Nottingham Trent Art and Design degree shows

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This week is the annual show for undergrad art and design students at NTU. I went last year and enjoyed it so made a point of going again this year. It also gave me the opportunity to take my new Panasonic TZ6 camera for a spin (more on that at the bottom).

The main event is held at the Bonnington Building, with the following courses represented:

  • BA (Hons) Decorative Arts
  • BA (Hons) Fashion Design
  • BA (Hons) Fashion Knitwear Design and Knitted Textiles
  • BA (Hons) Fine Art
  • BA (Hons) Graphic Design
  • BA (Hons) Photography
  • BA (Hons) Textile Design

Decorative arts

Below is the main decorative arts section, in the centre of the maze-like building.

Decorative arts

I guess there are likely to be themes in each graduating year. Last year there seemed to be a lot of ceramic work in decorative arts, this year there was far more work with textiles. All the work was of a very high standard, but a couple of pieces caught my eye particularly.

Katie Smith’s ceramics:

Katie Smith ceramics

And this piece from Anna Byers:

Anna Byers

Fine arts

I’ll admit to being disappointed by last year’s fine art exhibit. Amongst a couple of stand-out pieces, a lot of the material felt derivative and, frankly, a bit amateur. This year’s work felt far more complex and skillfully put together, with work from Nicola Jennings, Kyran Gregson and Adam Berriman particularly ringing out to me.

Nicola Jennings’ (who has a blog, Inside the Cabinet of Wonder) found-object birds and rats inside a cage showed vision, skill and humour.

Nicola Jennings bird

Adam Berriman’s destruction by basketball (‘Epicentre’) also brought a smile to my face – it reminds you that you’re not alone in the secret desire to smash  things that have taken hours of effort to produce. At least it did with me…

Adam Berriman basketball

Incidently, the camera performed superbly. It really is a great piece of kit and well worthy of the great reviews it’s been getting (look at the detail on the photo of the bird above – that’s at 1/40, handheld).  Aside from a bit more noise and a bit less detail, I doubt the results using my D200+35mm f/2 combination would have been all the much better.

One last piece, from David Bance:

Cut an ear off everyday

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Pimp my dishwasher tablet

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This seemed important enough to share with the world. But I may have issues with my sense of perspective.

Not really sure what happened here but one of my dishwasher tablets appears to have mysteriously grown larger, while retaining its plastic wrapping.

Unfortunately, it is now too big to fit in the tablet holder, thus saving itself from being destroyed.

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Camera bags from Lowepro and Crumpler

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First things first – an admission:

I own a lot of camera bags.

There is a good reason for this. None of them are right. They are all too large, too small, too obviously a camera bag, whatever. What I’m looking for at the moment is a shooting bag that can hold

  • D200 + 17-50mm lens attached
  • Sigma 50-150mm
  • Sigma 10-20mm / SB-600 flash
  • Bits and pieces (wallet, phone, CF cards etc)

…while being as small and as unobtrusive as possible. It really shouldn’t be too hard, right?  Well, there are options, two of which I managed to find at my local branch of Jacobs.

Jacobs is always my first choice of the camera shops in the area. They have a lot of stuff in stock, including loads of odd accessories and the staff know what they’re talking about. This, of course, is rare in retail.

They had a couple of possible choices  – the Lowepro Stealth Reporter D200 and the Crumpler Messenger Boy. Both just under £70.

Crumpler Messenger Boy

Crumpler Messenger Boy exterior

I liked the Messenger Boy, but it had one main drawback – too much padding. It’s a good size for my requirements and had the usual quality feel, but because of the excessive padding the bag was too stiff and stuck out from my hip, making it feel and look a lot bigger than it actually is.

A shame really as it’s roomy for its size and the access excellent. Opening the top flap give full access to everything inside. It is a little shallow though and, when wide open, it felt as though the taller lenses could fall out. I don’t think this is necessarily true, but it felt that way.

Also, aside from a full length pocket on the front there aren’t any other pockets, which can be a bit of a pain when you’re trying to seperate accessories.

A nice bag, but it didn’t feel like I was getting good value for money really (of course that’s never stopped me buying Crumpler in the past).

Lowepro Stealth Reporter D200

Lowepro Stealth Reporter D200

A very different bag to the Crumpler. But probably a better one.

The guy in Jacobs referred to it as ‘technical’ which is a pretty good description. Tough, lots of pockets, lots of clever little things like a waterproof cover and a reinforced card wallet.

Admittedly, it’s not as pretty – it looks a lot more like a camera bag. But it’s also smaller and molds better to your hip making it less obtrusive. It also holds more, with the drawback that, despite the access in the top, it’s harder to get stuff out quickly. The number of pockets is bordering on silly. I’m not even sure I could find them all.

Neither bag is perfect but the Lowepro seemed to fit my requirements more closely, despite its appearance and slightly odd shape. Despite this, I walked away from the shop empty-handed as I couldn’t quite pull the trigger on the purchase at £70. However, a quick check on Amazon showed that it was available on there for only £55 so I snapped it up (although I felt bad for Jacobs).

I’ll post an unboxing when it arrives and a more comprehensive review.

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The cost of cheap CDs

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I took my monthly visit to Fopp at the weekend, on the scout for cheap CDs. Cheap CDs there were.

They now seem to have reduced their lower-end price point to only £3 so I managed to get Nebraska (Bruce Springsteen), Kitty Jay (Seth Lakeman) and Sign ‘o’ the Times (Prince) for only £9. Really good, notable albums all. The days of music costing money (or serious money anyway) seem firmly to be over. In Fopp today you could buy pretty much the whole Pearl Jam, or Rage Against the Machine or hell, Tori Amos back catalogue for about £25 each.

Between the cheapness of CDs, services like Spotify (which delivers streamed music, on demand, for free) and other forms of downloading it’s all there, all the time.

I’m undecided if this is a good thing or not. The magpie part of me revels in the sheer quantity of material that is available, but at times it feels like I’m just drowning in content (8964 songs in iTunes so far).

I’ve been working my way through my CD collection and getting rid of the jewel cases as a prelude to moving house. And what have I discovered? That the CDs I like best are those I bought before 2002, when I bought them one at a time and actually listened to them all the way through, sometimes many times.

When I became able to buy as many as I wanted (and the availablity of music online increased) my listening became an awful lot wider but far more superficial. Now I have about 600 albums but some I’ve only listened to once.

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New social search – Hunch

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I’ve been looking at Caterina Fake’s new web service, Hunch.

It’s kind of a cross between Ask Metafilter and Match.com – a recommendation service based on the system’s understanding of your personality/preferences and the choices that people similar to you have already made.

In 10 questions or less, Hunch will offer you a great solution to your problem, concern or dilemma, on hundreds of topics. Hunch’s answers are based on the collective knowledge of the entire Hunch community, narrowed down to people like you, or just enough like you that you might be mistaken for each other in a dark room. Hunch is designed so that every time it’s used, it learns something new. That means Hunch’s hunches are always getting better.

Caterina Fake was one of the founders of Flickr and the new service shares some of the converstational interface style of Flickr, which can be a bit annoying after a while. The system itself actually works quite well and seems to get better each time I visit as more people register and the system learns more. A lot of the questions are silly (‘Should I take a bath or shower?’), but there’s some good stuff in there too (‘Should I buy a Blu-Ray player?’ – no, apparently).

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Building a website in WordPress

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Putting together a website has been kicking around in my mind for a while now. I spend a lot of time in my day job messing around with websites, so I haven’t been super-keen to devote a great deal of my time away from the office doing much the same thing.

So, what I wanted was something:

  • simple yet flexible
  • extensible
  • easy to tie in with other services
  • easy to export to a new system when I’m ready to spend some more time on development

I poked around a bit with the free CMSs, but decided in the end to put something together in WordPress, which has the solid advantage of being really heavily developed for, with plugins for everything from automated metadata generation to search. It also allows for easy tagging of content which, given that metadata is my life*, seemed important…

It’s not completely straightforward to develop a website using WordPress as it is first and foremost a blogging tool, but with the help of a tutorial or two and by dredging up some of the PHP knowledge lurking in my brain, I’ve managed to build something in a very short time that should be fairly easy to modify and upgrade when I can.

*Not true. Well, maybe a little bit.

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