Saturday, February 28, 2009

Everything

Hey everyone, I'm pretty sure that it isn't quite springtime yet, but all of the most beautiful flowers are in blume!

This is the tree that made me want a camera in the first place. It has the prettiest flowers on campus and it only stay in blume for a couple of weeks. I was so upset when I had to walk by it everyday last year and I couldn't take a picture.
I just recently noticed these flowers I don't know what kind they are, but they are really nice

These birds of paradise are no longer this nice looking, because I took this one a few weeks ago. They are all kinda grimy now. anyway these are very beautiful angiosperms (that is the kind of family of plant that all flowering species belong to).

This is a little plot next to the Science II building they remind me of my grandpas garden in the front of his house during easter. I hope that isn't a plastic bag in the bottom right corner...

On a another note, I have quite a bit more glass done now and I actually have a picture...

These are all solid peices with the exception of the second from the right, which was a mistake. I tried to pull four arms up and the twist them together, but it fell apart on me so i just made the best of the situation. The one on the farthest right has redused copper wire in it. You cant se eit but it is a really beautiful magenta color. The one on the fourth from the left is pretty cool. it looks kinda like a horse and i did it pretty much by just puling threads of glass of and playing around with it. and speaking of glass there are a couple more tools that I want to show you...


This gal here is named sophie. sophie comes in reall helpful when you need to blow out a lip on a blown peice. someetimes the lip is kinda thick and sophie helps to even it out.

This is the break off station. When you break a peice off, you put some water in the jack line and then you hit the punty and break it off. The fiberglass helps when you when you need to put something like christmas ornaments away or something solid.


These are optic molds and they are used for making what we call zippers, or pleated bowls or cups. They don't have that big of a role but yo do need them for some pieces. These are all of the tools that we use in the glass shop so now you know everything that I talk about when I talk about glass

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Laundry :(

So today is laundry day, and that makes me not very happy. No sir, not because I have to do laundry, but because I don't have my own washer and dryer. It's -pretty cool that my appartment complex has it's own laundry stations, but for the last couple of weeks the dryers haven't been working very good. The last time I did laundry at my appartment complex it took me like two cycles and it still wasn't dry. I was so frustrated that I took my laundry back layed it out and used my roomies hair dryer to finish the job.

Anyway this is very frustrating because I do not like paying $3 per load of laundry. thats like $9 a week and $36 a month. thats more than my utilities. Needless to say I looked into alternative means to getting my laundry done. The last time I did laundry in fresno i went to a laundromat and i felt really weird, so I think maybe I will ask my amigo if I can use his facilities this week.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

combo peice

Hey what do you know I'm here writing about glass again!!! Anyway, soon we will have to be making a combination peice where we encorporate metal into something that we make. the only downside is that only copper is compatible so that when the glass cools down it won't crack it. so be can't go and put red cornstarch on the ends of nails and then stick them into a peice. So I came up with the idea that I could get some copper wire and make a spider web and maybe even a spider and then pick those things up with the glass! I was so excited about this idea that i went out to home depot too look for some copper wire.

Anyway all I found was a big spool of huge wire that was like $157, so I called my dad and he said he could let me borrow some of the good stuff, I also talked to my brother who is a big fan of metal shop, and he said he could get me some iron fillings, and this is where I will explain how you get colored glass! colored glass is basically a mix of clear glass and different metals. you get blue from mixing cobalt, green from iron, lots of different colors from different mixes of metals. Usually there are glass companies who make and distribute color and it is exponentially easier to buy your colors than making an assortment of your own color. Basically I came up with the idea that I could roll my glass in the iron, turn it green and then pick up the copper web. I don't know how well this idea will work, so i'll let you know how the iron portion goes when I get the iron.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

TV

Since about the beginning of the semester my one and only tv was not working for some weird reason. we think that the problem was the remote (we tried the batteries, and yes we did actually did get up and try the buttons on televison but it still didn't work) so when I came back up to Fresno, I couldn't help but notice the big new LCD TV that had replaced the old one. I also can't help but notice that my study habits haven't been what they used to be over the last week.

Personally I think that Televison is among one of the most addictive drugs, right below crack (I don't do crack, mom). I would much rather read than watch some b-list movie, but I can't bring myself to get away from the TV and get my nose in the book. Anyway I have come to the conclusion that when I actually graduate and can afford a place of my own, I definately will not be getting a TV for it.

On another thought I love what my conditioner is doing to my hair! its making it so soft!!! Instead of big hair, I get it more where I want it to be.

Dragons are silly

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Is Crime Always Functional?

In my criminology class we have to write a response to two papers arguing whether or not crime is "functional" or not. Emile Durkheim, a sociologist from the 1920s argues that crime is functional because it presses the morals of society, and allows for a sense of unity among law abiding citizens. I agree with this paradigm to a point, but can crime be ALWAYS be functional? I think not. Durkheim may be right in certain cases like with Rosa Parks, and others who pressed for equal rights, but how can crimes like those commited by Ted Bundy, Joel Rifkin, Edward Gein, Bernard Madoff, and those involved with the Enron scandal be even thought of as Functional?

I remember watching a documentary on the discovery channel which explored the parts o fthe brain that are involved with crime and deviance, and it claimed that there is indeed a part of the brain that involved with rationalizing criminal behavior. The Amygdala, the part of the brain that deals with emotions and fear, is actually smaller in criminals meaning that criminals have a harder time relating to how people feel as a result of their actions. In this expose, they interviewed Joel Rifkin and asked him what was going through his mind when he was murdering those women, and he said that he was simply focused in the now. This shows that the Amygdala and the cerebrum, the part of the brain that thinks rationally, were not communicating as well as it should and the cranial check against the amygdala didn't work to prevent Rifkin's actions.

In other white collar criminals such as those involved in the Enron Scandal the amygdala communicates normally with the cerebrum, it is just smaller and inhibits the way that the perpetrators feel fear and emotion. This enables these criminals to embezzle away people's retirements without the thought of what this will do to people's lives.

In summary, No I don't think that crime is ALWAYS functional, but that isn't what I'm supposed to write about so that is why I am writing this here. By the way don't quote me because I'm not sure if I got the physiology of the brain right...

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Biology and stuff

I was so happy when I walked in today and my rommie said that I got my movie that I ordered a while ago. I had a bad experience when I ordered something online previously because it came and they left it at the office of the appartment complex that I live in, and they didn't let me know that it had arrived. Nonetheless I am happy because I have it now...

I remember watching this movie in theaters when it first came out, and thinking what a great movie it was. It is called Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, and it is a documentary type move on how several scientists got in trouble over mentioning that there was at least a little credance to the notion of intelligent design. Being a Cradle Catholic surrounded by an unbeleivably faithful family and a biology student as well, this movie had a really big impact on my outlook on this matter. My faith has always been a big part of my life, whether it was forced upon me or I chose to immerse myself into it, I always took a more rational view on the way things came to be than my parents might like, and this film really entertains my train of thought.

Anyway this movie comes highly recomended, it isn't about whether or not God exists , or anything like that, but it does make people like Richard Dawkins look foolish and ignorant.

One of my favorite scenes was when it shows a CG movie of what happens inside a cell and being able to be like "oh thats a microtubule, and that a carrier protein, and thats a chaperonin!" It is really amazing how the life works on a macroscopic as well as a microscopic level. biology has to be one of the most exciting sciences because you get to see how everything comes together from physics and chemistry to form the dynamics of life as we know it. besides that it changes so frequently!! Species are being reorganized into different families and taxa (names of species) because their genomes (DNA) are being sequenced and we are realizing that we placed them in the wrong places. the other day my teacher was showing us the phylogeny (family tree if you will, it shows how different species are related to a common ancestor) of many different species and he was like "oh that wasn't there when i learned it."

speaking of my biology class it freaks me out every time my head itches in that class because he is a parasitologist and some of his underlings work with head lice infestations in tent city... ... ...

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Glassblowing

Okie Dokie, as promised I took a few pictures of the glass blowing equipment that you need and, let you know how you go about blowing glass. Glass art is a very old artform, and can be traced back to the ancient romans... or something like that, and aside from the improved heating technology not very much has changed since then. First things first, the most important tools to a glass worker are gravity and cetripetal force. Because of these natural phenominae it is important to turn the glass only as fast as it fall off center from the pipe or punty. one of the next important tools to a glass artist is the furnace, where you keep the crucible where molten glass is stored. The one at fresno state is kept at around 2150 degrees fahrenheit, and this is a picture of it.



when you take glass out of the furnace it is called a "gather" and it's a lot like taking honey out o a jar with a toothpick provided that the honey is very viscous, and the honey jar isn't melt-your-face-off hot (that is seriously how most of the girls describe their first gather "I felt like my face was going to melt off"). Once you've gathered enouh glass to make you peice big enough you need to be able to keep it hot, and that is done in a heating drum affectionatly referred to as the "Glory Hole." there are several different set ups for the doors and whatnot, but this is the one that I like the most.




Needless to say, bigger peices require bigger openings and why buy multiple gloryholes when you can get different openings? This one is my favorite becuase the doors are hydraulicly opereated and open at the push of a pedal on the floor. Glory holes usually run at about 2400 degrees. Once you are done with the peice that you are working on you put it in the annealing oven which cools down the peice uniformly so it doesn't explode. ours looks like this...

there are various tools that you use to pinch, pull, flatten, cut and shape the glass in order to make it look like the thing that you want it to look like. here are some pictures...


this is called a bench, you sit on it while you work with the glass. it also has a place where you can put the tools and stuff. You should also have access to an air compressor to help cool down the glass in localized places.
this is called a marving table. you roll the glass on it to keep it straight in relation to the puny or pipe that you are working on. You also lay out frit, which is small bits of colored glass,on its surface. you roll your glass in the frit and you will be able to pick it up and it different size frits give you different effects. powders give you more of a tint, wheras bigger chunks make polkadots. The steel of the table also tents to be cold to the touch so it also helps to control the temperature of the glass that you are woking with.





this is a pipe cooler. sometimes when you gather out of the furnace, or if you are heating in the glory hole the pipe gets really hot and you need to cool it off so you don't burn yourself. anyway this basically runs water up through this appartatus and you lay your pipe in it and it gets cooled off.





this is a paddle for when we misbehave... just kidding we use this to flatten certain things, like when we open up lips on blown peices and they are crooked then this helps to straighten them out. it's pretty much a portable flat edge.





these are called blocks, and they are used to make the glass into more of a bulb shape. this is very important when you are making blown peices. it is imperative that the peice is on center and domed off on the end so that the peice doesn't get thin in one spot and not in another. it also helps to keep a solid peice on center. they come in different shapes (more spherical), and in different sizes.




these are called jacks, they are used to make "jack lines"which are spots where you pinch the glass and make jack lines, which are places where you might break a peice off or make a neck on a vase. they are all flat on the end towards the handle so they can be used to flatten peices in localized places. these might be one of the most important hand held tools in the glass shop.





these are called penssieries, and are essentially heavy duty glass foreceps. you use these to hold and pull glass.



these are called diamond shears because when you open good ones up there is a cockeyed square shape that looks like a diamond. incidentally all of our good diamond shears dissappeared over christmas break and we are stuck with kinda half-rate ones. even so they do the job so I can't complain. these tools compete with the jacks for the most important hand held tools of a glass blower. these tools pretty much cut the glass, but they cut more like a guillotine than scissors. they also have an openeing anterior to the cutting edge to hold punty rods while you put hot bits of glass on a peice for patches or punties or leaves or fins on a fish.


these are called duck bill or lip shears. they cut more like scissors than the diamond shears. they are called duck bill shears because they are convex and form a complex that looks like a duck bill. tin snips also serve the same purpose but with much less finesse.

For the most part these are all of the tools that you use in the glass shop, and what you do with them. bear in mind that when you use these tools, especially the marver, and the blocks that it takes a very dlicate touch and by no means should you manhandle the glass. it gets all discombobulated when you do that and you mess everything up. it's kinda late now and thistook me so long to do. i'm pretty tired so i guess i'll finish tomorrow.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Hi ho, it's me again! Got to thinkin that I should let you all know a little more about my Glassblowing hobby...


I'm taking intermediate glassblowing at Fresno State and I had initially heard about glassblowing classes in the school newspaper. I remember on one of my visits to Mr Boring, my high schol mentor you might say. I told him about it and he encouraged me to take it because so I far I had not enjoyed my college experience at all, and I thought it would be fun. So I started beginning glassblowing last semester, and I loved it. Teacher is very skilled in the art and used to own a "world renowned" glass art company. He closed it in 2005 to teach glass full time.


I think I'll write a little more about the process and tools that you need in order to work the glass when I take some pictures of them. I didn't think to bring my camera this morning, but I need it for my bio lab tomorrow. anyway this is a picture of some of the things i havemade. Please note that they are the ones that I haven't given away, and am the most proud of.

There's a shot glass, a little mug, two paperweights, two sculptures(thats glass speak for something that didn't turn out quite the way you expect), and my rommie's George Foreman Grill. Every time I use that thing the smoke alarm goes off...

Sunday, February 8, 2009

blog

Wass up gangstas!?!? Anyway this is my blog. For those of you who are wondering why i'm the "Love Bandit," it's because I got a stuffed gorilla on valentines day that said "Love Bandit" on it. it fit the mold so badly that it stuck... courtesy of Uncle Rodrigo

You will soon find out that one of my favorite hobbies is Glassblowing! and I get to go and do it tomorrow!!! I have been looking forward to it all day. I got some inspiration from one of Katviper's posts about the flowers from Morro Bay. I think I'm gonna make something reminiscent of those dangling bulb things.

Anywhoosles, I guess I'll get some pictures up soon...