Category: Uncategorized

  • All Hail the Slarf

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Sunday, March 6, 2011.  You may read the original article here.

    It’s a pity Blogspot doesn’t have a reblog feature.  I saw this at Hipster Runoff today, it is glorious for more reasons than I care to enumerate here.  I give you the Slarf:

                                            


    Original Article: Is the Sleeve Scarf the next big alt fashion trend? R u gonna buy a slarf?

  • Seated Figure

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Monday, February 28, 2011.  You may read the original article here.

    MAN do I hate drawing hands!  I need a new scanner, would you believe me if I said that the shoes and socks are black on the original?  Seriously! 

    I hate that it picks up all the shading strokes that can’t be distinguished on the original, and none of the light lines that make up the hair and other fine details.

  • Fundamental Wrongness

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Monday, January 31, 2011.  You may read the original article here.

    Something I love is finding out that I’m wrong about the way something in the world works.

    (more…)

  • What I Played in 2010

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Friday, December 24, 2010.  You may read the original article here.

    Just like Notch!  Okay, I was planning on doing this anyway, but his blogpost got me to do it now.

    (more…)

  • Serpent Babel

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Wednesday, December 8, 2010.  You may read the original article here.

    Today I talk about the Bible and Snakes and Harry Potter and Milton, I guess.

    (more…)

  • Infinite Elephants

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Monday, December 6, 2010.  You may read the original article here.

    Here’s the latest thing I’d like to share.  From the fantastic mind of Vi Hart, doodling infinite elephants.

       

    Those of you who know me are aware this is a pretty fantastic representation of the way I think at any given moment.

  • Fall

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Sunday, November 14, 2010.  You may read the original article here.

    Autumn Song

    Know’st thou not at the fall of the leaf
    How the heart feels a languid grief
       Laid on it for a covering,
       And how sleep seems a goodly thing

    In Autumn at the fall of the leaf?

    And how the swift beat of the brain
    Falters because it is in vain,
       In Autumn at the fall of the leaf
       Knowest thou not? and how the chief
    Of joys seems—not to suffer pain?

    Know’st thou not at the fall of the leaf
    How the soul feels like a dried sheaf
       Bound up at length for harvesting,
       And how death seems a comely thing
    In Autumn at the fall of the leaf?

    –Dante Gabriel Rosetti, 1883

  • Thoughts: The Secret of Kells and Traditional Animation

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Monday, October 25, 2010.  You may read the original article here.

    Traditional animation is a dying art.  Within, why this is bad, and how a small film by a no-name studio fought back.

    (more…)

  • Beginning, End

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Friday, October 15, 2010.  You may read the original article here.

    I urge everybody to read the short story “Beginning, End” by Jessica Soffer, a new up-and-coming author.  I’ve had it open in a tab for three days because I don’t want to lose it.  I hope that you will not want to lose it either.

  • The Prime of Life

    Note: The following was originally posted on the old LordBlognStuff page on Thursday, October 14, 2010.  You may read the original article here.

    “Our indifference to money was a luxury we could afford only because we had enough of it to avoid real poverty and the need for hard or unpleasant work. Our open-mindedness was bound up with a cultural background and the sort of social activities accessible only to people of our social class. It was our conditioning as young petit bourgeois intellectuals that led us to believe ourselves free of all conditioning whatsoever.”

    Simon de Beauvoir, The Prime of Life

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started