Photos to come, feet have hit the ground running.
WTS!
Kick start that creative side in you this new year. Come and gain some inspiration.
Take an old Thrift Store hard back book for a couple of $ and transform it into a whole new book. It’s simple and most importantly fun and rewarding. Come and see how it’s done so you can have a go yourself.
Call it street-scrap-booking, it utilises existing materials and bits and pieces you collect on a day to day basis. Best bit… no Martha Stewart in sight.
The Thrift Store Sketchbook Event is a perfect opportunity for you to also gain a sneak look into the creative minds and worlds of the Concept Design and Conceptual Thinking students and their thinking process.
See you Thursday 20th January 2011, The Cafe Gallery at MIU Art Institute 15th & Biscayne Blvd, 5.30pm-7.30pm. A wee beverage and a few nibbles will be served.
Please RSVP to thesketchbookproject@gmail.com ASAP or via the Facebook page.
DUE TO UNFORESEEN CIRCUMSTANCES THIS EVENT IS CANCELLED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE. APOLOGIES. KEEP FOLLOWING US ON FACEBOOK.
There is a must-attend-event happening this Friday. It would mean the world if you could also twitter, facebook and email the details on to all your contacts. Would love to see you there…
The concept design and conceptual thinking students at Miami International University of Art & Design are sharing their inspiration and showcasing sketchbooks that have an interesting twist to them – they started out life as a second-hand book bought from a thrift store.
Art Basel whisked Miami on a whirlwind, romantic adventure, a long weekend and jam-packed program of art and culture which has since come to an end. The city is now returned to locals and Art Basel leaves the streets littered with a bit of street-art here and the odd empty pop-up shop there.
However, bubbling away under the surface of this quieter city is a pocket of creative energy that can still be found, a select group of creative students shaping their future are on a journey of exploration and discovery – The Thrift Store Sketchbook Project 2010.
Miami International University of Art & Design invite members of the creative communications community to come and see The Thrift Store Sketchbook Project 2010 on Friday December 10th, 5.30pm-7.30pm at the Café Gallery, Ai campus, 15th & Biscayne Blvd, Downtown Miami.
We hope to inspire creative artists and creative communication practitioners to see the benefits of documenting evidence of the creative process. It gives clients a different perspective and key insight into the world of creative thinking, which is highly valuable to both client and supplier.
There will be complimentary refreshments and you will be able to see pages of the books accompanied by quotes from each student explaining what this creative journey has meant to them.
Please RSVP thesketchbookproject@gmail.com
56 days since I last updated! Where is the time going?!
I have to confess it is getting harder to write more frequently as I clock up the hours for work, have a few very tall guests around at the mo and have been planning trips over the coming weeks. All exciting and fun experiences though – it’s just finding the time to record them. What I also find interesting is when I do come online I get so easily distracted by everything else the web has to offer – Facebook, Twitter, TweetDeck, Skype, BBC, TED and the infamous You Tube.
I wasn’t an avid online video watcher before I came out to Miami – if I’m honest I was like a child who at the first taste of wine, screws their face up and looks like they will never, ever grow to like it. Now I’m in my late twenties and I’ve discovered the only time I screw my face up at wine is a) if it’s corked or b) if it’s a really, really cheap bottle that’s way too sweet. The thing with You Tube is I find myself intrigued by the homemade clips, fascinated by the TV shorts and catch-up skits, inspired by the seemingly Google-like quality it has (the search engine is getting better and easier to find relevant footage) and I’m probably using it more owing to my involvement in education too. It really helps me to communicate with the students and share examples in a more engaging way.
I also realised that I am actually watching less of what I am not that interested in (unless Mark has control of the remote and it’s Bear Grills omnibus or anything shark and snake related). Anyway, as I build my ‘network of interest’ (thank you Manuel from Havas SE – I’m quoting your good-self when you attended my class last week – and I find the channels of content that I really do want to be informed by – I am in control of my programming. Having said that, I still grow a small concern that I’m missing out the best bits that are no doubt elsewhere. I almost wish I had a personal social media consultant-guru that could build for me a healthy diet of media and communication. Like an ‘information dietitian‘ – with accountant qualities who can show me a return on investment (ROI)… my investment being; my time, my comments and possibly my money – although I think this new information economy doesn’t require money anymore. Who knows, maybe my prediction will come true?
I read today via a TweetDeck update that a New York Times journalist in 1909 predicted that in 100 yrs New York would have no cars, we’re now 100 years later and his prediction hasn’t quite come true. Shame really, it makes sense that highly populated areas don’t have cars.
On Tuesdays I look after a friend’s dog and this gives me a chance to be very aware of a dog’s body clock – AKA their bladder. Unfortunately every Tuesday for about a month now it has rained and in case you haven’t heard me say it before, a shower in Miami is far from the showers and drizzle we experience in the UK. When it rains here it pours. In fact, I just took a moment right then to take him out and the heavens opened. Imagine walking between two rows of people, ten/twelve people in length and each one of them is throwing buckets of water at you – then you have the equivalent of a brief shower in Miami. Merge that with a warm breeze and bad Latino drivers and it’s like the Fun House has made a come back stateside (btw – Pat Sharp’s Fun-House-hairstyle would be twice the size in this humidity)!
Apologies, I totally and utterly digress with all the above – what I really wanted to share in this post is my recent trip to San Francisco! Some of you have seen the pics and others have heard the stories – but heck, why not? I’ll summerise it all again…
After being so generously invited by friends who have relocated to San Francisco from London about 2yrs ago, I had a bed I just needed a plane ticket. $5 and a few thousand air miles later and I was ready to go (yup a $5 return ticket!). Now, I know American Airlines is a life experience not to be missed (?!) but should a passenger, like myself waiting to board, be worried when one of the 70+yr old air stewardess dabs a fair few too many drops of rescue remedy onto her tongue???
Moving on… having been ever so slightly cooped up in Miami for about 15months, Mark and I had done Key West and gone to Naples for a weekend but I hadn’t been out of Florida and really seen much else of the States. I was ready for a breathe of fresh air.
My wish was granted. As soon as I stepped outside the airport I could breathe! I got in the cab (driven by a man from Richmond, small world – although a bit abrupt, telling me off for calling it San Fran and not San Francisco… sorry but for the purpose of this entry I’m calling it SF). It wasn’t long before I met with our friend in the center of SF and we were catching up on a year or two’s worth of goss. As she drove me to her place in Sausalito on the way there we were up and down all the high streets, if you’ve never been to SF it’s hard to describe, but I’ll give it a go – a little like Postman Pat’s van bobbing over the northern landscape but overly populated with lots of quirky looking late 19th/early 20th century townhouses on either side of the road? Your car really does go up and down over steep, steep hills – it’s a roller coaster ride and a real-life Inception trip. In fact I’ve just stumbled across this rather amusing clip on You Tube of Americans trying to use clutch control while parking on one of the steepest hills in SF:
I was lucky enough to have several trips across the Golden Gate and see it at all different times of day and in many different weathers too. We arrived in Sausalito as the clouds lifted and what a beautifully, quaint neighbourhood. As we headed up another steep hill we arrived at their tree house which would be my home for a few days with a newly acquired flatmate Twitch…
I found myself high from the oxygen emitted from all the trees that surrounded me – I don’t think I stopped smiling. The humidity of Miami and flat landscape of Florida seemed worlds away and such a very different part of the USA.
Day two of the trip consisted of a whole day jammed full of stuff to do… a chartered sailing boat with crew sailed us around the Bay. Amazing. They said it was probably the best weather they had for sailing that season, it was windy but so invigorating. A seal was bobbing about, just chilling in the bay and the Golden Gate looked as strong and proud as the postcards portray it, and as the champagne flowed our ‘hen’ was appropriately happy amongst the bubbles, the laughter and the chat – whilst a lot of us had only met for the first time everyone was so down to earth and we all bantered as if we’d met years before.
We anchored at Angel Island and took a walk, did a bit of Geo-Caching and then headed back to the boat for the last leg of our trip. When we docked it was back to the tree house to brush out the knots in our hair and freshen up for a night out in the Financial District. The ferry took us past Alcatraz which I hope to revisit in the future. As we sipped G&Ts it was a very peaceful and civilised 30mins before the sun set over SF and the night of good food and great company was in full swing. The Piano Duel at an Irish Pub in the centre of SF topped off the night as we requested a Spice Girls number and they probably pulled off the best ‘zig-a-zig-ah’ cover in the USA – wish we had recorded it!
The following day included the most amazing drive via a British pub and then up and a little trek further to the top of Mount Tam. I’ll let the pictures do the talking. When we reached the top, a Fire Marshall is on watch and it would appear he has a little helper…
My last day in SF was just as visually stimulating, my friend took me on a whistle stop drive through the beautiful Golden Gate Park, past the museums I will be returning to and then we defied the laws of gravity and parked almost 90 degrees to the cross street to explore the famous Haight Street. A fab vibe, reminiscent of Camden Lock back in the 90s (and maybe 80s? but I remember the 90s). Just as we arrived there was a fire in one of the houses, I was amazed at the number of folk stopping to do a bit of citizen journalism so I snapped them snapping away.
So as the sun set on my trip to one of the most beautiful cities I have been to, I inhaled one last deep breathe of fresh air and headed south again to share my experiences.
I hope to not leave it so long until my next post. I’m off traveling again soon so I’ll be sure to post in a couple of weeks. WTS.
Bye for now…
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Tagged Alcatraz, American Airlines, Angel Island, BBC, cat, chartered boat, dogs, Facebook, Financial District, fresh air, funhouse, Geo-Caching, Golden Gate Bridge, Haight St, Hills, Irish Pub, Miami, Mount Tam, mountains, New York Times, Pat Sharp, Piano Duel, postman pat, rattle snake, San Francisco, Sausalito, social media, Spice Girls, Stinson Beach, sunset, TED, the bay, trees, Tweet Deck, Twitter, Victorian Architecture, You Tube