It was -12 °F earlier this morning, with a windchill of -37. And much worse elsewhere. May all in the weather be safe.
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
Angry robot
[Nancy, January 30, 2019.]
Everyone in the robotics club is mad at Nancy for skipping pre-competition practice, even the robot.
This bit of pareidolia owes something to Ernie Bushmiller. See, for instance, this school.
You can read Nancy by Bushmiller and by Olivia Jaimes at GoComics.
By Michael Leddy at 9:43 AM comments: 0
Peanuts chute
[Peanuts, February 2, 1972. Click for a larger view.]
There must be a chute. Sally has written to a pen pal — that’s why “a letter” is something that flies over the ocean.
See also: Slywy’s collection of mail chutes.
[Yesteryear’s Peanuts is this year’s Peanuts.]
By Michael Leddy at 9:43 AM comments: 0
BAGS TO RAGE
I misread — an honest late-night mistake — a screen title in an episode of Tidying Up with Marie Kondo last night.
By Michael Leddy at 9:43 AM comments: 0
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Joe Namath on TV
How strange to see Joe Namath doing a commercial for Medicare Coverage Helpline. He claims to have called and discovered that he is eligible for dental and prescription coverage, private home aides, and rides to medical appointments.
I’m not sure which scenario is worse to contemplate: that Joe Namath needs these benefits, or that he’s willing to say that he does to make some money. O television!
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November 6, 2019: A new commercial omits Namath’s claim about his eligibility: Here it is.
By Michael Leddy at 5:29 PM comments: 7
Recently updated
Harvest Refill Leads Now with new info from the Musgrave Pencil Company.
By Michael Leddy at 11:28 AM comments: 0
Strunk and Kondo
[Tidying Up with Marie Kondo (2019). Click for a larger, messier view.]
Look: it’s a copy of the paperback third edition of The Elements of Style, front and nearly center. I swear, even at a distance that book is as instantly recognizable as, say, T.S. Eliot’s Complete Poems and Plays, or a pack of Luckies.
This fleeting image is from the brief introduction to the Netflix series Tidying Up with Marie Kondo. Kondo is tapping the books to wake them up. No, really. I haven’t seen the episode with these books yet, but I will already guess that many of them did not survive long past the exterminating angel’s wakeup call.
Elaine and I have watched just two episodes of this series, which I would describe as Amélie meets Hoarders. In truth, the problems with stuff in the episodes we’ve seen are milder than the problems of hoarders. But the problems are still severe enough to make me think that our household is pretty well organized by comparison. (Phew.) Then again, we have been folding for some time now, under the Kondo spell.
Related posts
“Hands off my piles” : Marie Kondo and poker : Salzberg’s Theory of Pizza : Tidy? : The unmysterious Art of Discarding : All OCA Strunk and White posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:34 AM comments: 7
“A North-west passage to the intellectual world”
Walter Shandy has been at work on the Tristrapædia, a system for the education of his son. He explains to Parson Yorick:
Auxiliary verbs? Really? Yes, indeed. They “set the soul a going by herself upon the materials as they are brought to her,” “to open new tracks of enquiry, and make every idea engender millions”:
Laurence Sterne, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman 5 (1762).
And so on.
James Aiken Work’s notes for the 1940 Odyssey Press edition of the novel point out that Sterne is parodying Matteo Pellgrini (d. 1652), who developed a system of predication that enabled its student to write page after page on any subject.
Also from Sterne
Letters for all occasions : Yorick, distracted : Yorick, translating : Yorick, soulful : Digressions : Uncle Toby and the fly : Heat and knowledge
By Michael Leddy at 8:34 AM comments: 0
Monday, January 28, 2019
Harvest Refill Leads
[5″ × 3¼″. Found in December at an antiques mall. Click for a larger view.]
There’s so much to like about this display card. First, that it is a display card — in other words, that pencil leads were deemed important enough to be given this treatment. (My guess is that the cards stood upright in a holder on a store shelf.) I like the contrast between the sharp serifs and the italic script. I like the repetition: 5H, 5H, and the five appearances of leads. (The fifth leads, hidden from view, is on the cardboard tube.) I like 5H, which suggests that any store that sold these leads sold a great range of replacement leads. (“I’m sorry, sir, but we’re all out of 6H right now. I can offer you something in a 5H, if that would be satisfactory.”) And I like the lines above and below Harvest, four above, four below.
I’d never heard of Harvest Refill Leads, a product of the venerable Musgrave Pencil Company. (The manufacturer’s name appears on the tube.) The Internets return nothing for harvest leads, with or without the word refill. But Musgrave still manufactures a Harvest pencil (wood-cased, not mechanical). From the company’s website: “It’s rumored that our great-grandmother named this premium line ‘Harvest’ after the yellow harvest moon.” Shine on, Harvest pencil!
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January 29: Henry Hulan, whose grandfather started the Musgrave Pencil Company in 1916, tells me that Musgrave sold refill leads in the 1930s and ’40s. But the company has never made mechanical pencils, only wood-cased ones. I am following Henry’s lead (no pun intended) in using the word wood-cased instead of wood.
This post is the twentieth in a very occasional series, “From the Museum of Supplies.” Supplies is my word, and has become my family’s word, for all manner of stationery items. The museum is imaginary. The supplies are real.
Other Museum of Supplies exhibits
C. & E.I. pencil : Dennison’s Gummed Labels No. 27 : Dr. Scat : Eagle Turquoise display case : Eagle Verithin display case : Esterbrook erasers : Faber-Castell Type Cleaner : Fineline erasers : Illinois Central Railroad Pencil : A Mad Men sort of man, sort of : Mongol No. 2 3/8 : Moore Metalhed Tacks : A mystery supply : National’s “Fuse-Tex” Skytint : Pedigree Pencil : Pentel Quicker Clicker : Real Thin Leads : Rite-Rite Long Leads : Stanley carpenter’s rule
By Michael Leddy at 10:15 AM comments: 9
Ink, nibs, and Zip-a-Tone
[Zippy, January 28, 2019.]
In the first panel, Griffy explains: “A chunk of vintage Zip-a-Tone just landed in my hands from 1974!!” He then laments: “One by one, all th’ art supplies of my youth are disappearing!” As Dante Gabriel Rossetti, translating François Villon, asked, “Where are th’ art supplies of yester-year?”
Zip-a-Tone was a brand of screentone, used, Wikipedia explains, “as an alternative to hatching.” Here’s a Zip-a-Tone swatch book. And here’s a blog post with some examples of Zip-a-Tone in comics.
Related reading
All OCA Zippy posts (Pinboard)
[Zip-a-Tone? Zip-A-Tone? It’s a lowercase a on the swatch book.]
By Michael Leddy at 9:40 AM comments: 2