Archive for 2011

Fearless Chocolate

I went to the “Foodia is Chocolate” event Friday night with Erika. We tried chocolate from Fearless Chocolate, Madecasse, Vice Chocolates, and TCHO. The clear winner: Fearless Chocolate’s Cherry Bomb gnosh (ugh, how do you spell that?). The taste experience was like watching Macho Man Randy Savage and Hulkamania duke it out on a terrific roller coaster… on the moon… in 3-D… In. My. Mouth! Awesome.

And their basic chocolate bars all had a vivid, sharp taste that had us wanting more!

Madecasse: too much of a heavy cream action in all their samples
Vice Chocolates: I don’t recall, there was something not perfect… (sorry)
TCHO: a solid stand-by

Real Bread in 10 Minutes – Makerfaire Followup

The classes at Maker Faire went splendidly. The 30 minute format required me to tighten everything up dramatically to get the message across. The students didn’t get all the info I wanted to give them but they certainly got the spirit, and some laughs! Afterward, I received email comments like this:

I was lucky enough to catch your talk at the Maker Faire this afternoon… I really enjoyed your “organic” way of approaching baking… Your teaching style was also excellent, a little humor goes a long way in education.

– James Peters

Lee,
Thanks for teaching us how to make bread at makersfaire! It came out delicious the first time and we shared it with our neighbors. It was a fun way to bring the whole apartment building together!
Cheers,
Sarah and Evan

Creating Reuben Margolin’s Nebula – Part 2

Here is video part 2 of 4 showing Reuben Margolin’s Nebula.

Wherein there is much talk of how to actually ship and put together 12 tons of kinetic art. Having built big art, I can say that this is a very real depiction of what goes on.

Reuben Margolin’s Nebula video – part 2

Go back and see part 1.

Photojournal: Still Not Sketchy

Here’s one more photo for the journal. This is from last night’s Electronic Controlled Flame Effects class. That’s my hand holding the cutest little double-poofer you ever did see. This was terrific proof to the students that a 1lb cylinder produces just as powerful a poof as a larger one, just not for as many times before freezing up and/or running out of gas.

It made a fireball that by gum nearly touched the 30 foot high ceiling! It would be more accurate to call it a fire “jet” owing to the 1/8″ nozzle on the pipes.

Flame effects at work

Please note that the man’s head obscured by the fireball was not, in fact blown off by the force of the blast.

Photojournal: Not Sketchy at All

Here’s some photos from recent travels. Click to enlarge! Better yet, mouseover each image briefly to preload, then click when you want to view.

Creative forklifting at NIMBY. Not sketchy at all.

Brunch in Alameda. Quite a nice spread!

Charlotte brings my touchstone, Joe's O's in her new measlecar

Look at the name of the school. Just look at it! Yes, this is a real school in Alameda.

Erika straps in to receive an automated randomized religion reassignment tattoo at the amazing ArtPadSF event at the Phoenix Hotel

Tada! Now she's a Jew!

Building a new poofer at Center Hardware!

Building the poofer in Electronic Controlled Flame Effects class!

An aerial performance at the NIMBY BBQ!

I've got a bad cold. Aunt Dorothy's caps will help make me better!


Happily, I got over the cold.

Learn Bread Baking This Weekend

I’m teaching another bread baking class on Sunday, from 3-5pm in the Mission. Sign up at wwyl.net/bread!

Here are some emails I got this week about last week’s Maker Faire class:

I was lucky enough to catch your talk at the Maker Faire this afternoon… I really enjoyed your “organic” way of approaching baking… Your teaching style was also excellent, a little humor goes a long way in education.
– James Peters

Lee,
Thanks for teaching us how to make bread at makersfaire! It came out delicious the first time and we shared it with our neighbors. It was a fun way to bring the whole apartment building together!
Cheers,
Sarah and Evan

What Will You Learn? Taster Classes this weekend!

This weekend, May 28 & 29,  there are a whole bunch of taster classes going on in the Bay Area. Here’s a tiny sample of what’s going on:

  • Eat fire (3 hours, $95)
  • Sequence your own DNA (1.5 hours, $39)
  • Learn the basics of woodworking (2.5 hours, $28)
  • Create a cast glass sculpture (3 hours, $95)
  • Arduino with a Wood & Nail Breadboard (2 hours, $82)

See the whole catalog, go to WhatWillYouLearn.com!

Swing higher and higher … right back to childhood

A couple weeks ago I went to Paolo Salvagione’s closing event of his “Competitive Swinging”. It was great fun*. A reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle, Sarah Adler was there and interviewed me :-)

View the full article here

Here are bits of the article archived locally

Sarah Adler took some nice photos of us on the swings. Thanks Sarah!

Former artist-in-residence at the Headlands Center for the Arts, conceptual artist and sculptor Paolo Salvagione was invited back in April to activate the gymnasium space. Calling it “Competitive Swinging,” he created a sculpture for the old military barrack by utilizing the existing ceiling hardware once used to hang climbing rope for military exercises. He combined that with the basketball court’s geometric grid to hang and linearly place 10 swings (five on each side).

Recalling the squeaky swing set of his childhood, Salvagione designed the swings to avoid any audible reference; rather, participants swing in silence, feeling the breeze off the Marin Headlands.

On the last day of its installation, folks gathered to swing as pendulums and relive the playfulness of their own childhood swing sets.

– Sarah Adler, sadler@sfchronicle.com

David Calkins, 43

Profession: Robot builder

Neighborhood: Mill Valley

When was the last time you were on a swing?

A few weeks ago because Emma (his 2 1/2-year-old daughter with him at the gymnasium) loves to play on the swings.

What is your first swinging memory?

In the park by my grandma’s house growing up. There was a set of swings with big tall metal posts – you could get really high up.

How do you feel when you are swinging on a swing?

You get that almost flying sensation. But it’s hard if you don’t swing on a regular basis; you’re surprised by how many muscles you don’t normally use.

Other favorite piece of playground equipment?

My favorite is whatever Emma’s favorite is. Right now, she likes big slides. (Danger is her middle name.)

Lee Sonko, 41

Profession: Teacher and artist

Neighborhood: Mission

When was the last time you were on a swing?

Three or four years ago in the middle of the night. Before that it was 25 years.

What is your first swinging memory?

In my West Milford, N.J., elementary school playground. We had a giant swing set.

How do you feel when you are swinging on a swing?

A little dizzy. A lot free. A little in control. A little out of control. Ridiculously silly.

Other favorite piece of playground equipment?

There was this spinning table thing; sort of a merry-go-round. It was a 4-foot circular table that you spun around and it always felt really dangerous to be on that because you’d spin so fast and then fly off into the mulch.

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*except for the great/crashed OKCupid date, but I digress

And I have to say thank you to to Simone Davalos of Suicidebots et all for posting the event to Squidlist. It was just my kind of event :-). Paolo and Jennifer are terrific.

Colussus at Maker Faire

6 years later, I helped Zach Coffin and friends bring Colossus out of storage and into the hearts of Maker Faire attendees.

Colossus captured on real film (!) by Brody Scotland

Previously

Creating Reuben Margolin’s Nebula – Part 1

Reuben Margolin is a Bay Area kinetic artist. He designed and built Nebula with the help of many people including my friend Michael Prados, who is a licensed mechanical engineer. Here is the first of a 4 part video on the design and construction of this beautiful and huge kinetic sculpture.

Nebula video