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Give or take. It’s hard to get the exact count through the sands of time. But it’s at least 10,000 blog posts as of today. That’s 25 years, once or twice a day. Back of the envelope, that’s about 2 billion blog post views. I’ve written and edited every post myself, hence the typos. 3,000,000 […]
3 months ago

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More from Seth's Blog

The talking dog

First mistake: If you meet a talking dog in the street and it makes a few grammatical errors or speaks with an accent, you don’t use a few errors to dismiss the fact that this is an actual talking dog. It’s amazing. It might even be worth having it join your team. Second mistake: If […]

14 hours ago 2 votes
Overappreciated

It’s all too easy to be familiar with being underappreciated. Customers, clients, vendors, colleagues–we’d like them to notice and acknowledge our efforts on their behalf. When we pay attention to appreciation, it’s easy to come to the conclusion that there’s rarely enough. Contrast this with the rare experience of being overappreciated. Getting more credit, support […]

yesterday 3 votes
Sunk costs and the framework for forward motion

Everything that happened yesterday, and the yesterdays before that, is real. It happened. Perhaps it’s the hard work you did to earn a degree, or a significant error that cost you and others a great deal. Maybe it’s a community you chose to join, or one that you failed to embrace. All of these costs […]

2 days ago 4 votes
The Superman metaphors

Sooner or later, we are all superheroes. Superman wears a costume. As we all do. He isn’t great at time management, always focused on the urgency at hand instead of investing in long-term planning. He rarely works to change the foundational system he’s part of. Supervillians exist in opposition to him and his work. Without […]

3 days ago 6 votes
The four arcs

They can carry us away, amplify our work or slowly change everything around us. These arcs can easily become invisible forces, pushing us to make choices and to ignore their origins or consequences. Capitalism is the most common one, along with its shadow, industrialism. We show up on behalf of the invisible hand, engaging with […]

4 days ago 6 votes

More in creative

The talking dog

First mistake: If you meet a talking dog in the street and it makes a few grammatical errors or speaks with an accent, you don’t use a few errors to dismiss the fact that this is an actual talking dog. It’s amazing. It might even be worth having it join your team. Second mistake: If […]

14 hours ago 2 votes
How Jackie Chan Filmed the Best Fight Scene in Cinema History

Though now in his seventies, Jackie Chan continues to appear on the big screen with regularity. For most world-famous actors, that’s hardly notable, but it’s not as if Sir John Gielgud, say, had spent decades filming scenes of hand-to-hand combat and sustaining severe injuries in the performance of elaborate stunts. Viewers of New Police Story […]

14 hours ago 2 votes
Creating Screen Films using Sumi Ink

Sumi Ink is fantastic for making hand-drawn screen films that create exposed screens with texture and loose spontaneous marks. Sumi ink can be painted onto Inkjet Screen Film or True-Grain film to produce a variety of marks.  We experimented by painting Sumi Ink on both types of films. Thin brush strokes on Inkjet Screen Film created loose, painterly, solid lines. Painting onto True-Grain caused the ink to reticulate pleasingly into speckled marks as it dried, almost like a halftone. We exposed all our experiments onto a screen. For more details about exposing your own screen, see the following blog posts and videos: What is an exposed screen? At Home Screen Printing with Bridget or find details of our Custom Exposed Screen service. Below, we can see how the Sumi Ink behaved on True-Grain. The image on the left is the screen film, on the right is the screen print it produced. The pale areas are where the ink was diluted before being painted on the True-Grain. Sumi Ink painted on Inkjet Screen Film can be seen below. The screen film is on the right, the print on the left. We can see that the Sumi Ink does not reticulate in the same way as on the True-Grain, and instead pools in grey tones, creating an interesting effect on the screen and therefore the final screen print. These differences can be seen in the following experiments. Top left square: Sumi Ink on True-Grain Top right: Screen print produced from Sumi on True-Grain Bottom left: Sumi on Inkjet Screen Film Bottom right: Screen print produced from Sumi on Inkjet Screen Film We used these experiments to put a three-colour layered screen print together. First, printing leaves (produced by using Sumi on True-Grain) in green ink.  Next, flowers (produced by using Sumi on Inkjet Screen Film) in lilac Finally, our line drawing in black (produced using Sumi on Inkjet Screen Film).  The marks on this print are a refreshing change to the sometimes rigid designs made using digital screen film prints or pen drawn positives and offer a nice alternative if you're looking to add a little more spontaneity to designs.  To create screen films using this method you will need: Sumi Ink Inkjet Screen Film or True-Grain film Brushes For more details about exposing your own screen, see the following blog posts and videos: What is an exposed screen? At Home Screen Printing with Bridget or find details of our Custom Exposed Screen service.

yesterday 4 votes
Overappreciated

It’s all too easy to be familiar with being underappreciated. Customers, clients, vendors, colleagues–we’d like them to notice and acknowledge our efforts on their behalf. When we pay attention to appreciation, it’s easy to come to the conclusion that there’s rarely enough. Contrast this with the rare experience of being overappreciated. Getting more credit, support […]

yesterday 3 votes
The Story Told on the Famous Bayeux Tapestry Explained from Start to Finish

They say that history is written by the victors, but that isn’t always true: sometimes it’s embroidered by the victors. Such was the case with the Bayeux Tapestry, which commemorates the build-up to and successful execution of the Norman conquest of England in 1066. Created not long after the events it depicts in what we […]

yesterday 4 votes