Rolling Ball Sculpture: Day One (and Two)

It has happened!  Not even two weeks following my conversation with the artist at my friend’s party in Columbus, OH, I have started on my very first rolling ball sculpture!

I went back and read the referenced post just a moment ago, and was surprised at just how closely the following events had mirrored the conversation.  I did decide to start on a smaller scale, I did decide to use copper, and I am working in my living room (although I did not tear up the carpet…but give it time).

I started work on 8/11/08, having purchased supplies at Lowe’s earlier in the day.  For the curious, this is what the beginnings of a rolling ball sculpture look like:

This is art.  Really.  It\'s just kind of in the \

The orange stuff is a roll of Romex wire, the kind you use if you’re wiring up your house.  It was the easiest way I had of getting a roll of 10 gauge copper wire in bulk.  Still not cheap, but I have it.  The tools are for tooling things, the sockets to the lower right of that are for bending wire around to make curves as are the aerosol can and the silver can to its right.  There’s also a soldering iron and the bits that go with it: flux, brushes, solder.

You’ll notice that, like a good kid, I set a board down on my table so that I don’t burn the tabletop as much and so that my workspace is enlarged. 

The first night I figured out what kind of design element I wanted to start with, and then spent several hours trying to get it shaped.  I also spent an hour on the phone with my engineer brother getting help on figuring out the optimum track width for the two rails the ball will ride on.  This is fun, but there is some definite science that goes into it.  He had to go find a scientific calculator so that we could do a square root problem!  We got the answer, though.  It’s .4 inches, thank you very much.

At the end of the night I had this:

Woohoo!  A piece of bent wire!

Note the intricately curved piece of wire, dial caliper, and sheet of paper with bending diagram.  Like I said, fun, but not exactly off-the-cuff stuff!  Maybe I make it difficult sometimes, but I wanted a nice, clean bend.  Guess that’s me.

Night two was more wire bending.  This is challenging, because you cant just bend the exact shape you did previously.  The diameters of the curves are different depending on if the wire is following an inside or an outside curve.  It’s pretty demanding to bend everything and get it to line up perfectly, and I’m not really that good at it.  I’m probably 60% there with things as they stand.  Check it:

Squiggly stuff that doesn\'t quite line up right.

The picture quality is poor, but you can get the idea that stuff isn’t lining up all nice and nifty like it’s supposed to.  When I got to this point I remembered a phrase I’d read a lot on the Yahoo RBS group: “You’ll have to tweak it.”  I guess my time to tweak has arrived.

Lower down in the photo you can also see a couple of T-shaped pieces.  These are my soldering experiments.  Soldering is used to join copper, and it uses a metal that melts at a relatively low heat point.  Of course, it’s not as easy as holding an iron to it and then sticking the solder wire up against the joint.  Oh no!  There’s proper joint preparation (“Make sure it’s clean!  Use flux!  Make sure the pieces butt together!), and proper soldering technique (“You need something that’ll heat the joint quickly, but not for too long!  Don’t burn it, or the solder won’t stick!  You’ll have to isolate the joint you’re working on or you’ll melt something you already did that’s close to it!”)  This is…fun?

The first night I used a soldering iron that I had.  The results had me less than pleased.  The solder didn’t “flow” on like it was supposed to, it globbed on like chewing gum, or, dare I say it – boogers.  That’s gross, but then so was my solder joint – boogery.  See for yourself:

The one on the right is the first night’s attempt.  See how the solder is all globbed up?  That’s called a “cold” joint.  It’s not sturdy, and looks ugly.  It would most likely vibrate apart if used on the sculpture.

Following that attempt, I got online the next day and read a bunch of posts from the Yahoo group.  I also received some direct email replies to a builder who had used copper in the past.  He told me I needed a torch, like a micro torch or just a plain old plumber’s torch like they use to sweat pipe joints.  I went and bought one.  Right before I quit for the night I made a simple test, and the photo above and below shows the improvement:

In this pic you can see the backside of the work, and it becomes readily apparent just how suck-ass-y the soldered joint really is.  The torched joint on the right is nice and smooth looking.  The soldered joint on the right didn’t even flow around to the back side of the work area.  There’s a big blog of solder on the front, and nothing at all on the back.  Marble-iffic disaster would have surely resulted if such unsound practices were employed on this project.  While this isn’t a nuclear reactor, it’d be a cruel denoument if my sculpture snapped and broke apart piece by piece after I’d completed it.  Now I know it wasn’t just my amateur soldering skills, it was my tools.  Since I’m set up with some decent tools now, I should be set with solder joints…until something else comes up to frustrate me.

So there we are, kids!  Two days closer to marble-rolling bliss!  I can’t wait to see the finished product – I have no clue what it’s going to look like, and I can make it do absolutely ANYTHING I want it to do!

Changing of the Venue #2 – “Latte, please.”

Events transpired much more quickly than I could have anticipated. When I wrote the first Change of Venue blog on Friday night I knew I was going to visit a friend in Ohio on Saturday. I did not know that the following conversation would take place once I was in Ohio:

Friend: “You need anything? ‘Nother drink?”
Me: “Eh, maybe. Not sure what I want though.”
F: “Another diet Coke?”
M: “Nah.”
F: “Coffee?”
M: “Hmm…maybe.”
F: “There’s a great coffee shop down the street.”
M: “Really? You know, on my latest blog I’ve been saying I was going to blog from a coffee shop…”

I didn’t go right at that moment, but the thought stayed in my head, and today when my friend asked, “So, wanna do anything in particular?” I said, “Well, I think I’ll go write from that coffee shop. Not only is it a change of venue, it’s a change of state.”

So here I am, hanging out in a place called Stauf’s drinking a latte and enjoying the hell out of myself. It’s been a fabulous weekend hanging out with my friends, and this makes the desire to write rise to the surface. It’s pretty easy to sit down and scriptulate when I’m not in my house with its many ready distractions (finishing the shower, cleaning, laundry, replacing the oil pan on the Chevelle – you know, the usual).

This place is pretty much how you’d want a coffee shop to be. It’s an independent, so it looks suitable cool and funky. There are the requisite 20-somethings with appropriately unkempt-looking hair working the counter. Without moving my head at all I can spot four other laptops. A red-haired girl sits to my right working on something out of a school text, and the necessary dude in dreadlocks just walked in with his canvas man purse slung to one side. It’s all rolled together into a cliche with which I’m quite comfortable right now (oh, and by the way, if anyone can instruct me as to how to put the accent marks over the “e” for latte and for cliche, I’d sure love to know. The incorrectness is driving me nuts.)

I can’t be much of anything except relaxed right now. I’ve got air conditioning, caffeine, and a laptop. I’m doing one of the things I love to do most right now, and it is physically impossible for me to be removed for some other task at this moment. Call it escapist if you like, but I really think it’s just exploiting a window of opportunity. I love my window.

Speaking of, there is a wall of windows immediately to my left. This is an old store front along a row of similar buildings. It could have been a grocery in the past, or a hardware store, or a dress shop, but the idea back then was that you’d have all your wares displayed in the windows so that when folks walked by (as there were no malls back in those glorious days) people could see things that might attract their attention, and then come inside for a look, and hopefully a purchase.

What this affords me in the present day is a gorgeous view of the street outside. The weather this weekend has been unbelievably gorgeous – cool, breezy, hardly any humidity. It’s the definition of perfect Midwestern weather. As such there is a large amount of foot traffic, and I have the opportunity to do some people watching, plus some machinery watching as various cars and motorcycles wheel past.

I have no desire to leave this place. Actually, several times when I’ve visited here I’ve thought that this town, and this particular part of this town, is really where I should move to, and really for no reason at all other than the fact that I get a good vibe from it. Then again, my friends and their kids are so awesome, maybe I just take those feelings and throw them out into the area.

It’s probably a combination of factors, perhaps just the desire to escape from the reality of some of my responsibilities back home. Tomorrow will lead to yet another day at the same old job, the job that doesn’t encourage growth in any of my natural abilities. Hell, last night I had the greatest conversation with another woman at my friend’s house. She’s running an art studio, and so we talked about various creative pursuits, and she was very encouraging of my desire to build some kinetic art – those rolling ball sculptures that I’ve got in the back of my head. She asked me why I hadn’t done any of it yet, and I said, “Well, I got some parts made up for it, and then I realized how big it was going to have to be, and I don’t have room to build that big!” And she said, “It’s too bad you don’t live around here or you could rent one of my studios. We need someone like that in there.” And in my head there was this little voice going, “YES! That’s what I need! I need a place to build these things!”

So I said, “Yeah, I can’t find space like that close enough to my house to make it worthwhile. But I still want to do it. I was thinking last night, ‘I really don’t use my dining room furniture. I should just get rid of it, get rid of my stereo, some other stuff, then I could just build the whole thing in my living room.”
She said, “You should do that! You obviously want to build it!”
I replied, “I did think about it, and I would do that, but then I’d have to tear up the carpet, ’cause I’d set it on fire with the welding.”
She said, “Is it nice carpet?”
“No. It’s gross. It’s turquoise.”
“Then you should totally do that!”

I love that. I love that thinking. ‘Tear up your carpet, sell your furniture, and build something.’ Really, the world works for me like that. I’m still probably not going to do it, but to have a conversation with someone who thinks that’s a good idea – that just makes the world a better place for me to live in.

What we did discuss me doing is working, or at least starting, on a smaller scale. We talked about copper wire as opposed to recycled car and motorcycle parts. I’d like to make a tabletop design for a relative of mine, a little boy who loves to sit still and watch things. I’m going to go to the hardware store and see what I can find in the way of materials.

My latte has nearly bottomed out here, my friends. I believe it’s time for me to go. I’m glad you could all come along with me for my off-site, outta-state litscribblings. Stay tuned for posts from the shop, and – Kevin’s ultimate curiosity – the meaning of writing “from the pits at the drag strip.” Rock on.

Changing of the Venue #1 – The Shower Floor

Spawned from a blog written by my the Coxswain of Literary Greatness, Kevin Alexander, I was moved (quite literally) to try writing in different locations to see how that would affect my writing.  Now, while our boy Kev was talking about changing his location from the East Coast to Lake Tahoe, due to financial constraints, I’ve scaled things down a bit.

While I would love to say that I did something as creatively romantic as jumping online, picking a last-minute cheapo fare, and jetted off to Colorado, Arizona, the Bahamas, or Belize, where we actually find ourselves at this specific moment is sitting on the floor of my as-yet finished shower in my bathroom.

Welcome to my office.

That’s right, kids, I’ve traveled all the way from the desk in my bedroom (office?) some fifteen or so feet to the bathroom.  I wondered if being physically positioned at ground zero of a weeks-long and frustrating shower replacement would have any effect on my prose.  Follow along as we find out.

Tonight I finished doing some caulking work, finished it laughingly badly, I might add.  Tip: never “wait a few minutes” after caulking to go back and smooth down the bead.  That gooey trail of sealer you walked away from only moments ago will have suddenly become a thick-skinned bead of impenetrable whiteness.  Good luck smoothing it into an unnoticeable seam!

There are short lengths of two-by-fours in here with me, used primarily to keep the step stool I have to keep using from scarring up the floor of the shower.  This has helped, I suppose, but it looks like I’ve managed to mark up the surface with unidentifiable black marks here and there, probably due to the careless placement of random tools at one time or another.  Perhaps I should be angry about this, but at this point, I’ve been so long without my very own shower, I really could care less.  If scuff remove doesn’t take them out, there will be no tears from me.  I just want my shower back!

I’m in a slightly better mood about all of this at the moment, mainly due to the fact that it seems I’ve finally turned a major corner in this whole charade and will soon be enjoying running water, much like they did in the 30s, once again.  That is, I will if I can find a replacement for some faucet surrounds I threw out before realizing that they were specific to this apparent one-off production of a shower faucet that I have been blessed with by a previous “plumber.”

Now, sitting here and going through all this, I’m getting a little aggravated again.  You know what I’m not going to do before I go to bed, after having gotten all hot doing caulk work and roughing in the shower head?  Well, I’m NOT going to take a shower?  Why, you ask?  Well, because I don’t have on yet!

Still, may I say that it was silly of me to think that this whole operation could be completed in a couple of weekends.  For normal people this might be the case, but I have a life that is not like that of my father, a home craftsman who I still admire as if he were Joseph of Aramathea’s very own apprentice.  I’m sure dad laughed to himself a tiny bit when I outlined my plans.  He had to have known I’d not pull this off as easily or quickly as I’d thought, but he kept quiet and let me work through it myself, and that’s probably a good thing.  I’m sure I’d not have been in the mood to listen to why “that’s a rather ambitious plan.”  Instead, I got to find out myself how, when you plan on doing a “simple” replacement of one horribly crappy shower insert with another, much better one, you can’t “just pull that one out and put the other one in.”  Oh no.  See, you have to get the floor level, that can take most of an afternoon, figuring in trips to the hardware store for supplies.  Then, you have to get the walls positioned and squared.  There’s another afternoon, figuring in a trip to the hardware store for supplies.  After they’ve been roughed in, you’ll realize that you really should repaint at least the worst part of the ceiling, and then you’ll realize that you didn’t paint down far enough to meet the new lower walls of the replacement shower.  What’s that?  You say you didn’t know that they could possibly be shorter?  Well, they are, so there you go.

All this priming, painting, drying, trial-fitting, hardware-store-tripping, and whatnot is easily going to eat up two weeks, given that you don’t have four hours every night to work on it.

Let us not forget, either, that you will find out that nothing fits together the way you thought it would, that the previous “craftsman” installed plumbing in such a way as to cause more work for you when you’re trying to do it in a way that doesn’t absolutely suck ass, and that you still have to make more trips to the hardware store.

So here I sit, surrounded by tools, parts, and supplies, hoping against all odds that the plumbing shop I heard about will be open tomorrow morning so I can buy JUST ONE MORE THING and thusly be able to finish off the final, final, FINAL bits of plumbing, install the shower rod, hang the curtain, and then…hold my breath as I turn on the water and, much like Noah, pray that nothing leaks.

I hope you all enjoy the good fortune of a functioning personal bathing facility.  I envy you all.

Stay tuned for future Venue posts, when I’ll be bringing you inspired ramblings from “the coffee shop, or out in the garage in the workshop, or sitting in the pits at the drag strip.”  Should be a real gas.

Not-So-Great Expectations

“Hi,” I said, stepping into the room with that “I think I belong here?” look on my face.

It was my first night of a new fiction writers group that I was trying out. This was pretty much a blind date situation. I’d found mention of the group on the web site for the local writers’ association. It was titled as a fiction group, and the description basically said, “We’re a fiction group. We meet twice a month. Email (address) for more information.

On the day I found this notice I realized that they were having a meeting that very night. In mild fit of enthusiastic discovery glee I got home from work, cleaned up and changed, packed all my writerly things into my bag: laptop, some story hard copies, pens, CDs, etcetera, and headed over to the meeting. I arrived a few minutes early, and the door to the lobby was open, but the main door was locked. I waited until the 7pm start time. Nothin’. I waited five minutes. Still nothin’. I waited another five. Some dude walked through who apparently was doing sculpture in another room. He smiled. I smiled back and looked like I was sitting on the floor waiting for something to happen, which is precisely what I was doing. I waited another ten minutes, and at twenty past the hour, gave up on my mission and returned home, puzzled.

Still puzzled (a five minute drive did nothing to quell my curiosity – I’m just that tenacious), I pulled the web site up again and sent an email to the address. Again with the waiting. One day. Nothing. Two days. Nothing. About six days later I was fortunate to actually have some time off from work during the day, and I stopped by the writing center office (which is conveniently only open during standard business hours exactly like the ones I work myself). I poked my head in the door and asked what was up with the fiction group. The nice woman in the office kindly informed me that the web site had been having problems, and the folks with related email addresses had not been getting their email, but that it had just been corrected that very morning, and I’d surely hear from someone shortly.

This turned out to be the wonderfully true, and I received an email form the leader of the group within 24 hours of that conversation. He apologized for the delay, and gave me a few bits of information about the group, general size and whatnot, and the meeting dates. In a follow-up email he explained that they’d “had an event” and wouldn’t be meeting until the 16th of July. Okay, all good in the hood…but I still didn’t know much about the group!

So here I was, resplendent in my “writer’s finery” (which was adequately distressed-looking blue jeans and a suitably casual yet stylish long sleeve T-shirt), laptop bag over my shoulder, face to face with what looked like – a small business meeting! There were several gentleman sitting in the corner of large-ish room inside of a square of couches and chairs. The youngest guy was probably seven or eight years older than me, and the oldest guy looked like he might be in his seventies. Dress slacks and button-downs were in full force. My brain was going, “Uh…where are the writer dudes? Shouldn’t there be at least one kid here who looks like he works at Starbuck’s while trying to write the next great American novel featuring a cast of characters that work at acceptably hip jobs like coffee shops, bars, and record stores? And…where are the cute, geeky girls???! Gah!”

With all this going through my head I smiled and said, “Is this – uh – the writers group?”

“That’s right,” answered a man in the far right corner of the furniture-delineated square. “Have a seat.”

Expectations duly smashed, I took a seat at one of the couches and introduced myself. Negativity and Positivity are duking it out in my head: “Oh, shit. What the hell am I going to have to sit through?! I’m not gonna meet any cool writers that I’ll bond with and then start sharing fun and exciting writer-type emails with, or hanging out with at coffee shops while we craft our masterpieces – and there aren’t any girls!” and then there was the part of me that made some sense “Dude, cool it. These guys are writers. They are in a writing group, and you are NOT, at least not quite yet. By that very fact, they have an edge in literary awesomeness over you. You are a rookie. You had a great thing going in your old two-person group with Adam, but this is a different story. Besides, a number of the writers you read and like are so damn old they’re DEAD! One of these guys could be some sort of word-wielding genius who could smite your ambitions with a single keystroke of his vintage manual Royal typewriter. Sit, listen, and be open. You are right where you need to be.”

So I sat and listened, and here’s what unfolded.

Most of these gentleman were guys just like me who just wanted to write. Largely they were unpublished, with a few having some works out in the public arena. We had no presiding Tolstoys or Hemingways, but they were all serious about what they were doing, be it fantasy, children’s lit, historic fiction, or weird crap like I write. Based on their plain-spoken intentions, and the fact that they all were really writing stuff, and had it sitting there with them to prove it, things seemed to be looking pretty decent.

Turns out the group has had as many as a dozen people, and as few as four or five. At one point I guess they were so big they had to meet at the tables set up in the same room, and they had to set a limit on the number of works that could be reviewed at each meeting, as meeting times had started pegging the three hour mark. The group has been meeting for a few years now, though there are only two “old guard” members left.

The structure of the group is that works are sent out via email during the two week intervals, and the individuals review and make comments on hard copies. At the group meetings the comments are then made public to the group. While comments are made the author is not allowed to speak unless a minor point needs to be clarified. This avoids continuous interruptions for the commenters, and it also allows the author to hear exactly how their work would be perceived if handed out to a total stranger, as would be the case if the work were published.

Comments are not meant to be flames. It is suggested that they take the form of impressions as in, “Well, I had trouble with this paragraph,” or “I kind of got confused about who the character was addressing here,” rather than, “You should change this scene, and put these people in a car,” or, “They shouldn’t cuss so much.” The above two guidelines for the group really made sense to me in two or three levels, and seemed well-designed to provide for a constructive and productive atmosphere. It seemed to me that the group had been around long enough to hammer out all the bumps and create a good feedback environment. I was pretty sold on that.

As I was new I took it upon myself to simply be a listener and relax. Everything went very smoothly, and I enjoyed my time in the group, lack of hip youth and females notwithstanding. Ultimately, I’m there to write. In some fashion or other this is helping me get connected with a writing community to which I’d previously been denied, if only by my own reluctance to search it out. I’m taking steps to be involved, and I’m pretty happy about that. Besides, the guy who looked like he was seventy? He used to race roundy-round cars back in the fifties! Rock on with that. Oh, and the group leader says he’s thinking of buying a motorcycle. I smiled, thought of my BMW, and told him I’d be happy to speak with him on the subject.

I’m not sure exactly what I was expecting of the group, but I’ll happily toss out those expectations of perceived hipness and youth for what I did get – a chance to interact with writers. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to go review some fiction for next week’s meeting.

Step Right this Way

In writing this post I christen my new(est) blog. I have others, some public, some not, some still in existence, some inexplicably deleted. While this particular blog has been in existence for some time now (two months, actually!), I have futzed and fretted about what exactly to do with it. My blogs in the past have all had one thing in common: it was pretty hard to find them unless you knew me personally and I told you about it. This one has my name plastered across the top of it, prompting me to take careful consideration into just what I was going to do with it. Since I’m not one to just throw it all out there without regard for the consequences, I had to do some thinking. Granted, hordes of random people are likely not ever going to come looking for me on the interwebz, but if they do, I want to make sure that what I set out for them here is something that I can be okay with, perhaps even proud of.

It’s actually my youngest brother, Ben, who prompted this whole thing. We were talking about blogs one night as we worked on the Chevelle, and I believe I’d been making noises about having a web site for some of my photographs and perhaps writing as well, something that would be directly linked to my name. Within 24 hours of his departure I get an email from him. It says, “Here’s your new blog,” and has a link. Ask and ye shall receive, even if you weren’t sure you were asking for it!

I took a look at it and went, “Woah! That’s my REAL NAME on there!” This wasn’t my usual mode of operation, and yet it related to exactly what I’d discussed with him the day before. Now what? The thinking began. I hemmed. I hawed. I considered many things (lots of them only as a way of delaying making a decision about the blog). I wanted the blog to have a distinct angle, a slant, a focus. I told Ben as much, but I couldn’t figure out how I was going to do that without feeling like I was putting my entire life out to the public. I think big, kids, probably too big at times, but I also know that, if you want to find someone on the web, it’s only a matter of time before you can root them out, and I have a pretty strong desire to present myself in an acceptable manner to random strangers who may stumble across this thing while trying to find some photographer’s web site that happens to share my exact same name (more on that later).

After much thought, and what seems like a pretty obvious return to my original statement, I’ve decided to dedicate this blog to my creative pursuits. There may occasionally be some overlap here between this blog and some of my others, but largely I’ll be writing here about my photographic and literary pursuits. Music and other arts may come into play here on occasion as well.

In my first post my creative news centers not just on the introduction of the blog, but my writing life as well. Tonight I’m off to try out my first writers group meeting. There is a statewide organization for writers that is very fortunately located close to my house. I found out about a fiction writer’s group that meets on alternate Wednesdays, and I’m making the leap to check it out. I have the usual trepidations: What if people think I suck? What if they laugh at my work? What if they’re all deluded crackpots? What if they like me, and – gasp! – they want to READ MY STUFF OUT LOUD!!!

Whatever. Tonight is a step out onto the tightrope of life experiences. I’ll learn something from it. Hopefully it will lead to some great experiences in the group, some growth for me, and maybe some new writing friends. At the very least, it will provide me with fodder for another blog entry.

Welcome to the creative journey, kids. Step right this way. You are allowed to bring your own snacks, and there is no minimum height requirement. Enjoy the ride with me.