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Kenilworth Portraits

Remember when I got the Kids Camera Instant Print which I now just refer to as toy camera most of the time?

Well last month I went to Kenilworth Square East to see work by UWM PSOA students (including my daughter) so I brought the toy camera along and shot portraits of people. When you are holding a toy camera that looks like a pink kitty, people tend to let you shoot their portrait. Then when you hand them a receipt with their photo printed on it they smile even more!

So here’s a bunch of photos from the evening. I set the camera to print after each shot and tore off the print and handed it to the person (or people) in the shot. It was a ton of fun being able to share like that!

I took most of the photos but the one of me (and a few others) were shot by my daughter Madeline, who is also a photographer, and actually had work on display at the event.

When I got home I printed a second copy of each photo so I could use them for this blog post…

I also started a new photo album called Toy Camera to upload more of these shots…

The metadata says they were shot with an iPhone, which is sort of true, since I took a photo of each photo with an iPhone. Weird, right? It seemed like the easiest way to digitize them…

I originally messed around with a desktop scanner, but wanted a faster process.

Oh, there’s also a device to assist with taking the photos of the photos, and I’ll write more about that in another post.

For now, just enjoy these photos!

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Bike Bag (Top Tube)

I recently asked about bike bags on Mastodon and enough people responded to help me make a decision. I ended up getting a “top tube” bag, a ROCKBROS Top Tube Bike Bag to be precise. So here’s a mini review.

Since it fits giant mobile phones I figured it would be good enough for whatever I wanted to put in there. Probably gloves, maybe granola bars or other snacks, keys, etc.

When I got it the first thing I did was try fitting the toy camera in it. It fit well enough. I can zip it completely closed, but I can also just zip it half way (up to the camera’s ear) and it’s in there pretty snug.

I found I could easily remove my gloves and shove them in the bag while riding, and even pull them out and put them on. Yeah, riding in spring can still be a bit cold in the morning. Hopefully I won’t need gloves in the summer!

There’s also the elastic thing on the side you can shove things into… like gloves. It’s not as great as sticking them inside, but it’s there if needed.

Overall I’m fairly pleased with the bag, which was under $20, and it’s easily removable with just three hook & look straps holding it in place. I’m not a huge fan of the ROCKBROS text on the side and considered blacking it out, but it appears to be reflective material so for the sake of safely I’ve left it as-is.

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Furniture Sketch

Fugazi released the Furniture EP in 2001. The song “Furniture” is actually a song that was first performed in 1987. It’s one of my favorite Fugazi songs.

I actually didn’t really like Fugazi at first. I think because they were so popular at the time. In On The Kill Taker was probably their first release I really loved. Red Medicine and End Hits were great, but The Argument just didn’t grab me the same as the previous releases did. Even on the Furniture release, I love the title track but the other two not as much.

Besides my own taste in Fugazi releases the band cannot be denied for what they created, musically, politically, and socially. The world is a better place because of Fugazi.

(Also, I remain to this day thankful that Grant and I did not run over Fugazi at the Waukesha Expo Center with a van when the opportunity was presented to us in the early 1990s.)

This chair sketch was inspired by Fugazi, and created using an Apple Pencil on an iPad with Procreate. I actually started to play around with different techniques for adding texture to this one, and I like it.

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Pay (Molly) What You Want

Molly White is a writer. Wait, she’s an amazing writer. You may know her from Web3 is Going Just Great which is “a project to track some examples of how things in the blockchains/crypto/web3 technology space aren’t actually going as well as its proponents might like you to believe”.

She also does a newsletter called [citation needed] which (critically) covers cryptocurrency, AI, and other issues in the tech industry.

For [citation needed] she offers a Pay What You Want model. Here’s an excerpt from the about page:

All content is free and available to all readers, and will continue to be that way. Paywalls suck and you won’t find them here. What you receive will be exactly the same regardless of whether you choose to pay for a subscription or not.

That said, paid subscribers are crucial to allowing me to continue doing this kind of research and writing, and so if you are able to support my work I would be immensely grateful. You will also get access to additional features including commenting.

I understand that not everyone is willing or able to support at the same rate, so I’ve set up a system to allow you to pay what you want. The suggested rate is $10/month or $100/year, which comes out to around $2.50 a newsletter just for the weekly recaps — less when you factor in the additional deep dives and special editions. But whatever you want to or can afford to pay is just fine with me, and deeply appreciated.

There’s a bit more on the about page to read, but I really wanted to include the above text. (The rest of the page is mostly about Molly and her credentials.)

This is how I want it to work. This is the Pay What You Want method, and I think it can work… because it does work.

I subscribe (and by that I mean pay) for a number of publications in Milwaukee. Mainly Urban Milwaukee, OnMilwaukee, and I think The Recombobulation Area. (Note I said I think because I can’t remember if I signed up so I need to recheck that. I’m not a fan of Substack, which Dan uses, but I still want to support him.)

Of the above, only The Recombobulation Area is a one-person shop, and the other two are large(r) organizations with full staffs. They both do ads, and that’s fine, they need to do so, but I will pick either of them over the old guard of Milwaukee Journal Sentinel or any of the local TV stations who usually offer a healthy mix of too many ads and poor design.

Sorry, back to Pay (Molly) What You Want! I should find more examples of this concept. I remember when I got in touch with a news organization that offered subscriptions because they published one really great story, and I wanted to support them. They told me I could subscribe for $99 per year. That was it. They had no option for a one-time donation or a Pay What You Want option, which is sad. I would have immediately subscribed for $1 per month, and maybe increased that if more great stories were published, but they lost me.

I support Inkscape and OpenSCAD each month, and being able to choose the amount, or given more options on smaller amounts, is what got me in. If the options were too high I’d really have to weigh the decision, but $1 or $5 per month is a no-brainer for me.

Are there more people & organizations out there utilizing a Pay What You Want model?

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Chuck Taylors Sketch

Did I have Chuck Taylors when I was a kid? Of course I did. Do I have a pair now? Yeah, I do. I remember learning about Chuck Taylor (the man) and finding out he was sort of the first “shoe evangelist”, as it were. You can learn more about Chuck on Wikipedia.

Of course if you just want to learn about the shoes, you can do that too. The pair I have now, I definitely don’t wear every day. I think Chucks are much better for young feet than for someone who has been around over four decades. (Or maybe that’s just my feet talking.)

Anyway, I’m sure I’ve seen hundreds of skaters and punk kids wearing Chucks over the years, and then they got even more popular and normies started wearing them. I guess that’s just how it goes, eh?

So pour one out for Chuck whose was born on June 24th, 1901 and died on June 23rd, 1969… just five days after I was born.

Side story here, when we lived near a cemetery (last time, not this time) we always looked at death dates and birth dates to see if people made it to their birthday. Sadly Chuck died the day before his birthday! So close!!!

I’ve mentioned it before, but I do these sketches with an Apple Pencil on an iPad using Procreate. If you want a print of one of these, or a color I didn’t do, let me know and we can work something out.