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the pain of the rain…

Jun13
by Greg Cravens on June 13, 2013 at 11:05 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

So, here is the shot.  The one that cost me a burned arm.  My wife has completed her editing and allowed me to post.  Whattaya think?

photo by Paula Cravens

I was flingin’ sparks from the left.  It was a thirty second exposure.  What that means is that real life didn’t look quite like this- to the standing observer, the sparks weren’t in long clean lines, but were individual sparks falling along the paths you see here.  And there weren’t this many all at the same time.  What you’re seeing is a whole half-minute of life frozen into a single image.  Also, the sky was black to everyone standing there.  The camera collected all the light in the sky the whole time and that makes it seem like it’s still blue to the naked eye.

 

Neat, huh?

└ Tags: castle, cravens, fire, Paula, photo, rain, Sparks, tie, umbrella
5 Comments

If Ghost Rider was just a neighborhood kid…

Jun11
by Greg Cravens on June 11, 2013 at 10:32 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

photo by Paula Cravens

photo also by Paula Cravens

So you remember the movie “Ghost Rider” with Nicolas Cage?  Yeah, sorry ’bout that.  I’m a big comics fan, and I see all the comic-based movies.  Oh, wait… there was that second Ghost Rider movie… Yeah, I see MOST of the comics-related movies.

But what if they had made Ghost Rider out of an average neighborhood kid instead of a stunt rider?  It could have gone that way… Let’s face it.  Hollywood will pretty much run roughshod all over a comic book character that’s crazy popular after being refined for decades of stories and character-building.  The movie guys get a hold on this popular formula, built on the successes and failures of dozens of writers and they’ll say things like, “You know what?  Let’s not make Doctor Doom a tragically angry,  horribly scarred, and armored East European dictator with a fanatic drive to destroy his enemies and rule the world.  Let’s make him an insufferable scientist/genius/businessman who used to date one of the superheroes.  What a great idea.”

So.  Ghost Rider used to be little Billy, and he was on his paper route when the devil stops by and asks him to become an otherworldly bounty hunter.  Billy says, “Sure.” and, Flash Bang, he’s a skeleton riding on a really nice bike, but instead of a newspaper you get little burnt-out divots in your lawn (two if there’s a skip on a low throw) and the neighborhood bully suddenly stops pushing around the bonier kids.

Hollywood.  Here I come.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

└ Tags: bike, ghost rider, nicolas cage, Skeleton
3 Comments

Life’s tough. Wear a Helmet.

Jun06
by Greg Cravens on June 6, 2013 at 9:59 am
Posted In: Talk About Toys

So TSOJ sent in THIS LINK (a lot of you guys are kind enough to send links, and I haven’t gotten to some good ones.  Thanks much, and I will get there eventually!)

It’s about helmet/hats like Hubris has worn in the strip occasionally.  Very cool.  We’ll get these in the States pretty soon, unless I miss my guess.

 

└ Tags: hats, helmet, TSOJ
2 Comments

Woodburn custom deck

Jun04
by Greg Cravens on June 4, 2013 at 9:51 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

I had this idea a while back, and of course it was overblown in its initial state.  I would enlist the help of the two people I know who have the know-how and the elaborate woodshops that would enable me to lay up some custom skate decks.  Then, I would woodburn cool custom designs into the decks for the sheer pleasure of having a really nice custom deck.  Then, I would cover the deck with a clear resin finish with some quartz sand mixed in for grip, and vóila!  A really expensive, jaw-droppingly cool skate deck for me.  I say for me because you can see how such a thing could be well outside the perceived value/price range of your average skater.  The kinds of people who would WANT such a thing are the kinds of people that skate so good and so hard that they regularly break decks.  You don’t want to smash a two-month old $300 custom deck do you?  No.  Nobody’s that frivolous.

But overlarge good ideas can be whittled down to something manageable.  I started tinkering around.  Why build custom decks out of handpicked hardwood ply when you can go online and buy a half-dozen blank decks and piddle around all you like on them?  So I did that.  And that whole Resin finish thing?  The wiser heads at the skate shop said “Why not use clear grip tape?  Zap.  Done.  So all that remained was the woodburning of the art.  That’s what I was mostly interested in.  I like woodburning, and I like the idea of the art on the top of the deck, so I went for it.

It took me three months to finally clear a day in my schedule, and there wasn’t time to really finalize the cool Hubris art that I wanted to do, so I decided the first deck would be total practice- a throwaway if necessary.  So I laid out an area to work in, transferred some art to a deck fresh out of the box and sanded bare of finish, and grabbed my woodburning tool.  Turns out, I needed all three of my woodburning tools to make this thing work.  There were some effects and line weights that insisted on various kinds of burn.

There are big fat lines from a tool that’s pretty much a soldering iron, a lot of tiny feathery lines that come off a tool I bought at a specialty wood shop years ago, and some patterning in the background that comes off a hot twist of wire in the end of a handle on a thing my father got from a woodworking buddy- it’s a tool that started life as a charger for a car battery and now does duty as a custom branding iron.

There you have it.  Niiiiice skate deck.  I took some photos and ran to the skate shop to get that clear grip tape put on it.  That didn’t work out so well – waaay too milky and opaque,  so we’re on to phase two.  I do the art on the bottom of the deck and go get some resin.

I’ll let you know how it goes.

└ Tags: art, burn, custom, deck, graphic, Gun, joker, skate, skate deck, skull, Wood, woodburn
7 Comments

Anyone smell pork?

Jun01
by Greg Cravens on June 1, 2013 at 11:32 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

Thursday I mentioned that I burned my arm doing a photoshoot.

It was pretty alarming, though thankfully not ‘disarming’.  Ha.

Here’s a photo of my injury, proving that I’m Hubris in real life.

How does it prove that I’m Hubris-like?  Well, there were also two children and a grown woman who were engaged in the selfsame activity, and they sure didn’t get hurt.  In fact, until this happened, we were pretty amazed at how safe the operation seemed to be.

You put a bit of steel wool in a wire whisk.  You put the whisk on the end of a foot or two of rope.  Hold a flame to the steel wool, and it starts to smolder.  Whirl the whole mess around at arms length in front of you.

If you do this in the dark, with a camera trained on you, you get a neat effect.  If you stand just to one side of the camera’s view, you get a neater effect: glowing rain.  The tiny bits of smoldering steel fly out of the whisk and if you’re using long exposure times on the camera, you get a neat shower of sparks.  With a little practice, you can even direct the height of the fall and the general direction.

And without much practice at all, a whole chunk of molten steel can somehow get out of the stupid whisk and land smack on your arm.  Your first instinct will be to brush it off with your other hand.  Bad instinct, bad!  The resulting blisters on your other hand will hurt a LOT worse than the ruination on your arm… mostly because those nerve endings in your arm have seen their OWN end.  Them li’l suckers are cauterized, and you don’t have to worry about them anymore.

What you DO have to do is get some of those soothing gel pads from your local pharmacy and stick one to your arm, and some high-grade aloe product for your hand.  The hand will be fine in a day or two, though you might suspect there’s  a tiny piece of charred steel where there had been a couple of blisters.  Cool.  The arm, on the other hand… oh, the arm.  Still no pain, so you start showing it off, leaving the bandage off after a couple of days, and letting a big ol’ scab form.  Except that if you’re not careful enough, that scab gets awfully wet in the shower and sloughs off, and then you’re back to square one with the gel pads and the bandages.  Putting the bandages back on is good.  Because as your friend, who tore his face off in a mountain bike wreck, will tell you, you don’t want open sunshine on your wound, ’cause the scars turn an unmistakeable red and everyone says, “OOoogh.  Nasty scar, there.”  On the arm, that might be okay, but he wanted his face to heal up proper and so he didn’t go outside for, like, two months or something.

I was told all this after spending a couple of hours at the skatepark thinking a little sun would do my wound good, since it was fresh out of the gel pad and I didn’t like it looking all wet and gooey.

And before you ask- no, the fire didn’t burn all the hair away from the wound.  I hadda shave my wooly arm to keep the bandages from sticking to the hairs and making removal some kind of wax-job joke.

Y’all be careful out there.  But if you’re not, send photos.

└ Tags: arm, burn, fire, gel pad, smolder, steel wool
5 Comments
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