22 December 2011
20 December 2011
bestiary: black widow spider
i thought all bites by black widow spiders would be fatal to all humans but apparently this is true mostly for young children or the elderly. still, their venom is fifteen times more poisonous than a rattlesnake and it leads to muscle pain, nausea, and paralysis. no thanks. then again, this is on humans. smaller animals and insects have to worry a lot more—including male black widows. many people know that males often become fodder for the females after mating and this of course has lead to their names. interesting from a male black widow's perspective then, isn't it? my species is named because our "women" eat us. after sex. see? your life could be worse, no? or you could be another insect that falls prey to black widows. they paralyze their food and liquify an insect's insides and then go to town. no wonder people are freaked out by these things. latrodectus hesperus in moleskine.
16 December 2011
separated
i recently watched ji lee's creative morning talk and i thought his student exercise of illustrating a word's meaning typographically using really only the word would be a fun little thing to do here and there. having never gone to art school, i never got an exercise like this and i guess i wasn't smart enough to just try and do something like this without having heard about it first. anyway, if i don't have time to ponder illustration friday's topic as much as i want, i may try and do these typographic doodles.
here's the talk, if you're interested:
here's the talk, if you're interested:
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