Sunday, November 29, 2009



Friday Otter and I went to the Brookfield Zoo and brought our cameras with. It turned out that Whirl, one of their Amur Tigers was rather active. It ended up as a day to do a tiger study. See Whirl at play on one of our other sites.

We ended up taking 449 photos of her all told after eliminating the various blah photos we ended up with 212 good pictures. Yesterday we made another pass to pick the best of the good photos, 88 in total, and that is what I posted at the above link.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Windycon Pictures

Too many to be post here, on our website at: http://dracos-otter.com/windycon36/

Sunday, November 8, 2009

On Friday my co-worker and I went to a local forest preserve to do a photo walk here are some of the pictures that I took. The first two pictures of my co-worker.


























Saturday, November 7, 2009

Robin - Halloween


Just a quick snapshot from Halloween morning, before Robin went to school.

His shirt says:
Knowledge is Power
Power Corrupts
Study Hard
Be Evil

Saturday, October 10, 2009






Here is the latest set of beads that I have created.  The first close up shows a bead with a twisted inlay of black and yellow the one on the right.


The last one is a close up of a bead that was made on a large mandrel and two hollow beads.  Unfortunately the one in the middle cracked during the cooling process.

Monday, September 14, 2009

And now, Some Finished Socks

"Angee" socks from Cookie A.'s "Sock Innovation" (link to .pdf preview of the book, showing most of the socks). No, this is not the yarn used in the book, this is the "Hearth" multi from Knitpicks.com, in their "Stroll" sock yarn. Good match, eh? My moosies are kinda covered up, though.


Well, that picture came out a bit dark, didn't it. A variation on the "Twisted Rib" socks from Interweave's 25 Favorite Socks book - the twisted rib columns are one stitch wider than the pattern is written. We're all smart enough to figure that one out. :) The yarn is Brown Sheep Co. Wildefoote, color "Tom Cat" which I thought was grey-ish with one pinkish ply, but I'm told by VS shows up as purple.

"Milo" from "Sock Innovation." And the moose on my blockers. Yarn is "Ty-Dye", and I think I did an awsome job of splitting the skein to get obviously-related socks, thankyouverymuch.


Yet Still Another Cookie A. pattern, "Monkey" from Knitty.com. Yarn is "Crazy Zauberball", I don't think the colorway has a name. I hope it shows up better on your screen than this one - it goes through dark teal, burgundy, grey, brown, and looks really cool, in about 3/4"-1" bands. The heels I did in Wildefoote "Cranberry" to keep the color-changing going down the foot. I think it's a decent color match, but heavier yarn.

Yarn Orgy Results


Hmm. The picture above seems to be a bit dark. The three skeins on the left are the half-priced generic sock yarn I referred to in my LJ post about the Stitches trip. The middle one of the three big skeins is red and black or red and blue (still not sure), that may end up being another pair for Ron. The others are purples. The blue-green smaller skein (Cherry Tree Hill brand, no color name) is going to be the Mermaid's Lagoon socks from knitty.com. No concrete plans yet for the orange and the green.

Above are the dozen skeins from Miss Babs, IIRC they're all the "Yummy" superwash merino. She had a lot of nice solids and semi-solids, I could easily have spent a lot more money there than I did.

Let's see, the two dark green skeins on the left are for Ron - I expect it's going to take more than one skein to make him a pair. But I might be able to get a pair of anklets out of it, too. Don't know what pattern I'll be using with it.

The green and white ("Day at Sink Valley Park") is going to be the "Glynis" socks from Cookie A.'s "Sock Innovation." - link to .pdf preview that shows most of the socks in the book. It turns out that colorway is still not as solid as the sock really needs, but I'm not ripping them out for the 5th or 6th time, dammit! And if anyone plans to do these socks, you need to get a couple repeats in to really see the pattern. And don't knit too tightly. Yeah, I have learned something in all the tries on them.

Next is a pale grey ("Oyster"), which is going to be the "Bex" socks from "Sock Innovation."

One of the two rusts, not sure which it was now, except the more solid ("Terracopper"), (they are slightly different) is going to be the Baroque socks from Knitty. Yeah, that pattern needs a solid yarn!

The burgundy ("Merlot"), third from the left of the bottom four, is going to be the "Vilai" socks from "Sock Innovation." Yes, I do like Cookie A.'s socks - I've got 2 more queued up from yarn in the stash - "Nebula", "Ornette" (in about those colors), and 2 more that will probably be done out of the yarn orgy - "Stricken" - but not in light blue, yuck, and "Twisted Flower" - probably the other rust, since I didn't actually grab a dark green - D'OH! - and I will be buying more of her patterns.

If you have suggestions of which yarn to do "Stricken" (or other Cookie A. patterns) from, e-mail me or leave the comment here on blogger directly (gmail addy is your blogger userid), comments on the LJ feed behave . . . oddly.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

More Cemetery Pictures

Here are my favorites



Spending time in the Cemetery again

Here are some pictures that I took at the cemetery on the corner of Quinten and Old McHenry Road.









I think this is my favorite of the ones I took today.



Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Wolf in Intended Habitat


Remember the wolf from about two posts earlier? Well, here it is, in the intended habitat, in color. You see now exactly why I spent mumble years futzing around with it.

This was taken immediately after completion Sunday afternoon (you can see the yellow ink smears on the one side). The skin around it is already red in the picture, but is fading today. The minor bleeding you can see in some of the yellow has cleared out, too. Still a bit ouchy, but not too bad.

The artist worked around two freckles/moles that are slightly raised - flat ones he'll go over, but he doesn't like to mess with anything that could possibly be a problem site. I can handle that (and Dr. Iza saw them earlier this year, along with the fifty-zillion other spots on my back and shoulders), although the one is the backs-side paw is kinda obvious. The other one not so much.

Since this is immediately after completion, the colors are as vivid as they'll ever be. They were still that bright this morning, but I expect the skin to start peeling today, at which time the appearance starts to move to the less-bright fully healed state.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Woof! Up close and personal

This, above, is a typical shot of the wolves at Brookfield Zoo, when they're on the top of the hill.


This is what you get when you have a f-11 lens, aka a 1.6-meter-ish telescope mounted to your SLR. Yes, this wolf is on the top rock in the photo above.

These are both from 2006, two different trips.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Thunder-Duck, and a Wolf





Click on the pictures to embiggen, BTW (embiggen - good word, thanks Yarn Harlot)

Hmm. Clever of me to call this Otter-Dracos Pictures instead of Photographs, as these aren't photos (obviously). They're drawings that Ron scanned in, brought into Adobe Illustrator, and traced/cleaned up (hence the awsome display of symmetry). So I probably should have put the copyright as belonging to both of us, but I doubt he'll be fussed.

The first one is a Northwest Coast-style wolf's head I was working on for myself. I forget how many versions I've gone through as I worked on it in the last mumble years, this time I finally got it right, I think. I think the key was getting rid of outlines. You may or may not notice that the bits are free-floating, not necessarily connected. But it works, you end up seeing the face as a whole. It would be more detailed, but for design constraints the final medium will impose.

As we were finishing the wolf face up, I had the idea to do a Thunderbird-Duck. Yes, with DucKon in mind. I couldn't resist. I did it. Hence the second drawing, ThunderDuck with the duck face in the chest. More semi-detached bits, although less obviously than in the wolf face. More detail, too. I knew that I could put more detail in it.

Then Ron had fun, took out the duck face, and put in the wolf face (with some stretching and/or squashing to make it fit, but not obvious deformation).

In some ways, the ThunderDucks are just . . . wrong. But they came out so well! We also have colored and black-and-white filled-in versions, in which the moustache-y bit in the beak is gone, because it was waaaaay too much like a moustache.


If the DucKon leadership leaves me as Publications again, I do solemnly promise . . .
. . .
. . . NOTHING! I have the POWER! I have the SOFTWARE! I have the IMAGES!
BWAH HA HA HA HA!

Monday, August 10, 2009

Looky looky! New Bloggy!





















































Since LJ's picture storage/uploading makes me crazy, and our other Blogger blog is for Otter Necessities, I've started Yet Another Blog for general picture-posting. And here it is, dracos-otter-pictures.blogspot.com. I'll add links from LJ and Otter Necessities' blog.

So, about these pictures: A while back I decided I'd like to take pictures in Hillside Cemetery, which is on Smith Street, about a block or two north of the Palatine train station, as there seemed to be some older stuff there. New headstones are boring. Old headstones (and footstones, it turns out), are interesting. So we finally got there on Wednesday. We went about 6 pm, because the sun is getting lower and so the light is more interesting.

I think Ron took the first picture, and a couple others, I took the other two posted, and most of them for the evening. And most of them had to be rotated counter-clockwise a couple degrees - but some had to be rotated clockwise - woo! drunk Lon! Straightening was made even more fun by the fact that a lot of the older stones lean. And the cemetery is hilly. Finding a good line to straighten on was sometimes entertaining.

I need to work on my composition. Perhaps that's why I bought a book on composition a week or ten days ago?

Not sure these are the best of the batch, but they're the ones I grabbed this morning.