Monday, October 10, 2011

show at raven's nest coffee shop

 

left: "section 16".  right: "top of the incline".



view of the shop 

 
all of the peices hung--each 19" x 24"

cozy corner

tag hanging

"inversed incline"

typewritten business cards--2"x3"

"gold camp road" framed

quilted scrap pieces

Thursday, September 15, 2011

topo.


bristol board.

modelage.

work station.
new rotary and patch for old one.

 new parking lot.
Model for Jonathan Levi Architects, the Field School Project in Weston, MA. Bristol Board and Gesso.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

moral fiber.






Angle Iron for Greenhouse



 Ten 8" angle iron sections, all cut, drilled and counter sunk for fastening shelving for water barrels to a greenhouse wall.

 Twenty six 3.5" sections.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Llamapalooza 2011 Poster

Final Print on bulletin board. 12"x18" on brown chipboard. Three color print made on a Vandercook 219 AB press for Colorado College's Llamapalooza festival. Edition of 200.

Left: The design concept is born with pencil and paper, later transferred to rubylith cuts and made into multiple polymer plates for color separations. InDesign was used for type formatting and a polymer plate was made for type on the bottom half. LlamaPalooza, date, and time are self-designed fonts. Right: One of the first proofs on my second to last run: silver! Note: final edition does not include year and date in silver, this was a test run.
 Printing the first run of orange.
Happiness! The almost-final product before one more trim on the guillotine.

Stacking: gotta keep things tidy so I don't loose count of my proof to edition ratio. Twenty five in each stack.

 Ready to be printed: type for colophon (on back of poster). Printed in silver. 

 The poster hung in the Worner Student Center at CC on a community bulletin board amongst others.

Vernacular Architecture: The Yurt

Ash dowels hand carved with a draw knife and stitched with elastic cord for door seam closure and other attachment points on the yurt. Ea. about 2" long, made by myself and a student in the class.

 The finished space! Playing around with the idea of rafters out front, and different ways of closing the door.
 The 18' diameter yurt being used for one of the first times--we felt immediately more relaxed just sitting inside. Canvas was used for the roofing and walls, local douglas fir and ash for the rafters and lattice walls.
View of the yurt at night on the Colorado College campus--Slocum Quad. This project was the collaborative result of a first-time Block B summer class offered at CC by professor Scott Johnson. Myself and Maxime Robillard were "paraprofs" (or TA's) for the 3 1/2 week long course. Thank you to all of the amazing students who made this happen, and I was honored to help with the design and facilitate the course. We hope that this yurt will be a part of the CC community for years to come.