Textures and patterns

September 11th, 2008

Matching textures and patterns in fabric is really hard. Much harder than matching solid colors for a website (though that’s not easy to do right either). I love looking at catalogs, like the Crate & Barrel one I got yesterday, to see how the designers choose colors, patterns, and textures to create a particular “feel” for a room. There’s no obvious way to find the right combination, but when you do, the result is really beautiful.

Maybe one day I’ll get good at working with patterns and textures. For now, I just enjoy looking at them.

Let the smashing begin!

September 10th, 2008

Physicists around the world now have much greater power than ever before to smash the components of atoms together in attempts to see how they are made.

Largest particle collider conducts successful test

Morning

September 4th, 2008

A couple photos I snapped on my way to the train this morning.

Boston Harbor

August 28th, 2008

Click to see photo on Flickr

Mountains down below

August 18th, 2008

Click to see photo on Flickr

Lines

August 13th, 2008

Click to see photo on Flickr

One thing that’s always fascinated me for some reason are lines and the patterns they form around us. For instance, the lines inside a train are especially pronounced and visible. Almost everything in this photo is composed of straight lines. It would be interesting to sketch this out with nothing but lines. I bet the general context would still be very evident.

Kayaks of many colors

August 13th, 2008

Click to see photo on Flickr

Taken in Rockport, MA.

iPhone photo artifact

August 7th, 2008

I must have moved the camera at just the right time to get this interesting artifact from my iPhone. I wonder what this reveals about how the iPhone camera works…

iPhone photo artifact

The waves of Facebook

July 30th, 2008

I’ve been on Facebook for a long time - pretty much since it first started - and it’s been interesting to observe the evolution of my “friends” list.

The first wave were people I met in college because that’s who Facebook was originally available to.

Then they opened it up to high schools, but that didn’t affect me since I no longer knew anyone in high school at that point. However, around the same time came the second wave, which were people I met in school, mostly high school.

Not too long after, Facebook was opened up to everyone. This created the third wave of people I met at or through work.

Now, I am seeing the fourth wave of Facebook friends - family. I’m not sure what caused this particular wave, but it’s probably just a snowball effect. One person adds some family members, those family members add others based on the friends list of the person who added them, and it continues expanding until every family member is connected to every other one.

It makes me wonder what, if anything, the fifth wave will be. It seems like all groups of people I know have been covered, but then, if you asked me a year ago, I’d tell you that Facebook was just for college and school friends. I would never have thought that my boss, his boss, and his boss’s boss would be my Facebook friends or that my cousin in Israel would get in touch through Facebook after not having seen her for 10 years.

I look forward to seeing how this evolves or devolves in the future.

Staying dry

July 23rd, 2008

Click to see photo on Flickr