books

6. learn how to cook something nice

7. write letters to friends


  • Maia

1. Finish knitting the bottom half (at least) of the sweater I am working on.

2. Make 10 (yes, 10) mix tapes, and send them off to the receiver. The Productivity Pact group I will count as one friend to save me some o' that precious time (if you would like one, please
email your address)

3. Complete a special box of goodies for an old friend. To be included in this box is: 1 mobile, 1 mix tape, 1 pouch to keep mix tape. Pack up in box. Make box pretty. Deliver.

4. Brainstorm, doodle, design 5 new ideas for dioramas to be made next term. These brainstorms must be detailed drawings and descriptions of the suggested projects, as well as a detailed list of needed materials.

  • Elizabeth

1. Figure out my new camera including all bells/whistles, buying a battery for the light meter (battery this afternoon).
2. Starting next week, when my film arrives, shoot at least a roll a day.
3. Research color dark rooms in San Francisco and find one I like.
4. Contact the new rolls I've shot or get machine prints by the end of February and maybe start printing.
ALSO,
5. Make a mobile with part of my X-Ray collection.
6. Learn to crochet and make a scarf by the end of February.


  • Rachel

1. TO REINVIGORATE THE WEATHER REPORT.
For those who are not already familiar with this endeavor of mine, I started a daily scrapbook last January 24, in which I past/tape/paperclip/write/glue information about what happened to me that day-- recording detritus, basically, like receipts and all that other shit you'd throw away. I've kept it up pretty steadily all year, which is impressive, but I've been feeling lately like I treat it more like a repository than a project, unlike the early days when I used to think about it before falling asleep, and carry around a pencil and post-its in my back pocket to record stuff. It's about time I woke it back up again, and I decided to start by literally buying a new sketchbook with bigger pages. I want to keep evolving it, which means not just settling into a pattern of taping stuff in every 4 or 5 days. Hopefully, if all goes well, I can photograph a couple pages to share with people in a couple weeks.
2. TO WRITE A PROPER ARTIST'S STATEMENT FOR THE WEATHER REPORT
Which I will share as it develops.
3. TO KNIT A PAIR OF SOCKS FOR MY MOM.
I promised her these for her birthday, which was January 4th. I bought the yarn and the needles, my next step is to research a pattern today, and I think I can start knitting by tomorrow.