"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

San Pedro Garza Garcia

Category: Art Page 3 of 4

Will Kelly share her art with us again?

KellyCaricatureKelly went to a conference in Las Vegas. While she was there, here group gambled at the craps table for a little while. Since did not gamble, one of the guys in the group had her roll the dice for her several times and she won him $300. The guy gave her $25 for her trouble which she promptly blew on the drawing she holds in the picture. It was from a slightly tipsy street artist and you can see it is a monumentally bad likeness. You know what they way about ill-gotten gains!

This has inspired Kelly to start to share her art once again. She has started a new Instagram account named Betty Blonde Draws. She has her first three caricatures up there now. They are very good likenesses, but of the very quickly drawn ones. She plans to do more quick ones, but she also plans to spend some time to create some that are more thoughtfully drawn.

This is all great because she is kind of an amazing caricaturist. One of biggest worries is that the kids would have a lousy art education if we homeschooled. It turns out the had a fairly amazing art education including the study of art history. Maybe it was because I am so weak myself in that area, we worked harder to make sure we overcame my weakness. It is certainly true that I also received much more art than I had before we started the effort.

So if you want to be drawn, send her a picture of yourself. She is always looking for more material.

Betty Blonde #491 – 07/02/2010
Betty Blonde #491
Click here or on the image to see full size strip.

What you learned in Kindergarten is still important

Christian PowerPoint slide for Lincoln Labs presentationChristian is scheduled to fly to Boston tomorrow to give a talk on his research. He has all the technical material well in hand and a well organized presentation. Not so amazingly, one of his biggest challenges is to create professional and compelling PowerPoint slides that convey his ideas. It seems like none of the tools commonly used to create graphics for the slides have improved very much or gotten any easier to use in the last twenty years.

Christ has been creating these kinds of presentations for a long, long time. I bought the kids a desktop publishing program called Microsoft Publisher when Kelly was twelve and Christian was ten. You can see some thumbnails of the magazine they published below. Christian is fluent in the use of LaTeX, Inkscape, GIMP, GnuPlot and other graphical tools, but it seems like the tools of choice are MatLab, Excel and PowerPoint. It makes a whole lot of sense to use better tools than MatLab and Excel to create graphs (R is great), but every institution has their favorite PowerPoint template so he is probably stuck with that.

Kaktus Kids 1 Kaktus Kids 2 Kaktus Kids 3

Betty Blonde #376 – 12/24/2009
Betty Blonde #376
Click here or on the image to see full size strip.

Homeschool drawing class: Grandpa Lauro

 

Yesterday would have been Grandpa Lauro’s 73rd birthday. Lorena and I were thinking about it and went back through the blog to find the portraits of him we drew as part of our homeschool drawing class when Christian was twelve. These were drawn shortly after we moved to North Carolina and some of our very first efforts, so they really were not that great, but it brought back great memories of both Grandpa Lauro and of our drawing classes.

The reality is that I have never been much of an artist so I had to study a lot myself to be able to teach our homeschool art class. I have to say, in the end, it was one of our greatest homeschool success stories. We got some art history along with basic drawing skills and had great time together. Kelly’s comic strip (you can see an example at the bottom of this post) was an outgrowth of our homeschool art program, too. Best of all, though, it put all of us together, sitting quietly, listening to classical music and drawing and talking for an hour at least three times per week for several years. I would not give that back for anything.

You can see some of my old posts on drawing by clicking here.

Betty Blonde #370 – 12/16/2009
Betty Blonde #370
Click here or on the image to see full size strip.

Public campaign for Kelly to start drawing again

Commie professorOne of the great joys of this blog when the kids were in their undergraduate degrees was the reports they brought to us about happenings during class surrounding certain of their ultra-politically correct professors. Sometimes, even usually, they arrived via text messages from their phones in real-time. When I started writing about those events, Kelly drew me a Commie Professor logo to go with those blog posts.

I am quite happy to say this is all happening again in Kelly’s grad school experience. Good grief, she lives in SEATTLE, a veritable hotbed of anarchism and histrionic coffee house emotings. It is as close as one can get to Portlandia without actually being in Portland, but with the potential for anarchist rioting. The purpose of this post is to serve as a public shaming of Kelly to get her to illustrate and describe her encounters in the coffee shops, classrooms, conferences and gala events she attends so that this momentous time of her life as a grad student can be documented properly. She has committed to this and now it is time to put up.

The difference between graduate school experiences between Kelly and Christian (down in Tempe) is fairly stark. Part of that might have to do with the differences in the cultures of the schools. I think the bigger difference is between the nature of the material they are studying. Kelly’s anecdotes about school tend toward the absurd–almost like during her undergraduate degree. Christian has lots of anecdotes that are equally as interesting, but in a completely different way.

Serious is not the right word to describe what I think when Christian talks about his school and his work although the what he does definitely falls into that category. The work is so cerebrally intense that I do not think the people in his program have much time for consideration of much out of their academic domain. It is just very, very interesting. It is not just the work he and his compatriots do. It is also their interactions.

The difficulty of the material, the personalities and wide ranging cultures (different parts of the US, India, China, etc.), the research sponsors from important laboratories, think tanks, universities and industry, the frantic and frenetic race to understand insanely difficult problems before someone else with an off the charts IQ and an insane work ethic beats you to it–all of that is just jaw droppingly interesting. What these people do is beyond the boundaries of my understanding. In Christian’s case, it is down in the bowels of very hard math guided by his professor who just became a Fellow of the IEEE and is associated with all the luminaries in his areas of research. I am trying to figure out how to write about this in a compelling way to describe the extremely fascinating daily workings of Christian’s degree, but I might not ever be able to do it adequately. I will try if I get it figured out.

In the meantime, I am going to keep browbeating Kelly with continued public shamings until she starts sending me some illustrations and anecdotes I can publish here.

Betty Blonde #354 – 11/24/2009
Betty Blonde #354
Click 
here or on the image to see full size strip.

Fashion Dads

Instagram: Fashion Dads

I think a lot of people were surprised when I decided on a career in engineering. Everyone pretty much expected me to work as a swimming wear supermodel. I really am glad I decided to follow my heart and take the glamor route as a machine vision guy. I have a modicum of success in that, so I was pretty surprised when they started to drag me back in based on a Mexico vacation picture. Click on the picture to see what happened. There is more.

  • The page to the whole group of us on Instagram is here.
  • The Witty and Pretty website link is here.
  • The BuzzFeed link is here.

The latest is that CNN’s Headline News wants to do a segment and has requested permission to use my photo. I think I am being objectified.

Betty Blonde #238 – 06/15/2009
Betty Blonde #238
Click 
here or on the image to see full size strip.

BleAx rewrite: Introduction

My daughter Kelly drew a comic strip called Betty Blonde five days per week for two years starting when she was thirteen years old. I wrote a program called BleAx a few years back to help her accumulate the four hand drawn panels of her daily comic strip into a single image with a title, date, copyright, borders and that sort of thing. The program allowed the her to automatically upload the strip to a website for display. I did the whole thing by hand for about a year, then spent about six months writing BleAx whenever I had an hour or so free, here and there. BleAx stands for Betty Blonde Aggregator of Comix.

I wrote BleAx in Python and still have it, but have decided to rewrite it as a learning exercise. I normally write programs in C/C++ in my day job, but have recently been wrapping some of the time critical stuff I write in C++ in a Python wrapper so engineers who do not normally write in a “non-garbage-collected” language can use it easily. I now have started using a set of libraries called PySide to write Qt GUI’s in Python. It took me a bit of time and hassle to get my environment set up to automate the GUI development and C/C++ wrapping in so I did not have to go through a ton of manual processes to build the programs and put the results where they needed to be. I do a lot of work with OpenCV so I will talk about how to use that effectively in this environment, too.

I am sure my process is not perfect and that is part of the reason I am doing this publicly, so some of the people that might read this can beat up my process and tell me how to do it better.  To that end, I am going to start rewriting BleAx. I do not have a ton of time, so this will be a little bit of a slow process. I am mostly doing it just for fun and documentation, but if it helps anyone else, that will be great.

Betty Blonde #222 – 05/22/2009
Betty Blonde #222
Click 
here or on the image to see full size strip.

Programming and comic strips: An example

Kelly has decided she wants to start drawing her comic strip again as she has time. You can see an example of what she did before at the bottom of this post. She is going to do something different now, but plans to do a four panel strip like before. I wrote up some code to accumulate the hand draw single panels, add titles, copyright notices, borders, etc, and then post the results to our website. I could easily dust off the old code and use it again for her current efforts, but have decided to try to rewrite it as a way to improve some new skills on which I am working.

The idea will be to write a series of blog posts on how to set up an environment to write low level code that needs to go fast in C++ and the GUI and everything else in Python. I plan to talk about how I use Qt Creator, OpenCV, SWIG, PyCharm, PySide, some batch files, and a merge tool to automate this and make it easier. I am at the beginning of another series called Our Homeschool Story that I will also continue, but this is a very different thing that will provide some variety. I hope to start sometime over Christmas break.

Betty Blonde #220 – 05/20/2009
Betty Blonde #220
Click 
here or on the image to see full size strip.

Kelly’s comic strip apropo for her new home in Seattle

I noticed this awesome Betty Blonde comic strip Kelly drew over five years ago. It truly captures the pretentiousness and ambiance of Seattle, Portland, Starbucks and most of the rest of the Pacific Northwest. I just thought I should draw a little attention to it.
Betty Blonde in Seattle

Christian’s boat shoes: Before and After pics

Christian is Internet famous again. I wonder whether I should start worrying about his grades. He had some old, beat up boat shoes that he did not want to throw away so he spent Saturday rehabilitating them and made the front page of the Reddit Male Fashion Advice section. The pictures below are the first and last images in a quite complete how-to that explains and illustrates how he did it. The comments by the readers at the end of the article are hilarious. Here is a link to the article. Here is is a link to the images that go with the article.

My friend and colleague Ann R. said it best, “He wrote that? Well…. i guess he is thrifty….. And who knew that Reddit had a ‘male fashion advice’ section.”

The question I had was “Who knew that anyone actually read the ‘male fashion advice’ section of Reddit?” It is on Reddit! It is kind of horrifying if you think about it.

Before
Christian's boat shoes before he rehabilitated them.

After
Christian's boat shoes after he rehabilitated them

Betty Blonde #185 – 04/01/2009
Betty Blonde #185
Click 
here or on the image to see full size strip.

A cool drawing of Christian as a Freshman

Day 940 of 1000

I am not exactly sure when Kelly made this drawing, but it had to be either his Freshman year in college or the summer after that.  It speaks for itself.
Christian, age 15

Betty Blonde #90 – 11/19/2008
Betty Blonde #90
Click here or on the image to see full size strip.

Ugliest library?

Some have argued that the Geisel Library (named after Dr. Suess and his wife, Theodor and Audrey Geisel) is the ugliest library and in the top ten ugliest buildings in the world.  I kind of like it.  Here is Christian’s snap:

Geisel Library UCSD (Christian's PhD recruiting trip)

Self-teaching: Kelly’s comic strip

Day 883 of 1000

We took down Kelly’s old comic strip site.  We wanted to have a home for the comics she drew for two years from ages 14-16.  Over the last couple of days, I was reminded of when how she learned to draw the strip.  Of course the start was our homeschool art with Kistler’s Draw Squad, but there was a lot more than that.  She and Christian drew lots of cartoons before Kelly even got started.  Then, Kelly started picking up cartooning books at bookstores and reading everything she could find about cartooning.

One of the things she learned and that I noticed in yesterday’s and today’s comic is that she often experimented with angles, distances, foregrounds, shadows, and a ton of other stuff.  The comic got a lot more interesting to me when she started pointing out the different techniques she used to make the drawing interesting, pull interest a certain direction, set the tone of a given panel, etc.

Some of the stuff I am noticing was from her earliest work so the implementation is a little rough, but she is definitely experimenting with stuff she has read or seen in other comic strips.  Here is yesterday’s strip.  Notice the third person view through binoculars in the third panel.

Now in today’s strip she tries a couple of different techniques.  The first panel shows the kids talking in the foreground with interesting stuff in the background to set the scene.  The las three panels are from a balcony or stadium point of view with a narrator at the top.  I love it.

There are lots and lots of different things she tries.  Some of it has to do with the narrative and different ways to show people talking to each other–how they are positioned, their angles, etc.  I am enjoying looking at these again as I re-post them.  I really hope she takes up her comic stripping again very soon.  I know she wants to start a new strip.

Betty Blonde #49 – 09/23/2008
Betty Blonde #49
Click here or on the image to see full size strip.

Lorena’s second holiday arrangement

Day 841 of 1000
Betty Blonde #21 – 08/14/2008
Betty Blonde #21
Click here or on the image to see full size strip.

Lorena’s holiday arrangement.  She is a crafts genius.
Lorena's Christmas Arrangement

Betty Blonde redux

Day 816 of 1000
Betty Blonde #1
Betty Blonde #1
Click here to see full size strip.

Kelly drew a daily comic strip for two years from when she was fourteen until when she was sixteen.  I thought it might be fun to start posting these strips again, one at a time until they are all again available for public consumption.  My recent start on an index to all our homeschool art program posts got me to thinking about it.  The drawing of the strip was not bad when she started because she and Christian had practiced quite a lot on comic strip art before she started the daily strip.  Christian actually drew a graphic novella that I will eventually put up here, too.  We had all her comic strips up on the internet until a couple of years ago.  I hope to create an index for them as I have time.

Kelly’s and Christian’s homeschool art program

Day 813 of 1000

Chrsitan draws Grandpa LauroKelly's water color of CeliaDad draws Grandpa LauroKelly’s watercolor of our friend Celia (middle left) got me to thinking about the art classes we all did during our homeschool years.  We all learned how to do pencil portraits during those classes.  You can see Christian’s effort at drawing Grandpa Lauro at the top left.  Mine is at the bottom left.  We sat down every day to do art together for a period of five or six years.  We still like to do it when we get the chance.  We started with something titled Mark Kistler’s Draw Squad.  This post will serve as an index to posts we made on our art training.  I say our art training because I got trained at the same time as the kids.  The astersiks are posts that include drawings.

Mark Kistler’s Draw Squad
July 15, 2005 – Mark Kistler’s Draw Squad
July 26, 2005 – Drawing with the kids
August 10, 2005 – Cleaning up the bonus room
June 12, 2006 – Starting the summer
June 26, 2006 – Homeschool 2006/2007 prep I
June 30, 2006 – Drawings*
July 25, 2006 – Drawing with friends
October 10, 2006 – Fourteen years with Lorena
October 24, 2006 – Designing t-shirts
January 23, 2007 – Learning to draw
April 16, 2007 – A successful party

Portraits
April 22, 2007 – Our second drawing class – Robert Hutchings Goddard
July 18, 2007 – Continuing our portraits
July 19, 2007 – My drawing today, Kelly’s tomorrow
July 19, 2007 – Dayanita drawing
Betty Blonde

…I did not get them all.  I plan to continue this.

Kelly does a watercolor of Celia

Day 811 of 1000

Kelly learned to draw pencil portraits when she was in homeschool, but her skills have advanced greatly since then.  Here is her last watercolor.
Celia watercolor

Kelly’s toughest statistics class – done

Day 624 of 1000

Kelly's study notes for Mathematical Statistics II, her toughest classThere are plenty of hard classes in Kelly’s Statistics program at NCSU, but everyone believes Mathematical Statistics II is probably the hardest.  Kelly has been hammering away at this class since the beginning of the year and did her final in the course on Tuesday.  She feels great about her understanding of the material, but tests are tests so she is sitting on pins and needles while she waits for the results.  She put the following image of her study notes up on Facebook.  I had to write about them here.  Someone on Facebook actually said this was frameable artwork.  I agree!  I think this might be a great thing to have on the wall in my office.

More Kelly art–another watercolor of a friend

Guess who, again.
Ruth Pollard

More Kelly art–a watercolor of a friend

Guess who.
Glen Coleman

Kelly will be FAMOUS–she will be published tomorrow

Kelly's first "The Technician" comic stripRemember this comic strip that Kelly drew.  It has been accepted for publication in North Carolina State University’s student newspaper, The Technician.  She is going to be famous!

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