The word of the week is indicative.
Mar 21 – Spring!
Did you know that yesterday marks the earliest
arrival of spring in our lifetimes?
I didn't, and I find that fascinating.
Spring is a time of rebirth, of regeneration and
renewal, all things that I can relate to this year. As I've said many times in
this blog since the summer past, I've got a lot to do and have to ensure that
I'm not overextending myself while trying to accomplish it all. My recent
anxiety hasn't helped get things done either, but I'm choosing to see it as
just one more challenge that I have to overcome to accomplish what I want this
year.
Seeing all the fresh life blossoming around me
here in Victoria now, I can't help but feel like my spirits are buoyed... and
the recent time change has certainly helped as well, ushering in later evenings
and earlier mornings both to look forward to. I'll also be thinking about my
friends elsewhere, how they're enjoying their spring this year and how soon I
might be able to see them again.
Probably not until next spring, at the very
least, depending on how this year goes.
Mar 22 – Orthokeratology?
I've had glasses for more than half my life, ever
since Grade 8.
While I can see all right without them, my vision
is much poorer in my right eye and I can't go too long nowadays without glasses
without giving myself a headache from the focus discrepancy. At least modern
glasses weigh only a few ounces and aren't anywhere near as heavy as the
sliding-prone glass monstrosities I had perched on my nose decades ago.
Still, I regularly wish I could see without them.
Today I went to the eye doctor and got some test
pairs of contacts. I'm thinking about getting some monthly-wear one's sometime
late this year or next, simply to have the variety available. It's been over 10
years since I last were contacts, mainly because I was working in retail and
constantly having to touch your eyes meant I was constantly getting sick from
the transfer-germs-contact with people. All the same, it's not advisable to
wear contacts at work if you're staring at a screen all day, as that can also
lead to headaches and I won't even get into the fun part where the lack of
oxygen to your eye( even with today's technology ) means that in the
long term, the surface of your eye dies the longer you or your contacts....
But what if you were contacts that reshaped your
eyes?
Such is the promise of orthokeratology, contacts
that you wear at night to apply pressure to your corneas so that when you wake
in the morning, your vision has been corrected - temporarily, at least.
I'm quite leery of laser eye surgery, due to the
lack of long-term studies showing its full effects, so hearing about
orthokeratology this week is exciting for me. I'm going to investigate it
further and see what he can do for me, but I'm quite aware that it too might
possibly have side effects; all the more reason to research it.
Maybe I can wear them for the next 10 years,
until bionic contacts finally arrive...
Mar 23 – Bike/Car?
Do I need a car? Not really? Could I use
a car, though? Well...
Apart from the expense of owning and operating a vehicle in general,
it's great to be able to be able to travel directly to a destination without
needing to orchestrate a ballet of bus routes. Especially if your destination
is on the other side of the city and taking your own vehicle means that you
save at least half an hour trip time total by going directly there and not
having to wait for a bus... etc etc.
Time is precious to me these days, so my lack of
mobility has been on my mind. I've been considering some ride-share alternatives
like Modo, but that requires advanced planning and also that nobody else wants
the vehicle at the same time as you need it... who might reserve it first. Then
there's the time it takes to walk to the nearest vehicle location, which in my
case is at least 15 minutes away.
What if I could get a vehicle that's not a car,
but not a scooter either? And definitely not a motorcycle... while still being
an environmentally-friendly electric.
Enter the C-1( working title ).
While it looks like an enclosed motorbike, the
resemblance ends there. The C-1 is designed to operate like a car, containing
extremely advanced technologies like gyroscopes in order to make the driving
experience as simple as possible. For someone without motorbike skills like
myself, this sounds ideal, as the C-1 can carry one passenger and a small a lot
of cargo, or two passengers in a pinch for up to 200 miles on a single
overnight charge - perfect for city driving.
While I'm not in love with the current design of
the vehicle, it's better in my mind than Smart cars, which sound like rattling
refrigerators with wheels to my mind. The C-1 is something that I could park
easily on the street and take me wherever I need to go at a moments notice,
with no ties to expensive fuel or general maintenance necessary for gas powered
vehicles.
While it's too early to tell yet if the C-1 will
become a reality, its appearance perhaps heralds the arrival of the pure
'Commuter Electric Car' designed just for city driving.
Hopefully it also heralds the arrival of
affordable vehicles in the same category...
Mar 24 – Guess What Arrived Today?
It's here, at last!
After months of work, a package arrived in the
mail for me yesterday. After lunch, I excitedly trotted down to the post office
to pick it up, lugging it back home in order to free it from its packaging.
Have a look:
A little blurry, but at least you can ready the LED: 95 rounds! |
Isn't she a beauty? The prop is built around a
fully functional Nerf Rapidstrike that's been upgraded with some very
high-power motors, meaning it can fire off the entire clip of 12 darks in under
3 seconds: three times as fast as normal! But that's not the point: it looks
just like the M41A from the movie Aliens, doesn't it?
The LED counter on the right-hand side is
something I'm especially proud of as I managed to find a pair of them for sale
on eBay after waiting nearly a year for one the pop-up. There's a fellow on
there by the name of Majenko who very occasionally puts up three or four for
sale, which go damn fast, but I snagged a couple through persistence and luck.
The counters are designed to exactly mimic the function of the M41A as it fires
and then is reloaded in the movie, as shown in this test clips sent by the
engineer who put my prop together:
Needless to say, I'm extremely pleased with the results and to be honest, a little scared that I still have such a long way to go with my costume before the convention in a couple weeks. While I wasn't able to budget having this prop wired for sound, part of my specifications were that it be pre-wired to allow such an upgrade in the future should I so choose.
Needless to say, I'm extremely pleased with the results and to be honest, a little scared that I still have such a long way to go with my costume before the convention in a couple weeks. While I wasn't able to budget having this prop wired for sound, part of my specifications were that it be pre-wired to allow such an upgrade in the future should I so choose.
For now, I'll just have to make some pew-pew sounds
when I fire it...
Mar 25 – Bat vs Cape
It was movie night tonight: Batman versus
Superman!
-SPOILERS BELOW-
Going in, I'll admit that I deliberately didn't
find out much about this film, but not for the reasons you might think. Batman
certainly ranks highly in my lists of best superheroes, for many reasons that I
won't get into here( apart from being a normal guy without superpowers and
the super genius part ). As for Superman, well... he's just the idolized
version of what every superhero really should be: a boy scout, with lots of
cool powers including flight.
So let's get these two fighting on-screen, and
that'll be cool, right?
Sad Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman |
Well...
Let's start with the visuals: BvS looks
great and doesn't suffer from too much SFX overkill like Man Of Steel did( many
parts of which were still cool-looking ) as much of the effects budget has gone
to serve the story instead of just putting things on the screen to look good.
Speaking
of looking good: what about Wonder Woman? Perfect casting! She's underplayed
subtly by Gasl Godot, with powers far surpassing that of Lynda Carter's iconic
iteration from the 1970s television show, all done in a solid performance that
really sells the character while moving it forward significantly.
But back to the title match: it eventually
happens, and it's a letdown.
Why? One word: story.
Quite honestly, while I enjoyed the
biff-bang-boom action parts of the film, the rest of it was a major letdown, as
the story has obviously been cobbled together in order to get these two heroes
to fight one another. There's a whole lot of things that don't make sense in
the film( 19 of them, in fact! )and in the end I just had to turn off my
brain to enjoy watching the film, which looks great in IMAX.
Bottom line Guardians of the Galaxy was
much, much better.
Mar 26 – USCM Progress!
Today was mostly spent working on my costume.
My girlfriend had an extremely busy week, so much
so that we decided to forgo getting together today so she could just rest,
which I can totally understand.
So, I was essentially handed the rest of the day
to do with what I pleased, and I couldn't pass up the opportunity to make some
significant progress on my Colonial Marine cosplay. It also helped that it was
extremely sunny here this afternoon, so working at the table by the window with
all my paraphernalia was great for both light and fresh air.
Most of the secondary parts, excluding the helmet, chest and back plates. You can see on the left a complete shin guard vs one that's just been cut out |
The main material on using for the costume is EVA
foam, cut from large 8ft x 4ft antifatigue mats: I managed to get two of
them for the budget price of $40 total from Canadian Tire on sale a few months
ago! There's enough material for me to make a lot of mistakes and still end up
with four suits, so I'm pretty happy about that.
While the cutting out of the parts isn't all that
complicated, it does require a strong arm and the dense foam dulls blades at a
frightening pace. As you can see from the image above, today I managed to cut
out all the major and minor pieces, including the leg sections and I even got a
few of them shaped with the help of some hot glue. Note to self: hot glue is
HOT, so you shouldn't grab any freshly glued parts when you're not looking
where your fingers are going...
The biggest challenge for me in the next few
weeks, apart from finishing, is going to be the painting of the foam: the
finish is key, and foam isn't smooth when you paint it with standard paints.
I'll have to pick up some latex paint on the cheap ( from Canadian tire
again )this week, so I can have time to do multiple layers while they dry
for a day or so in between. It's going to be a challenge to keep them in my apartment
while they dry without stinking the place up, I have to say.
Even with all the above challenges, I'm excited
to be creating something so cool!
Mar 27 – Resting
I took a bit of a break today from the costuming,
only cutting out a few replacement parts to substitute for ones that I've
managed to screw up in some way. Plus I needed to get my arm a rest from all
the cutting.
My girlfriend and I spent the morning and early
afternoon together, taking a walk around and enjoying the flowers blooming
everywhere in Victoria:
I took these on our walk today in Beacon Hill Park |
I also caught up on a few more episodes of the
wonderful Netflix-original anime TV series Knights of Sidonia, which is
a scifi feast! in a nutshell: some of the last survivors of earth have fled the
ravages of an alien species they don't understand it is still trying to destroy
the seedship Sidonia as it travels to what the humans hope is a new
world to begin again:
The premise is excellent and the science
surprisingly sound for show with giant mecha in the traditional Japanese style.
The story centers around pilots of the Gardes, which is what the Mac are
called, and their defense of Sedonia from the Guana, which are
the aliens. While the writing isn't stellar, and it's rather heavy on
too-many-names and too-many-interpersonal-relationship stories, the overall
plot has been engaging and I'm looking forward to learning more about the
universe that's been created in which the story is set.
I'm going to add 'Figure out why Google Drive
isn't uploading my pictures automatically' to my long list of Things To Do in
2016. Already on that list: fix Plex so that all the movies I copied from my
DVD collection actually show up, finish scanning and organizing my book
collection, check my few dozen laserdiscs for warpage... the List goes on and
on, and that's not even THINKING about getting my novels completed or getting
my new business running in the summer. I wonder if I can take a paid sabbatical
from my day job for a few months...?
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