Saturday, March 30, 2024

Finding the Ideal Surface for My 9X5 Artworks on Wooden Panels

The quest to find the ideal surfaces for my 9X5 inchartwork for the 2024 VAS Exhibition continues! I'm planning to create two pieces, one in watercolour and the other in soft pastels. To test out different surface preparations, I made three variations for each medium on some scrap plywood.

 Let's start with the watercolour surfaces:


  • W1: Just plain white acrylic, which behaved a lot like Yupo paper.
  • W2: White acrylic topped with a thin coat of regular gesso. This improved colour intensity and gave sharper hard edges compared to the acrylic-only surface.
  • W3: White acrylic with a 50/50 mix of transparent gesso and regular gesso. This surface had the most texture, but the paint went on nicely with great intensity, and it was easy to lift off.

Both W2 and W3 seem promising, except that the watercolour washes picked up brush marks on all the surfaces. For the next trial, I'll need to apply the gessos with a foam roller.

Now, onto the pastel surfaces:

  • P1: Just an old layer of Derivan background paint (China Red). This added a nice tooth to the surface, and the coloured ground made the pastel colours sing.
  • P2: White acrylic with standard gesso on top. The least successful option.
  • P3: White acrylic with the 50/50 transparent and regular gesso mix. Good coverage with a light pastel touch, but the colours looked pale.

 I tested various pastel marks, from very soft to hard, and even Conte pencils. Getting details on such small panels is going to be a challenge, and I need to experiment further with different "background" paints and "watercolour ground".

Stay tuned for more experimental fun on the road to the perfect 9X5 surfaces!

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Spambots be gone


Has anyone else discovered a sudden massive increase in the number of views being recorded on Blogger (this site)?  I was rather pleased with myself struggling to over half a million views over the past 20 years. Yes I have been using Blogger for 20 years! However, in the past month the pageviews have risen by over 100,000. Over the past week the recorded pageviews are between 2,000 & 3,500   per day. but actual pageviews, even most recent posts, seldom exceed 10 views per day.


I do suspect bad actors, possible spambots, content scrapers or maybe a hacking attempt gone wrong. I really can not see what might be achieved by such an activity, perhaps other than wasting bandwidth (which I can not see evidence of). Is it part of giving a legitimate address for a phishing scam to fool validity checks?

Ok now I have noticed. Do I try to inform Google?  Yes, but I have gotten nowhere again. Have you ever tried to contact good with a problem? y=You will know what I'm talking about. Is is another massive "I don't care" / #FAIL google!


So what can I find out about these extra views (which I might just call an attack). Well it must be automated to reach that number. Its seems to be totally originating from Hong Kong, using apple MacIntosh and Chrome, the refereeing URL being reported as other by Google Analytics. The biggest puzzle is my blogger site is recording these extra views but my actual page view seem to be remaining normally low. Are these numbers even real? Should I be concerned, given the location these pageviews seem to be originating?


Thursday, March 21, 2024

What is with the cable octopus?

 

Trying to clean up my desk inevitably runs into the USB cable tangle. Whilst USB A is pretty universal the number and variety of devices it can ad-hoc connect to a computer is amazingly diverse. Sometimes it’s used for charging, most often t will be to transfer data or connect a different peripheral temporarily.  

The downside is many use different or non-interchangeable plugs at the other end. Whilst they are all obey the USB standards,  the plugs vary to suit the devices they being connected to. I currently have 5 different device end styles. That’s quiet a tangle on my desk. So I used a spiral cord minder to group the cables together at the USB-A end. A bit of magic using a split tube, lets me keep the cable close to the computer but neatly away from my work area.

This little diagram gives an idea of many of the current plug types, but there are many more including USB-C and a range of proprietary connectors for specific devices eg. cameras, phones and watches.

Iuse pairs of recycled bread-bag ties, that I colour coded to help keep track of which of the ends match up. It nice, simple and neat. Better still no time wasting searching for the right cable.