Playing with Content Aware Fill
Getting the sky to look natural without the stick would have been much harder before Content Aware Fill
Gourd-like squash
This is the first time I’ve carved a pumpkin
I expect we’ll see these Decim8 effects everywhere, so I’m getting in early!
The dog & ball
Tickets nostalgia #4: Wembley
Tickets nostalgia #3: Prince
Little yellow cut-out elephant
This intro to track #10 in the 1990 Festive 50 nails exactly why I loved John Peel.
Bellenden Bunfight 2011
Any book recommendations?
[edit] Books I’ve read recently are here
I am Legend
– Don’t be put off by the Will Smith film. This is a minimalist classic by Richard Matheson is right out of the Twilight Zone school
Master and Margarita
– very readable quirky tale by Bulgakov – and Jagger’s inspiration for Sympathy for the Devil
– My favourite writer; vivid characters, wonderful stories and funnier than Wilde Lady in the Lake or the Big Sleep
– Raymond Chandler didn’t write many books, but they were uniformly fantastic. Every single page contains a killer line. Example: “He looked at me like a horse looks over a fence” The Woman in White
– Wilkie Collins wrote four fantastic novels (the others are No Name, Armadale and Moonstone). They all have weaving, teasing plots and were sensations of the time. He pretty much invented the detective novel, and added a whiff of the supernatural too. The Great Gatsby
– A fairly short story and just beautifully written. A 1920s decadent bloodbath. American Tabloid
– well pretty much anything by James Ellroy. Staccato, machine gun sentences and convoluted, near reality plots. Quite shockingly violent at times.
The Strange Tale of Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde
– One of those books that we all know, but rarely read (along with Frankenstein). Thankfully, it’s an excellent, warped story and very well told
– Russel Hoban’s novel is unlike any I’ve ever read. I don’t want to reveal any of the plot, but it’s steeped in myth, imagination and history. Takes a little effort to get into the style, but pays back in spades. Ten Little N-words
– Most of the Agatha Christie books are better than you’d imagine. Of course, they were so influential that echoes of her ideas and plots continue to be recycled today, so what might have been wildly original in 1925 is all-but expected today. This book is as good as any of them, though the title is quite shocking to today’s eyes, so you may wish to seek out a re-titled version such as Ten Little Indians. Lee Child
– My favourite escapist thriller writer. I’ve read all of them, and with the single exception of “Die Trying”, they’re excellent. Think a wandering Die Hard
A Study in Scarlet
– Again, all of the Sherlock Holmes books are great, but this – the first – is arguably the most interesting. Not only does it introduce the world’s most famous detective, but the structure of the book is both original and engaging.
Capri
Spotted in Peckham Rye. This was THE car to have in the 70s
Dulwich 10k photos
Seeing Stars
Not at all what I expected, and all the better for that.
Dracula
It’s interesting reading this and reflecting upon the influence it
still has from Buffy to Twilight to True Blood. The darkness of the
Un-Dead (Stoker’s original title) must have been a real shocker at the
time – there are some wonderful and twisted ideas on there.
Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (which I kinda put in the same camp).
Those are also original and impactful, but are much tighter, pacier
novels. At 500 pages, Dracula is crushingly overlong – it desperately needs
some, er, blood letting – and the sexism really grates, even for
Victorian times.
I’m a sucker for repetitive beats and M.E.S. barking in German
Bold Tendencies 2011
This summertime outdoor art exhibition and, er, Campari bar is in its fifth year. I first visited in 2009 and shamefully have only just got round to going this year.
Horace goes Skiing
This old ZX Spectrum game would translate perfectly for the iPhone.
Much like DoodleJump, it’d simply be a matter of tilting to steer.
bit of nostalgia.
Published in the Guardian
Delighted to get one of my pix in the Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2011/sep/20/william-blake