Nautical Disaster of February 15th, 1898 and icon of a new breed of journalism.
This bandana was printed by the Cranston Print Works of Cranston, Rhode Island (still in business!).
If history can’t repeat itself, then the terrorists have won.
Nautical Disaster of February 15th, 1898 and icon of a new breed of journalism.
This bandana was printed by the Cranston Print Works of Cranston, Rhode Island (still in business!).
If history can’t repeat itself, then the terrorists have won.
It is getting colder and bike riding is becoming less and less appealing. However, my enthusiasm for sitting on the couch and thinking about bicycles is never-waning.
Favorite comic writer and fantasy best friend, Kate Beaton, just published a great little sequential which I have accidentally published in full.
Going to her website and reading her other offerings is highly advisable but only if you have an hour or two to spare.
If you have never trusted me before, please, trust me now.
A few words about Sgt. Stubby, a former stray who went on to become the most decorated American war dog.
“Stubby also had a talent for locating wounded men between the trenches of the opposing armies; he would listen for the sound of English and then go to the location, barking until paramedics arrived or leading the lost soldiers back to the safety of the trenches. He even caught a German soldier mapping out the layout of the Allied trenches. The soldier called to Stubby, but he put his ears back and began to bark. As the German ran, Stubby bit him on the legs, causing the soldier to trip and fall. He continued to attack the man until the American soldiers arrived. For capturing an enemy spy, Stubby was put in for a promotion to the rank of Sergeant by the commander of the 102nd Infantry. He became the first dog to be given rank in the United States Armed Forces.” – From Wikipedia
Watch out, Martin. You just might be getting a Sgt. Stubby costume to wear for Halloween next year.
For even more information on Sgt. Stubby, check out this article.
My friend Melissa must have known that SimTower was a favorite computer game during my younger years. A big, huge thanks to her for pointing out these great cross section illustrations featured on a website that I can’t believe that I had not heard of before: Retronaut!
My favorites are the theater and the department store. Tiny costume shop! Tiny automat!
It is greatly worth your time to visit the website proper and see these images in their expanded glory. Go, go!
I love neon, Kodachrome, and entertainment architecture. I’m pretty over the moon about this 1960s Las Vegas home movie that popped up on A Continuous Lean. (Although, best listened to without the music on… unless you like sappy indie rock.)
You might know that 1960s stewardess is one of my favorite styles when I think about what my perfect wardrobe might contain so when I came across these images on Les Yeux Sans Visage (via Pandora’s Closet), I had to pass them on. I know that Pan Am starring Wednesday Addams is going to drop real big in TV land this fall but, c’mon guys, I just started watching Mad Men. I only have room in my life to live vicariously through one current tv show and MM is just so full of good looks and unlikeable characters. Perfection. Plus, the set of the Draper house is so full of things that remind me of my grandparents’ house (which had been last decorated around roughly the same time) that I can’t help fight all those nostalgic, sensory memories of faux dark woods and smooth mid-century modern furniture (some of which I am resting my feet on RIGHT THIS VERY MINUTE!)
Anyhow, there will be a much more wordly post coming up soon, once I am able to stop nibbling the remaining fun from the rind of summer.
Last week, I, Miss Elizabeth “Ceaseless Puritan Work Ethic” Novak, actually took a little break.
I don’t think that I really kept it much of a secret that I had been feeling less than adequate in the head-and-heart health department. At best, it was a little twinge of life not running at capacity; a glitch in the emotional matrix that would work itself out in time. At worst, it was the feelings of everything I like turning against me to highlight what a waste of everything I was (Italics for dramatic effect). Actually, at worst, it really felt like high school. Particularly, the part where you are frustrated and inarticulate and nobody likes you and you look all funny and greasy. Too loud/not loud enough at all the wrong moments. And yes, there was crying.
But this is okay because, when you are a grown-up, you can run away from your problems.
At least, I was able to run away as long as my friends in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, New York City would allow me to crash on their floor. Which was 2.5 days, roughly. And that’s the pretty nice thing about running away- if I run in a certain direction, I get to crash right into good friends who support me… even if I’ve known them for a long time… even if I just met them… and even if they first met me back when I was an angsty teen wearing a lot of black velvet.
Luckily, this scrape with sadness came at the right time: the weekend of the Coney Island Mermaid Parade! This was my fourth parade in 6 years so I felt pretty comfortable keeping my finger off of the camera’s shutter button. I could probably slip in a few photos from last year and you would be none-the-wiser (I even met up with the same friends!), but it is worth it to check out other folks photos from the 2011 edition. I missed much of the parading because train issues made us over an hour late and unable to find many good viewing spots. Those photos would have been sub-par, anyway. That aside, this year’s highlights included cool, ocean breezes, a slice of pizza, not being nearly as hot as last year, and peeping Mr. Lord Whimsy walking by the El Dorado (“Bump Yo Ass Off!” ) bumper cars. We didn’t get to go to the cosmorama- but maybe in the fall!
After we were sufficiently sunned, my friends, that is, Ed and Kate, and I went on an adventure into uncharted territory: Dead Horse Bay! Using only the directions provided by Atlas Obscura, my memory of having seen this blog post, and a half dead iPhone we were able to find our way there AND we were only yelled at once by the bus driver. Hurrah!
At this point, I started trying to take pictures, but found the bay kind of hard to capture. We neglected to aim for low tide so most of the real treasure was submerged by a foot of water. Sheer visible trash volume aside, it was truly a peculiar place: calm, unpopulated, and surrounded by old stuff. Somehow I only want to vacation in iterations of the apocalypse
We were also under prepared as far as bringing things like “bags” or “shovels”.
But with some practice, we perfected a little something that I like to call, “poke at it with a stick”.
One side of the bay was littered with bottles, but also with an assortment of shoes and shoe soles, horse shoe crabs (how thematic!) horse bones left from the former rendering plants and some plastic this-n-thats.
Happy thought time: the kid who wore this is probably dead by now.
The other side was like glass city, even at high tide.
I wore only a crappy pair of Converse All Stars, but thick soled shoes are a must. The beach shines brilliant with myriad points of color but little of that glass has been tossed enough by the sea to dull its edges.
The collector in me kept rolling over and dying- only to be harshly resurrected and reslayed!- every time I came across shards of restaurant-grade Fire King Jadite. Which happened a lot. Because, shit, there was TONS!
And, oh, what’s that? Ah. Just a depression glass juicer with a bite taken out of it. No big. Or, as we have progressed to saying, “NBD.”
Despite that, I was able to find this tiny, perfect, white Johnson and Johnson jar. It was hiding in a half-submerged tire.
We also found this old safe (?)… but but somebody got to it first.
The view was nothing to scoff at, either.
As the sun hung low, we decided to bust out the little sanitary wipes that Kate’s mom had foisted upon her earlier in the week and to catch a bus back to the northern part of the borough- where beer was more plentiful and as well as actively being consumed by friends. Thanks to the train detours, that trip took 2.5 hours, the same amount of time it takes to get from Providence to the Bronx. Just sayin’.
The next day, my friend. Jill, and I tried to catch a ferry to Governor’s Island but service was way backed up, making travel a big, round zero. Instead, we stood around enjoying the cool breeze while looking at this stuff:
Then we loafed around town: hanging out with friends, sipping on drinks and munching hamburgers.
I strongly dislike New York City for a bunch of reasons, some more legit than others but all of them long-winded and totally subjective. However, as the bus was curving through the elevated highways of Queens, I found myself feeling kind of sad leaving it. I felt kind of… affectionate towards it. It felt nice and warm and happy and sunny. We’ve had our differences in opinion but I’m all grown and can see past that now, right? Maybe I could learn to love New York again?
.
No.
It only took a reading of the Sunday New York Times Arts and Leisure section to remember that I don’t give a crap about the opinions of New Yorkers. If you need further convincing, read anything on the web site Two Inch Cuffs.
Anyone who self-identifies as a “tastemaker” should be trussed up and kicked. A lot.
You may, or may not, know that lighter-than-air travel is a low-level, yet consistent interest of mine. I think part of this interest was sparked (ah. no pun intended) by growing up mere miles from the site of the Hindenburg crash. As a child, I would crane my neck in the general direction of the Naval Lakehurst air field any time I found myself at great height, trying to catch a fleeting glimpse of the enormous hangers, built to house zeppelins, blimps, and regular-old airplanes. Actually, I still do this whenever I am home. And when I can spot them, the thrill remains.
But another part of this interest may have come around because, frankly, airships seem really scary. I start to feel very unsettled thinking about standing before such a large craft. There is something about monumentality that is very effective, at least on my delicate sense of proportion. Despite having been around and inside the enormous hangers, the feeling of being so thoroughly dwarfed is a difficult one to swallow.
The other night, in bit of digital staring-into-space, I googled images from the largest of the hangers that I grew up in the shadow in: Hanger 1- famed for housing the Hindenburg (which, I have been told, stuck out at least 6 feet at either end of the building.)
Researching this, I found three pretty neat websites:
Airship Research Lab- great illustrated history.
Faces of the Hindenburg- ambitious blog project to catalog the stories of all 36 passengers and 61 crew members on board the Hindenburg’s final flight.
Stereoscopic Images of Lighter Than Air Flight
My favorite image, the ZR3 Los Angeles standing on her nose during a windstorm in Lakehurst, NJ.
Maybe I was Vietnamese engraver in a former life. Would that account for my attraction to small phrases, two word sayings, maxims and, as they are listed in my thesaurus: adages, aphorisms, proverbs, mottos, saws, axioms, dictums, precepts, epigrams; truisms and clichés?
Thusly, I was impressed by today’s offering from one of my favorite, favorite blogs, The Selvedge Yard, on American soldiers lighters from Vietnam. JP’s photo essays are always of the highest quality, well-sourced and credited while providing enough historical background put the images in context. Consider this post a great, big, red arrow directing your internet-time over to The Selvedge Yard. Check out this post. And then check out his other ones. Right now, it’s Saturday afternoon- cloudy with a chance of rain. What better time is there for looking at pictures on the internet?
And, if you miss it at the bottom of his post, ZippoGallery.com has a gallery of it’s Vietnam-era engraved lighters, too.
From Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon’s Preacher comic series; a perennial fave in our household.
Ah! Friends! Maybe this has made the rounds before and I just missed it, but if you are going to watch one embedded YouTube video today, it should be this one.
The style! The Kodachrome! The dry, British wit! The smoking indoors! Truly, something for everyone.
If only all the years I spent moping around the Toms River Diner looked this charming.