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Tuesday, November 30, 2010

CREATIVITY ACTIVATE!

Just realized that my recent posts all have photos in them. So, in order to keep up with the flow, I'll be publishing MY artworks (ehem!) created with AppleWorks in the succeeding entries. On that note, I'd be totally remiss if I won't mention that I set out to do such because I was inspired by someone whose blog I follow. I admit that my drawings don't hold a candle to hers; all the same, I take pride in whatever creative stuff my hands can do.



The one that started it all! lol


After seeing my first AppleWorks Drawing output, an officemate-slash-friend
requested that I also make her one, with the sun as the subject
and her favorite color as the background.
Monday, November 29, 2010

STRESS STRESSED

Monday, November 08, 2010

AN EYE CANDY FOR ORIGAMI LOVERS LIKE ME

Here's the recent list of origami books and kits I'm supposed to be excited about yet not to have at the moment (oh, there goes negativism again!), but someday who knows I just might (see, there's still hope for someone like me). They list for $6.95 to $24.95.

(Source: Tuttle catalog Bookshelves Issue 04/10)

Friday, November 05, 2010

I WISH I HAD ONE OF AMORSOLO'S

I have invariably marveled at artworks of Filipino pride and recognized as the first National Artist for Painting Fernando Amorsolo. For everytime I see one of his paintings, even in pictures, it's as if I know where that place is and it feels like I have been there. The odd familiarity of the landscapes and the scenes in his paintings always makes me feel "home." So, imagine me swelling with pride when I incidentally learned that he spent his childhood years in Daet, Camarines Norte. First I thought that we probably have the same gene pool of Bicolano, but I eventually found out that he just spent the first 13 years of his life in Bicol and was actually born in Manila. At any rate, it's just the same: at some point in our lives, we had breathed the same air. And that makes me a little prouder of where I'm from.

Here are some of his works (which actually number 10,000+ by the way):

Planting Rice, oil on canvas,1951, 24x34

Sunday Morning Going to Town, oil on canvas, 1958

Fruit Pickers Under the Mango Tree, oil on canvas, 1937, 25 1/4 x 37 1/2

Planting Rice with Mayon Volcano, oil on canvas, 1949, 70x100.5
Tuesday, November 02, 2010

VERBALIZED

The Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary primarily denotes "verbalize" as an action word that means "to speak or write verbosely" or "to express something in words," but its transitive use "to convert — a word, especially a noun — into a verb" is the best definition of the word at which I'm going to peg this topic.

As it has been said many times and I'm sure will sound the most banal idea within one's lifetime, the advent of technological advances has allowed man to do things posthaste with just a few clicks and tricks. Consistent with this great leap is our penchant in anything "terse" and "easy." It is as if we are running out of time and need to accomplish eleventh-hour day-to-day tasks one after another. We tend to shorten ways to deal with them, even to speak of them. We tend, therefore, to "verbalize" the seemingly kilometric-long description of the things we do: in one word.

Funny, but I've recently figured out that I encounter these "verbed" words every day, just by looking straight ahead or simply snooping into someone else's loud thoughts.

For one, as I was aboard the commuter train en route to work this noon, I noticed these plastic handles enclosing an advert of haircare product Vitress, which instead of being prolix in their promotion of the product, conveniently just have something like "Shine More. Get Vitressed." So if you want your hair to be as shiny as a newly polished pair of shoes, "Vitress." Short yet a very good copy for an out-of-home advertisement, to speak nothing of its chiming in with its fast-paced target consumers who are commuter train riders.

Among professional photographers, shutterbugs and specifically those who are not quite gifted with "the eye" (which actually include me), the word "Photoshop," or "photoshop" to be politically correct, is commonplace. Using the word "photoshop" — a registered name for a computer program — to tweak photos gained ground during the 1990s and is as popular today as it was then.

Another popular word of this kind — and easily my favorite — is the ubiquitous "Google," also "google." The search engine's proprietary name has been for years synonymous with "research." That is, if you are going to research for something on the Internet, "google it on Google" (one can use Yahoo! though, just to be fair). Of late I've been wondering what will happen if in the future a much more ace search engine is invented. Would we still use "google"? Or maybe I'm just one of those technology casualties who still are pitiably behindhand of this computer stuffs and unaware that there's already a better "Google" out there. I hope not.

To transfer a file from an electronic device to another one, e.g. from a cellphone to a computer or vice versa, through short-range wireless connection between them, we have been wont to say the colloquial phrase: "Bluetooth it"; "eBay it" when we talk about, yes, that popular online marketplace; and "YouTube it" if we need to watch a video on "the largest video-sharing community" on the Internet.

Indeed, verbing words seems to be the standard nowadays and one can talk about lots of them here, but let's just make this short, can we?

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