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Debbie Ridpath Ohi reads, writes and illustrates for young people.

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Saturday
Nov192005

National Cartoonists Society xmas party



Well, I ended up NOT seeing the new Harry Potter movie last night after all. Reason: I was having too much fun at the National Cartoonists Society Christmas party. :-)

I finally got to meet Patricia Storms in person:

With Patricia Storms


As I've mentioned before, I'm a big fan of her Booklust blog. In person, Patricia is just as wonderful as she is in her blog: friendly, witty, articulate. Hey, and she's going to be on CBC Radio's Cross Country Check-Up on Sunday, talking to Rex Murphy about some of her favourite books.

I was a bit nervous, walking into the party room at the Pauper's Pub, not knowing anyone. I had a brief impulse to flee...but it was too late to chicken out and besides, I could see a bowl of chocolate on the bar.

I needn't have worried. Not surprisingly, cartoonists are a warm and welcoming bunch. Their partners and spouses, too! I'll be highlighting some of the members of the NCS Canadian chapter in upcoming Blatherings. One couple I especially enjoyed meeting, for example, was cartoonist Brian Fray and his wife Chris, a stained glass artist. I also enjoyed meeting their son John, an actor currently touring with a production of Cinderella; he plays both Prince Charming and an Evil Stepsister. All three have their black belts in karate (!).

NCS Christmas party


All party attendees were encouraged to draw something; markers and a stack of paper were provided in a corner of the room. Very cool to see the cartoons accumulate on the wall above the bar (see left side of photo above). HOLY COW, some of these insta-cartoons blew me away; the level of talent in that room was pretty intimidating for a newbie cartoonist like myself. Inspiring, too.

And I wasn't the only writer at the party! I enjoyed chatting with Sarah Lazarovic, who is another freelance writer also interested in illustration and cartooning.

Other highlights of the party for me included:

- The slideshow presentation of Christmas greetings from other members of the National Cartoonists Society around the world, put together by cartoonist Sandra Bell-Lundy (who is now chair of the Canadian chapter of the NCS). Do check out Sandra's Between Friends site, especially the cartoon from yesterday (Friday) with its Lord of the Rings reference. :-D "Between Friends" now appears internationally in over 100 newspapers such as the Detroit News, the Chicago Sun, the Toronto Star, the Milwaukee Journal and the Seattle Times. Coffee, Tea and Reality is available in bookstores now.

- The raffle, because I won something! The Hi and Lois Sunday Best collection, signed by Brian & Greg Walker as well as Chance Browne. Hi and Lois was created in 1954 by Mort Walker (whose autograph I already have) and Dik Browne, and passed to the next generation in the 1980s; Brian and Greg, sons of Mort Walker, and Chance is Dik Browne's son.

- Christmas gift exchange. This was voluntary: if you wanted to participate, you had to bring something comic-related. Names were put into a hat and when your name was drawn, you picked whatever gift you wanted; all gifts were wrapped and without tags. I contributed a large-size Moleskin sketchbook, and was delighted when Bob Kain ended up with it. I got a wonderful Get Fuzzy: Groovitude collection by Darby Conley, contributed by Sandra Bell-Lundy.

With Deborah Peyton


- Talking with Deborah and Derrick Peyton. Deborah Peyton (see photo of Deborah and me to the right) is a New Brunswick cartoonist who does custom cartoons and illustrations and is also the creator of "Day to Day", a cartoon that appeared in newspapers throughout Eastern Canada and Florida. She has two 'Day to Day' collections distributed by Thomas Allen and Son Ltd. of Toronto, as well as a line of merchandise.

- Brief conversation with two people at the party who almost had me convinced they were just crashing the event for fun...until they confessed that they work for Torstar syndication services. :-D :-D

- Meeting illustrator Andrea Wayne von Königslöw and author/illustrator Linda Hendry, both of whom know my sister. I had several people come up to me at the party, in fact, saying, "By the way, are you related to Ruth Ohi?"

Some people may think blogs a waste of time, but I've found mine to have more than repaid any effort I've put into it. Not only have I found Blatherings (and Inkygirl!) a much-needed creative outlet, but I've made so many new friends and work contacts, gotten both writing and drawing assignments, and been introduced to new and wonderful experiences solely because of my blogs.

Thanks SO MUCH, Patricia, for inviting me to this party!

Nov/2005 comments:
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Friday
Nov182005

artsy/tech hybrids (part 2)

IMG_0754.JPG


Today's pics are from my Flickr archives. Feel free to click on any image to see a bigger version.

Looking forward to going to the National Cartoonist Society's Christmas party this afternoon! Possibly also the new Harry Potter movie tonight, though I might wait until I can get someone to go see it with me. Not sure if I want to risk hearing spoilers before then, however.

A few days ago, I posted a short Blathering about artsy/tech hybrids, and asked if there were any others out there.

Butter fly sculpture


Holy toledo, I was overwhelmed by the response in my Livejournal and Blatherchat discussion boards. There are a LOT of you hybrids out there. :-)

Though I suppose I shouldn't be so surprised. Unless you're utterly and happily devoted to your career path and have no other strong interests OR are a hermit-type who spends all of his/her time at home watching television outside of work hours, most people tend to be drawn to multiple disciplines.

Blatherings: handwritten entry


But I was surprised by the number of people who, like me, are now working in a career completely unconnected to their original educational path. And I also enjoyed finding out more about some of my friends who had interests of which I wasn't aware before. AND I learned about Tunisian crocheting. :-D

Anyway, here are excerpts from some of the responses:

---------------

From Chris Conway:

"My degree at university was Chemistry - which hasn't been of great use to me as a musician.
My Chemistry prof was pretty sure I wasn't a scientist..."

---------------

From surrdave:

"I have found that keeping the techie day job helps feed the creative spirit. Partly it's the general motion, motivation and momentum. Partly it's having things to say because I hear a lot. Partly it's just keeping the mind a bit jumbled.

(I spent a year majoring in music, then gave it up and got degrees in Physics and Geology. Now I work in computers and do a lot of music.)"

----------------

030110writersblock2


From keristor:

"Well, most sorts of engineer are a combination. So are a lot of musicians, there's a big overlap between music, mathematics and the sciences (allegedly some of the best musicians are found in physics labs!), and a lot of chemists and biologists are very visually oriented. So I don't think that the fabled art/science split actually exists (any more than the religion/science split does), most people partake of both.

(I'm not into visual art, really, because I have almost no visual memory, but programming correlates well with both music and literature. Including the common "I don't know who wrote this, but I don't like it!" "Er, it was you!"...)"

----------------

From aunt_marion:

"I trained as a linguist. And now I bully databases into submission for a living... Though more often than not they bully me."

-----------------

030124smokealarm


From ally_in_canada:

"I guess I am...but my artsy and my tech are relatively far apart! I'm techy in some of my jobs (AS400 drudge/desktop publisher/computer consultant) but my artsy side is very important, and I recently got another job as an instructor at Michaels, and spent the entire last weekend doing demos of the Knifty Knitter. Like many things nowadays, artsy and tech merge when it gets to the web. I may have been spending most of least weekend teaching people how to "knit without needles!" but I also referred many of them to web pages and groups where they could get help and patterns. I've recently learned and entirely new yarn craft, tunisian crochet, which I would have never heard of except for the web."

---------------

From Martin GK:

"My strong school subjects were the sciences, my degree is Engineering, my job is computer consultancy - but I enjoy it when I can use some of those skills on the music side, be it in running a sound desk (where some basic phyics knowledge on waves/frequencies is extremely useful, and engineering even more so) or, more recently, in setting up and running the FilkArchive site at http://filkarchive.scrumpy.org - which I coded from scratch as an exercise in teaching myself perl website design that has come in very useful in other areas (more work-based) since!"

----------------

Mr. Grumpypants tile coaster


From jhayman:

"Fascinating topic.

I consider myself educated on the science side: two degrees in sciences might support that (BSc and BScN). But... But... I'm pretty certain I have a strong artsy side as evidence by that songwriting, beading, [insert multiple other needlearts], sewing, cartooning (by the dark of the moon), designing, um...

Work is science oriented, though all the healing arts have an interplay of science and art. I couldn't function without a strong grounding in anatomy, physiology, chemistry, pathophysiology, statistics, etc.

My personal life is increasingly arts oriented. I really mean that. Over the years, the arts have become much more an important part of my life, both in how I choose to spend time and in how I consider time to be well-spent.

And some activities blend both: like building web sites. Making them (from scratch) requires both the technical and the creative. But then, really, so do ALL the arts.

Ah, we are of one mind..."

----------------

Illustration Friday:


From phillip2637:

"When I finished high school, my best subjects were English and Math. I had days when I figured on following one of those into chemistry or the other into journalism. Making no specific decision, I then studied Radio & Television Arts, did nothing with it career-wise, and took night courses in psychology and statistical analysis. All of which combined to turn me into a software designer, sometime photographer, and now, a weekend songwriter...to mention only a few of many semi-serious interests. Since the software hasn't been a regular paying gig in some time, it's hard to tell which are work and which are hobbies.

I blame it on a drunken guidance counselor. :-)"

------------------

From Peter Alway:

"I'm kind of artsy-science, but not so much tech, at least as tech has been narrowly defined in the last 20 years (computers and digital electronics).

My degrees are in physics (BA and MS) and I teach astronomy, but my other job is publishing, and my drawings and historical writing are central to my publishing business. Of course the drawings are more like technical illustrations, and the history is the history of rocketry and space exploration.

I've only gotten serious about music in the last two or three years, and I don't make money from that, but it is becoming more important to me.

Illustration Friday:


Funny, just yesterday, I was talking about spectroscopy in class, and I was making a point about how our eyes have lousy spectral range and resolution compared to our ears, and illustrated it with the dulcimer in class. I've done that for a few years, now, but this time I also played a little tune on the dulcimer before the on-topic demonstrations, simply because if you see a musical instrument, you expect and want to hear music from it or it's just Not Right.

I actually feel that my scientific and artsy sides are very much integrated with each other."

-----------------

From D'Glenn:

"Well I identify pretty strongly as a geek, and that's where I earned my living before I got sick, the social environment in which I'm most comfortable, the direction a lot of my spare-time thinking has always gone (not just "my field"; science/tech in general) ...
... but if you catch me unawares and ask out of the blue, "What are you?", my gut-level answer is, "A guitarist." I'll probably pause to think (the censor-circuit in my brain is pretty quick) and try to guess a context and choose a "more suitable" answer for whatever context I guess to say aloud, but the gut says "guitarist" before "human", "techie", "Christian", "transgendered person", or anything else. "Poet" comes pretty close behind "guitarist".

Which way do I think I lean? I have no clue, thinking about it. But some low-level part of me identifies more strongly as an artist.

Funny thing, I never really thought that much about how creating art is like programming, but I've often contemplated how programming is like creating art. Perhaps that's another clue as to which way I skew."

------------------

Justin and the Penguin


From Beckett: (whom I get to see in two weeks, yay!!)

"Hmm. Started out in hard sciences (really!), quickly realized I didn't have the right brain for it, went into animal science/animal behavior, managed to get a BS degree in that. All while supporting myself at a myriad of jobs, but the art jobs I found kind of kept taking over. Got out of UC Davis, looked around and decided to seriously pursue arts, illustration as a career. Got told by a fathead male art director that I'd never make it as an illustrator and to give up and go raise a family or something. Got mad, researched art schools and went to the Academy of Art in San Fran. And the rest is history, really. But I will say the scientific training has come in handy for a number of reasons:
-analytical thinking
-learning how to study and teach oneself new skills and disciplines
-pragmatism and skepticism
-being able to self-identify as more than just my profession(s)- very handy for switching jobs as needed
-life experience that there's always someone out there better, and getting a swelled head does no good for one's art.
-um, and probably more, but I have two hungry boys to feed right now... (so the comment of 'give up and go raise a family or something' has kind of come full circle, I guess, but I _can_ do the art; just now I choose to raise the kids, right?)"

------------------

The red balloon


From bitpixie:

"I don't know if I'm more artsy or techy because I wouldn't want to pick just one. I'm not really happy unless I'm combining everything.

I started college as a Computer Engineering major and after programming several calculators, I got bored and tried taking more courses in art and sociology (I love observing how people interact and how the setting affects that), but it wasn't ever enough. Eventually, I switched to Architecture. I figured it was a good combination of math and art. In my new major, I had a chance to work on my painting, drawing, photography and, of course, building design, but I also had to learn about HVAC systems, material strengths and construction techniques. During the summers, I worked for my dad, a contractor, working up bid estimates and drafting building plans. I still took programming and math courses, but now I was geared toward computer graphics for architectural walk-thrus.

For a year after I graduated, I worked for a small firm that built custom homes. Now, I do special effects, crowd simulation and set design for computer animation. I think my job is perfect for drawing from of all my experiences. Plus, I'm surrounded by people who are also artsy techies and techy artists. I love it so much!

And, of course, part of my spare time is devoted to dabbling on the web :)"

--------------

From missquirt:

"My undergraduate degree was in Arts and Science, with pretty much a 50/50 course split in arts and science courses. I also have a minor in math, but the two upper level courses that completed my minor were "History of Math" and "Selected readings on "Women in math"" because math and I had a fight partway through third year. Most of the women I talked to in math had double majors in music/literature/drama, especially the younger women.

I took one computer science course because my dad wanted me to, and while I did well, and I could see how one could get sucked in to that form of problem solving, it didn't really make me passionate.

Illustration Friday:


Now I'm doing a masters in arts. I'm glad for my science backgroud, because it gives me great insight into how scientists think, but I think I've come to realize that science is something I could do well rather than something I really enjoyed. I'm having great fun deconstructing my worldview (like a good little grad student) so I think I'm in the right place. That said, I think there are huge parallels between, for example, math and history."

--------------

From stevieannie:

"I'm the other way round - my degree is in an arts subject, but I find myself writing webpages...

I'm definitely more of an arts person deep down, though, and at the end of the day, I see what I do as an art, not as a science, whatever my boss might think. Careers are weird and twisted sometimes - Tim started out training as an architect, went into man-management, then became a pricing manager, then a charity director and went back to buildings with a bit of architecture on the side. Weird. How many semi-trained architects do I know that worked on sausage production lines? Not many..."

---------------

From epi_lj:

"Well, my official job title is, "IT Manager and Graphic Designer," soo... :)

I'm definitely more artistic in personal bent and interest, but my job is almost entirely tech, and my degree is tech. I don't think I have real "hybrid" pedigree though, because I don't sell or make money at any of my arty interests. But outside of work, the last thing I want to do is be very very techy. I'd much rather spend my times doing arty things."

--------------

Illustration Friday


From braider:

"I'm something of an artsy/tech hybrid. I love doing a multitude of arts and crafts-type things, as well as music - but some of the bits I love best about my job are supplying front-line tech support when someone has trouble with MS Word, or creating an Access database, or (in the midst of creating a db) learning a bit more coding.

Not a big tech geek, certainly. Mostly one by association. However, it's something I genuinely enjoy."

-------------

From trektone:

"I don't feel I'm either, really. Maybe it's all in the labels. I like trying to be creative, but not particularly artistic. While I'm interested in sciences, my banking day jobs (currently in an IT area) never seemed that science-y."

--------------

The Whistle Player


From folkmew:

"Well for sure arts for me. But comfortable (mostly) with tech.

I'm having great fun exploring watercolors for my "Arts: The Creative Process" class this semester (when you have an "Arts in Education" concentration you get to take all these cool classes!)

I love your illustrations and I hope you will make sure I know of any children's books published with them so I can add them to my children's book collection ok? :)"

--------------

From beige_alert:

"I suppose I might count. I started out studying Computer Engineering, but ended up with a BS in Chemistry. Now I'm something of a biochemist of the instrumental sort, running mass spectrometers and such. Plus some Unix geekery. I also play two musical instruments (flute and guitar), have done just a tiny bit of songwriting, do a little drawing, some photography, and I'm working on that second language (Spanish)."

-------------

From Dave Weingart:

"My degree is in Physics. I spend my days at a computer trying to get programs do do what I want them to do.
I spend my actual TIME daydreaming and singing."





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Thursday
Nov172005

Squirrels, squirrels, squirrels

Squirrel Chia Head


Congrats to Andrea Dale, who has been chosen to be the Interfilk guest at Conchord 2007!

I've been highly entertained by the lively LJ discussion about my squirrel Blatherings. Some offer useful suggestions like using chicken wire to cover my bulb plantings, Nella Darren/Christine helpfully suggests Chia-izing a squirrel's head, others have rallied to the defense of the squirrels (from Taunya: "POWER TO THE SQUIRRELS! DOWN WITH THE LITTLE CHIRPY EFFEMINATE BIRD THINGYS! Fur over feathers!!!!").

From my friend Bruce M. (one of my friends from university days), in a mailing list discussion:



"I had always believed that Debbie was a helpless dupe of the
hideous creatures. It sounds like she had quite a narrow escape
in Queen's park - a few seconds more with one clinging to her leg and
it probably would have injected its venom, paralyzing her so that she
could be dragged down into the hive where the bloated squirrel
queen would lay its eggs in her still-living body."



From my helpful friend John C.:

"The other day, as I was getting ready for Hallowe'en, I came across a bag of stale Reese's Peanut Butter Cups from some Hallowe'en long past. I put it in our generally raccoon-proof blue Rubbermaid wheeled garbage can and forgot about it.

The next day, I found that a team of squirrels had managed to gnaw several squirrel-sized holes through the lid and the PBCs were all gone. Sadly, theobromine is poisonous to dogs but not squirrels. I checked: if you Google for theobromine and squirrel, you get a bunch of pages listing the nutritional value of squirrel meat, and listing their theobromine content as zero.

So the moral of the story is to leave your peanut butter waste on top of your garbage can, and your bulbs on top of your flower beds. That will keep your squirrels happy."


Incidentally, there has been something digging or chewing on the walls of my basement office recently. When I bang on the walls, it falls silent for several long minutes, but then starts up again. I've checked outside but can see nothing.

It sounds bigger than a mouse.

Could it be that the SLF has sent one of its minions after me?!?

Ninja squirrel


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Wednesday
Nov162005

A letter from the Squirrel Liberation Front

So today I received the following e-mail:


From: Squirrel Liberation Front

Subject: A Squirrel Liberation Front Position Paper

We have read the squirrelous accusations you have uttered at:

http://www.electricpenguin.com/blatherings/archives/003467.html

Our outrage knows no limit. We demand that you lower the shields on the bird feeder, and that you add more succulent bulbs to your garden, or this will be taken to the next level.

You do not want this taken to the next level.

Please see attachment. We are watching you. Very carefully.

This is SLF Position Paper number 315-A/7. Cacahuetes para libertad!

Attachment:




Since the mailvault.com e-mail address they used appears to be invalid, I'm posting my letter here instead:

-------------

Dear SLF,

Your feeble attempts to intimidate me are so like the laughable attempts of the local squirrels trying to infiltrate my Squirrelbuster (tm) feeder (see Figure 1a below).

As for your demands to sacrifice more helpless baby bulbs to the Furry Fiends, you have only galvanized my resolve to find a way to frustrate next year's would-be crocus-crunchers.

So watch away...watch and weep for your little bush-league hirsute pals.

Unterdrücken Sie die Eichhörnchen der Welt!

Yours cordially,

Debbie Ridpath Ohi

Loser Squirrel

Figure 1a.



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Tuesday
Nov152005

Artsy/tech hybrids

051015falling


Every so often I'm struck by the irony of what I do for a living (writing, now getting into some freelance illustration) considering the fact that my degree at the University of Toronto was in the sciences.

I don't regret my time at the U of T at all. I learned many useful skills and truths that greatly enhanced my life long after I quit my computer programming/analyst job. Also met some very cool people with whom I am still good friends. Including my husband. :-)

But as I was doodling the picture above in Corel Painter, I couldn't help but think how similar drawing is to computer programming in many ways, at least the ways which drew me to both. The creativity involved, the focus needed, the losing of oneself in the act of creating and problem-solving. I know my friend Parki understands, being an accomplished technonerdboy and inventor/designer as well (check out the Design section of Whatevernot). And Jodi, Technonerdgirl Extraordinaire...who not only has her own Internet marketing company but also songwriting resource The Muse's Muse and her education resource, Find Schools Online.

Who else out there considers themself an artsy/tech hybrid? And to which side do you lean?

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