Sunday, 10 February 2019

7x7

squala mater: a definitive Latin translation of Baby Shark—via Super Punch

sonovox: watch Lucille Ball demonstrate the “voice-box” technique that Peter Frampton popularised


amplifying random noise: regional terms for carbonated beverages in the United States

the wandering earth: big budget scifi movie from author Liu Cixin (previously) has excellent New Year’s debut

from snowman to gingerbread man: the surprisingly flat dimensions of Ultima Thule (previously) baffles researchers

gregg-ruled: edition of Alice in Wonderland transcribed in shorthand—with illustrations to help the reader keep his or her place

embroidered stories: an exhibition of samplers (previously) from Scotland

Saturday, 9 February 2019

ๆš–็ฐพ

Thanks to the always brilliant Present /&/ Correct, we learn that the traditional curtains that hang in the threshold of Japanese restaurants and shops are called noren.
These bold dividers that also separate rooms as well as covering doorways and windows usually have vertical slits cut in them for easier passage. Hanging them in the morning and taking them down at the close of the business day and signal opening and closing hours and are often decorated with corporate logos—associated by extension with brand-recognition. More to explore at the link above.

point par pouce

From Kottke’s Quick Links, we are directed to a little routine that will convert any image into a mosaic consisting of emojis, matched for shape and colour. There is not quite the level of granularity present to make for a pointillist image and probably works better where it does not have to compensate too much for changes in contrast.
Up close, the results look like a chaotic jumble but at a distance, it does rather capture quite well Georges Seurat’s iconic A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, the Bathing Women of Hippolyte Petitjean and the self-portrait of Vincent Van Gogh when viewed from a distance, just as the original technique prescribed.
Click on the pictures to see more details and resolve what glyphs are representing each brush stroke. Though the term carries no negative connotations now, pointillism was originally coined by critics to ridicule the style and the artists who experimented with it. Try it yourself with what you think might take well to the mosaic treatment—and take a step back before judging the creation—at the link above.

disclaimer

During opening remarks to commemorate the fortieth anniversary of the Islamic Revolution that exiled a Western-supported monarchy and installed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as Supreme Leader, the marja defended the continued use of his provocative catch-phrase, “Death to America,” saying that the sentiment only applies to Trump and his warmongering associates and not the American people as a whole. Khamenei adds that European leaders are not the most trustworthy lot either.

extended character set

Via Nag on the Lake, we were very pleased to learn that the latest batch of emojis to be released over the course of the year was not only inclusive of people with disabilities, having the vocabulary available and therefore not feeling like outsiders or othered, the combinations of couples, counting the gender neutral and the non-binary, numbers upwards of seventy permutations—to make sure all sorts of relationships are represented. I caught the end of a very clever commentary the other day that really anchored perspective and identity—I think it was through the lens of minorities depicted in superhero films but it’s also universally true: those depictions of a minority character on the screen is not just for those that look like and recognise something of themselves in the portrayal but it’s also for those in the majority who are used to seeing themselves in the movies to help them understand that others can be there too. There’s also underpants, a banjo and an otter.