digital art since 2004

Sunday, September 28, 2008

National Museum Day!

Saturday, in case you didn't know, was Smithsonian Magazine Museum Day, during which participating museums offered free admittance. Quite roaring, I know.

Anyhow, I decided that since I had the day free, I'd go to the Eastman House (where the founder of Kodak lived and died), and the U of Rochester's Memorial Art Gallery. Normally, these museums cost $8 and 10 respectively, but not for me, bitches! I printed my free pass at work 3 days ago! (Seriously, if you're at work, check that work link out.)

So, I wake up at about noon, and eat, and generally lolligag while waiting for the rain to pass, and by the time I'm showered and out the door it's about 2. They both close at 5, so I decide to hit the Eastman House first, because I really wanted to see this lavish house. It's amazing, but more on that later.

I'm riding my bike along East Ave, when all of a sudden, a car pulls out 8 feet in front of me. I hit my brakes, and to no avail, because the next thing I know, I'd nailed this guy's front quarterpanel. And I am not making this up, I flipped over the handlebars, hit the hood with my back, rounded off, and landed on my feet, facing the car. My sunglasses didn't even come off.

The driver just looks at me, and the first thing out of his mouth is, "Are you kidding me?"

He was really cool about the whole thing. I think he was just happy he wasn't getting sued. I was okay, but mostly dumbfounded; plus it would've been my fault, as I was riding on the sidewalk. What? East Ave's scary on a bike! It was hilarious in hindsight, but that's not counting where the whole encounter left my bicycle's front fork broken. That's still kind of hilarious.

Eastman House! This place was incredible. It was the way I'd picture Hemingway's house, actually, if I thought Hemingway could tend a garden and had any class. Animal skins everywhere - apparently, he was a prolific hunter, and they even did a whole room on his outdoor adventures.

They managed to tuck the fact that he committed suicide at age 73 back into a hallway in the elaborate labyrinth of the 2nd floor, but I found it. To his credit, he was suffering from spinal stenosis, and his note (they had the original on display, which kinda shocked me) said "To my friends, my work is done. Why wait? GE."

So, now they have tours through there. Yay! But they also have some of the very first cameras and camera equipment ever made (back to the 1840's), as well as several photographic exhibits from modern artists, and his extensive garden that they keep up as his memorial. Also, they have a café on the first floor that serves gelato, which I'm sure George Eastman was a huge ... fan ... of? Then again, they did have a wax lemon pie next to a quote placard that read "I enjoy lemon pie as much as any man alive."

As far as museums go, I'd give this one four and a half Louvres out of five. The man was pretty interesting, and had lots of great ideas. Plus, his estate is as gorgeous as any house I'll ever be in. The half off is for keeping me from getting to go to the Memorial Art Gallery, they took my printed pass there and kept it. And the whole hitting a car thing. But yay helmets and ninja skills!

And then I got a haircut.

Here's where it all went down:

Friday, September 26, 2008

It works now!

Okay, thanks to everyone who wanted to see this. I've figured out how to make a start button now, so i can start posting things that don't auto-blare Weezer.


So, for everyone that's late, this is the second animation I've ever made in Flash, and also the second animation I've ever done, period. I'm pretty happy with how it turned out - now I just hope my professor is as well.


This is the rough draft, I still have some fleshing out to do.
Learning Flash is fun. Thanks, Adobe!


In case you don't make it through all 45 seconds, and don't recognize the song, it's "Holiday" by Weezer, from their 1994 self-titled album. It's not my favorite Weezer song per se, but it was the mood I was in when I was picking text to animate.






Wednesday, June 4, 2008

New Art Wednesday!


"Escher's Landing"


Civic Center Hyatt, Lexington, KY
September 2007

Original Size: 3264px by 2448 px

Prints Available: Up to 36" x 27"

New Art Wednesday #2! This one's a bonus, and I'm trying out "framing" options.

Nick Smith
+1 859 396 6070
novemberalphasierra@gmail.com

New Art Wednesday!


"Awake!"


Corner of Vine and Rose, Lexington, KY
September 2007

Original Size: 3264px by 2448px
Sample Size: 1280px by 960px

Prints Available: Up to 36" x 27"

Nick Smith
+1 859 396 6070
novemberalphasierra@gmail.com

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

The Red Album


So, this will constitute my first use of Adobe Contribute ... and likely my first palpable "blog entry."

I'm officially back on the Adobe wagon. I've been hanging out with my boy Photoshop the last couple of nights, and getting back into my Dreamweaver books.

That said, I hope I don't get all strung out on blogging about myself. I'll try to keep this as professional as possible. I'm hoping to get picked up by companies later on, not underage girls.

Anyhow, this is my foot dipped in blogging's waters, and with that, I'm finished. (Everything after this is edits:)




Weezer's third new self-titled album ("the Red Album") came out today. If you heard about it here, let me know, because no kidding, I'm the only person that reads this. It's practically impossible that I'm not.


This is simply the only place where a true Weezer fan (read: "nerd") can come to celebrate by publishing his first his first blog release.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

New Art Wednesday!


"Spring Sensation"


Raven Run Nature Sanctuary
April 2008

Original Size: 3264px by 2448px
Sample Size: 1280px by 960px

Prints Available: Up to 36" x 27"

Nick Smith
+1 859 396 6070
novemberalphasierra@gmail.com

Sunday, May 25, 2008

AjaxDaddy Adds Slick Applets to Your Web Site [Web Publishing]



 
 

Sent to you by Nick via Google Reader:

 
 

via Lifehacker by Kevin Purdy on 5/25/08


Need to give your blog or personal site a more modern look? AjaxBuddy, a free repository of Web 2.0-style site tools, is great for site owners who don't have time to learn an entire programming language, or just need a starter block of code to get building. Grab free, easy-to-modify code for Flickr-like editing fields, quick-loading slideshows and tabbed galleries, instant graphs, date-choosing calendars, and dozens more examples. Many require replacing just a few values to get working, but even the more complex tools are great learning tools.



 
 

Things you can do from here: