yeah, that was a bummer :( I was really looking forward to it. You should be glad I wasn't able to give you the nasty cold I had at that time though!
We're leaving NY tomorrow for the long road trip home. Maybe someday you'll be swinging through Seattle, or us Boston (my family is in New Hampshire, so we visit New England a fair amount) and we can finally (re)meet.
I don't have anything planned for this coming weekend (but we could come up with something), but something may be in the works for the next weekend, in which case you are most definitely invited along.
:) i'm hanging out with my mom a bit this weekend but that won't take up all the time. i definitely want in on the adventure next weekend and i'm unfamiliar with the swap-o-rama and can't see the info through the link cause i don't have a sign in name.
hmmm. though it sounds cool i will probably not go to the swap-o-rama. i actually got rid of all of the clothes i'd do that with recently. i donated like 8 bags of stuff to the goodwill before i moved.
p.s., and your first picture, above, made me think of this guy i heard about on the radio, clifford ross, who's invented this high resolution camera that takes these enormous pictures (5 feet by 10 feet)
`colors` is one of the places my hometown high school and college friends used to hang out (assuming that the other part of that building had one of those huge ceiling crane things). I don't think any of our primitive artistry remains (we mostly worked with charcoal, on what were then largely bare concrete walls). A building "next door" supplied us with *lots* of well dried fuel for campfires.
There was a mysterious rectangular pit roughly between the two structures, full of filthy water, with no bottom we were ever able to detect...
A relatively nearby bunker became our much longer-term hangout, with substantial artwork on the interior walls, and primitive furnishing of made of chunks salvaged from other buildings...
no subject
Date: 2006-06-05 04:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-06 03:01 pm (UTC)btw I meant to get back to you and say what a bummer it was that I missed you in NYC!
no subject
Date: 2006-06-06 09:55 pm (UTC)We're leaving NY tomorrow for the long road trip home. Maybe someday you'll be swinging through Seattle, or us Boston (my family is in New Hampshire, so we visit New England a fair amount) and we can finally (re)meet.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-05 12:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-06 02:17 pm (UTC)I don't have anything planned for this coming weekend (but we could come up with something), but something may be in the works for the next weekend, in which case you are most definitely invited along.
also, are you going to come to the Swap-o-Rama?
http://upcoming.org/event/81322/
no subject
Date: 2006-06-06 02:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-06 03:00 pm (UTC)try this link:
http://www.swaporamarama.org/bostonswap.htm
we will scheme re: weekend adventures.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-06 03:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-06 12:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 03:53 am (UTC)have you tried the open-source software 'gimp'?
here are some possible assistants for your next photo shoot...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/photosquirrels/sets/72057594128554742/
(thinkprogress pointed out that link)
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 04:01 am (UTC)http://cliffordross.com/R1/R1-detail.html
http://cliffordross.com/R1/R1-BPSpaper.html
no subject
Date: 2006-08-25 02:33 pm (UTC)`colors` is one of the places my hometown high school and college friends used to hang out (assuming that the other part of that building had one of those huge ceiling crane things). I don't think any of our primitive artistry remains (we mostly worked with charcoal, on what were then largely bare concrete walls). A building "next door" supplied us with *lots* of well dried fuel for campfires.
There was a mysterious rectangular pit roughly between the two structures, full of filthy water, with no bottom we were ever able to detect...
A relatively nearby bunker became our much longer-term hangout, with substantial artwork on the interior walls, and primitive furnishing of made of chunks salvaged from other buildings...