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02 Feb 04:10

Borderlands Books To Close In March

by Laura Wenus
Sithel

This is horrible

It seems not even cornering a niche market can keep bookstores alive anymore. Borderlands Books, purveyors of niche and popular science fiction, fantasy, mystery, and horror books to an enthusiastic community, announced today that it will close by March 31. The announcement closely follows news of Valhalla Books’ similar fate, though Borderlands enjoyed a prominent storefront on Valencia street, a cafe, and slight profits in 2014. After years of struggles including a rent hike at a former location in 1999 and the popularity of online book sales and electronic readers over the years (much like Adobe and Modern Times), the bookstore announced that the impending minimum wage increase to $15 by 2018 was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

“The change in minimum wage will mean our payroll will increase roughly 39%.  That increase will in turn bring up our total operating expenses by 18%.  To make up for that expense, we would need to increase our sales by a minimum of 20%.  We do not believe that is a realistic possibility for a bookstore in San Francisco at this time,” Borderlands wrote.

Rather than drag out their demise, they are taking decisive action and closing the store immediately, according to the blog post that broke the news.

“Keeping up our morale and continuing to serve our customers while knowing that we are going to close has been very painful for all of us over the past three months,” the post said. “Continuing to do so for even longer would be horrible.  Far better to close at a time of our choosing, keep everyone’s sorrow to a minimum, and then get on with our lives.”

In that same post, Borderlands said it supports the idea of a livable wage in an expensive city, though one of its managers has worked long hours for $28,000 a year — making it more expensive to pay fewer staff for fewer hours as higher minimum wages are mandated.

To support the bookstore through its last days, customers are encouraged to come in and purchase the remaining books and even the handmade shelves that hold them, as well as to just visit to offer support. The cafe next door is expected to remain open until at least the end of this year. Borderlands will host a public meeting in the cafe at 7 p.m. February 12 to address community questions.

30 Jan 17:09

Virtual Social with Special Guest: Feb 8th

by Donovan Beeson

B4yAXOkIMAEmFIc
Photo by PostMuse

It's that time again! Let's all get together via the Internet and write some mail with one another, to one another, for one another! The Virtual Social will last the whole day of February 8th with a Live Video happening at 3pm CST. According to my time zone calculations*, this should be an hour when most of the world is awake, so hopefully most of our International members can join us for the video. Either way, you can participate all day long with #LWASocial on Twitter or Instagram.

For our second Live Video Social, we added two awesome things: a special guest and a dedicated event page. Firstly, the awesome Mary Robinette Kowal will be joining us in the studio to write letters with all of us. You may know Mary from the books she has written or from Month of Letters.

Tmc
Photo by TMC

Secondly: For those of you who joined us for our first Live Video, you know that we had a snafu with the chat feature. Well, I built a page specifically for the Live Video Social that has the video, chat window, AND the Instagram feed for #LWASocial all in one place. No more multiple windows open; just time to write, listen, and chat with your fellow members.

We love how the Virtual Social has evolved and enjoy that it is a great way for all our members to get connected and write together. Also, it's great having a "social" event you can do in your PJs! Check out some of these amazing shots from one of the first Virtual Socials we did:

Virtual social August 2014 01 Virtual social August 2014 03 Virtual social August 2014 02 Virtual social August 2014 04
{From mjtroost, bronwenstead, blueskiesfade, & ohyeahblee on Instagram}

If you can't join us for the Live Video, you can create your own Virtual Social by watching the recording on YouTube. Either way, we hope we can share a day of letter writing with you.

Remember, there are some free commemorative downloads for virtual socials (and other fun stationery too) in our Downloads section. Members have access to even more downloads. Be sure to log-in so you see the full roster of goodies. See you on the Internet!

 

* Kathy's Time Zone Calcualtions for the Live Video
We chose random cities that some of member's reside in to get a good spread of time differences. Please verify with your own time zone if your city isn't listed.

(NZDT) Aukland, New Zealand: Monday, Feb.9th at 10am
(MSK) Moscow, Russia: Midnight of Feb 8th (going to Monday the 9th)
(GMT) London, England: 9pm
(PST) Portland, OR, USA: 1pm

30 Jan 08:37

Super Bowl

My hobby: Pretending to miss the sarcasm when people show off their lack of interest in football by talking about 'sportsball' and acting excited to find someone else who's interested, then acting confused when they try to clarify.
28 Jan 16:37

Troubleshooting

"Oh, you're using their Chrome APP, not their Chrome EXTENSION. They're very similar but one handles window creation differently." is a thing I hope I can stop saying soon.
28 Jan 16:36

Avatar: The Last Airbender Newbie Recap: “The Puppetmaster”

by Rebecca Pahle
Sithel

I've always enjoyed this recap series, this one in particular is hilaaaarious!

atla-the-puppetmaster-featured

This piece was originally posted on Cinefeels and has been republished here with permission.

“Aw man, this looks like another filler epis–WHAT THE FU–.”

[Warning: This recap contains a big spoiler for Snowpiercer, if you haven’t seen it yet.]

“The waterbenders could technically bend someone’s blood” is the sort of thing I thought the fandom would come up with, but the show would never actually do, because this is Nickelodeon. To wit:

@PaulFerence Bend someone’s BLOOOOOOD! Though air and metalbenders should be able to do that too, right? Poor Fire Nation being left out. :(

— Rebecca Pahle (@RebeccaPahle) January 12, 2015

Avatar, I am sorry for underestimating just how fucked up you are willing to get. Clearly I forgot how you brainwashed and then killed Jet. Fuck, you might have Aang go all Chris Evans in Snowpiercer. I don’t know. This show gets dark as shit.

i-know-that-babies-taste-best

So, yes. Bloodbending! But first: setup. The gaang sits around a fire telling ghost stories. Katara’s is pretty creepy–about a friend of her mom who froze to death, and then her ghost kept hanging around saying “I’m cold” like that episode of Are You Afraid of the Dark?–but Sokka’s, not so much. Toph says she feels/hears people screaming under the mountain, which is creepy, but it really needs some narrative structure, Toph. Two and a half stars. Then, bam! CREEPY LADY:

screen-shot-2015-01-27-at-10-50-25-am

The Creepy Lady is Hama, and she invites these strange children roaming around the countryside to stay in her inn free of charge. Once there, she tells the gaang that people have been disappearing when the moon is full. Given the whole thing about the full moon increasing waterbenders’ powers being in the “previously on” segment, I’m guessing they’re related.

Aang immediately suspects that the disappearances are a result of local environmental shenanigans pissing off some spirit, and that is NOT ON. You don’t mess with the environment on Aang’s watch!

aang-ill-kick-my-own-ass

Sokka is suspicious of Hama, which Katara doesn’t like, because she and Hama are BFFs who bonded over using flirtation to manipulate men. In poking around Hama’s inn, Sokka finds a cupboard full of puppets.

Same, Sokka.

Same, Sokka.

(I love that Hama is a metaphorical puppetmaster–as we’ll find out later in the episode, she uses bloodbending to control people–but the showrunners also throw in an aside with her LITERALLY OWNING PUPPETS, because she wasn’t quite creepy enough already. It’s like Hama’s thinking “You know what this evil thing I do needs? Memorabilia.” She is very possibly my favorite ATLA villain based on this fact alone.)

Hama comes along, finds them snooping, and goes into backstory mode: She grew up in the Southern Water Tribe, like Katara and Sokka, and was the last waterbender to be taken captive by the Fire Nation when they first started their raids sixty or so years before. They were all taken from their homes and locked up, and she was the only one who was able to escape… somehow. She doesn’t want to talk about it.

IS SHE A WEREWOLF?

werewolf-finger

Pictured: Hama breaking out of the Fire Nation prison.

OK, I know that the full moon thing is related to waterbending, and there are no werewolves in the ATLAverse (probably–don’t tell me if there aren’t, I want to keep the dream alive), but still.

WEREWOLVES.

tpose

Hama proceeds to play Katara–whom she knew from the start to be a waterbender–like a fiddle, offering to take her out in the woods and teach her about their shared heritage. Meanwhile, Aang, Toph, and Sokka head off to meet the one person who survived a full moon attack. He tells them he was possessed and made to walk towards a cave in the mountain, but then the sun came up and he was able to regain control over his body. Toph realizes that he screaming she thought she heard under the mountain earlier in the episode actually was people screaming under the mountain–OK, freaky–so they head off to rescue the missing villagers.

Meanwhile, Hama is quickly entering full-on horror movie villain mode, explaining to Katara that there’s water in all living things, and there’s even a super-cool form of bending one can do during the full moon, when one’s powers are at their highest.

Katara: “Uh…. but doesn’t an evil monster roam about during the full moon, or… ?”

Hama:

evil-kid-smile

So. Yeah. MOTHER. FUCKING. BLOODBENDING. After decades of being imprisoned, Hama eventually figured out how to control the guard and escape. The flashback sequence is thoroughly disturbing. Katara is rightfully a little 0_0, but it’s only when Hama starts talking about how it’s their responsibility as the last two Southern Water Tribe waterbenders to to defeat the Fire Nation when and how they can–ie. by using bloodbending to kidnap and imprison random Fire Nation villagers–that Katara firmly enters the “Oh, fuck no” zone.

Hama bloodbends Katara, but all that does is piss her off. She cries tears of PURE, UNADULTERATED RAGE and uses the water to fight back. “You’re not the only one who draws power from the moon,” she says. “My bending is more powerful than yours, Hama. Your technique is useless on me!”

hoshit

Then Sokka and Aang–who found the prisoners, figured out what was up with Hama, and went to find Katara–show up and promptly get puppetmastered by Hama into trying to kill Katara. She had the situation on lockdown before you showed up to be all rescue-y, dudes. Geez. Katara takes care of them by freezing them to trees

like-a-boss

…but then Hama makes them fight each other, leaving Katara with no other choice but to bloodbend Hama to make her stop.

tumblr_msml5rrwhd1rfk8fdo5_250

Toph, who had been using her metalbending powers to release the prisoners from their shackles, shows up, and Hama gets taken away in chains. She has one more Evil Villain moment to go before the episode ends: congratulating Katara on her newfound status as a bloodbender, MWAHAHAHAHAHA.

diabolical-laughter

OK, but… I completely understand Katara being upset, but she only did it once, because she had to. She’s not going to have to keep doing it. Being a bloodbender isn’t going to have any lasting effects… right?

liza

I demand that the next episode be something fun, like twenty-five minutes of Zuko at the DMV.

Rebecca (@RebeccaPahle) used to work for The Mary Sue before she cruelly abandoned them for Film Journal International, where she is currently the Assistant Editor. Still, she couldn’t stop doing Avatar recaps. Rebecca also writes for Pajiba and Phactual in addition to her personal website, Cinefeels.

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28 Jan 16:30

Post for the Parks

by Kathy Zadrozny

Post
Photo by Sarah Coyne

Artist Sarah Coyne managed to put together two of the things I love (National Parks and mail) into one amazing project: Post for the Parks. Not only is Sarah going to create one watercolor painting for each of the 59 National Parks, she is also going to mail that painting to the National Park depicted. 59 parcels for 59 parks. I'm so excited to watch the project unfold.

She has an awesome package created for each parcel that includes "formal paper work," aka: a letter, stickers, and certificate, to accompany each painting. Sarah is doing this project on a weekly basis, and while she is not expecting a response from the parks, I think she'll get some. I'm excited to see what the rangers say.

Tumblr_inline_nify0vjKzu1qa9cxf
Photo by Sarah Coyne

Tomorrow she sends out a parcel to Crater Lake (top of my list for NPs to visit) and next week she'll start the painting for Wind Cave. You can keep a track of her process here.

16267484956_95f15625f0
Photo by Sarah Coyne

Can we also talk about how awesome her rubber stamp is for this project? LOVE. You can read more about how this project was born and keep track of Post for the Parks on the project's Tumblr.

 

25 Jan 03:47

The First Hannibal Season 3 Trailer Is Here & It’s As Dark, Gorgeous, & Creepy As Ever

by Alanna Bennett
Sithel

Yeeeeeeeeeeesssssssssssss

That last line, though.

It should be noted that Collider just referred to Bryan Fuller as an “evil visual mastermind,” which seems…accurate.

Discuss things!

(via Collider)

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24 Jan 06:39

Persistence: The Only Technique that Matters

by marctaro

I don’t usually show my ‘bad’ sketches.  I often draw on loose sheets of paper, and tear up bad ones right on the spot. So there’s no evidence.

These happen to be in a sketchbook, and this was such a classic incident, I figured I’d post it for you.

Here we have what I’d consider to be a pretty average drawing.  Not very structurally sound. It’s stiff. And it doesn’t even show what’s going on.

Corning_Lampworker_01

I ran into this fellow doing a lampworking demonstration at the Corning Museum of Glass. He’s probably there 9-5, five days a week, doing his thing. But I only had 20 minutes before I had to be somewhere.

I’d found him just as he ignited his jet of flame and started to melt glass. I’m a sucker for a jet of flame. I’ll watch anything on fire.

So I dive right in aaaand – – – terrible sketch right?

Despite the interesting subject – it just didn’t turn out.

We had driven two hours out of the way to see the other demo I was heading to –  so, I wasn’t interested in missing that. But this drawing was really bugging me. I had already taken five steps away when I thought ‘No. Actually – I can’t live with it”.

Corning_Lampworker_02

So – turned around, did another one.

But, wouldn’t you know it!

Still a pretty weak drawing.

I’ve become a lot more demanding about capturing a likeness in recent months.  It’s never going to be perfect – but this isn’t even close.

Plus – I don’t mind a messy drawing – I’m fine with a sketchy feeling. But I want open, floating lines that have some elegance. This guy looks hunched over – his shoulder is a mess.

Even though the clock was ticking, there was nothing to be done but try again.

Corning_Lampworker_03

I had to slow down, ignore the possibility of losing a good seat for the show, take my time, and really look at the guy. Find what is distinctive about him.

His shoulder length hair rolls down the back of his skull, and flips up around his neck. It’s not just a bunch of lines – it’s a flowing shape with weight. Smoothly falling, only then dissolving to brush work.

He had a bit of a heavy jaw (a little chubby – after all, he’s a desk worker like me). His goatee was very specifically trimmed. Almost a Fu Manchu mustache – not just a generic scruff of hair. A beard always follows the jaw line.  It’s not pasted on – it reveals the shape of the jaw.Solving that leads me to his somewhat fleshy lips, and prominent – yet pointy – nose.

Now I have an actual person, not a generic human.

As well, the strange device spitting flame – it’s like a little cannon on spindly legs jetting blue fire. That’s a unique prop that is important to get right. Add in the glass rods and sculpted vials he’s crafting – and now I have a real description of an artist doing lampwork. A useful document of the day, not just a scribbled person.

Hope that helps you feel good about any bad drawings that happen. Use them as an opportunity. Flip the page and keep going. Getting a bit better each time. Persistence is everything in this game.


24 Jan 06:29

Real-Life Legolas Debunks Hollywood Techniques With Historically Accurate Master Archery - Your elf eyes won't see his arrow coming.

by Victoria McNally

I call him a real-life Legolas, but as the “fastest archer alive,” Lars Andersen is reportedly capabale of firing three arrows in 0.6 second—which makes him faster than Legolas. In this video, he puts those hard-earned skills (which he polished while LARPing, of course) to use recreating the techniques he picked up from old manuscripts, while in the process debunking some of the classic Hollywood myths about archery.

Andersen’s biggest pet peeve in movies? The quiver that archer characters wear on their back. “I recently read about a girl who did Katniss Everdeen (from Hunger Games) cosplay. She’d had to glue the arrows to the inside of the quiver to make sure they didn’t bounce out when she ran around,” he said. “If that doesn’t tell us that the back quiver is silly, I don’t know what does.”

Anyone else want to see an action movie where Anderson, Hunger Games trainer Khatuna Lorig, and Russian quickshooter Iza Privezenceva all just take turns being badasses?

(via The College of Wizardry on Twitter)

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23 Jan 16:42

Star Wars

A long, long time (plus 40 years) ago, in a galaxy far, far away (plus a corrective factor involving the Hubble constant) ...
21 Jan 16:40

Balmain | c. 1961



Balmain | c. 1961

21 Jan 03:17

Here Are All the Netflix Titles We’re Gaining and Losing Come February - Say goodbye to this face.

by Carolyn Cox
Sithel

Spartacus!!

blacadder

Let’s keep things in perspective here: sure, Black Adder is going the way of Battlestar Galactica and leaving Netflix Streaming, but that’s way better than losing most of the BBC catalog, right? We’ll meet again, Rowan Atkinson. We’ll meet again.

The Daily Dot has a complete list of February losses, but for your convenience, here are some of the more nerdy series you might want to put near the front of your queue: in addition to Blackadder Seasons 1-4, we’ll also be bidding adieu to all of Fawlty Towers, Jem and the Holograms Seasons 1-3, My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Seasons 1-4, Red Dwarf Seasons 1-9, Transformers Prime Seasons 1-3, and Transformers: Rescue Bots.

Notable geeky movies leaving the service include Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990), Mad Max (1979), Jane Eyre (1973), GoldfingerBatman & Robin, Batman ForeverBatman Returns, and Dredd (2012).

Now for the good news: here’s the list of all the titles we can look forward to in February!

February 1st

Bleach the Movie: Hell Verse
Dark Ride
Departures: Seasons 1­-2
Gimme Shelter
Gucci: The Director
Hot Pursuit
Houseboat
Into the Blue 2: The Reef
Joe
King Arthur
Magic City: Seasons 1­-2
M*A*S*H: Seasons 1-­5
Naruto Shippuden: The Movie
Now: In the Wings on a World Stage
Proof
Spartacus: Complete Series
The Brothers Bloom
We Could Be King
We’re No Angels
Zapped

Feb. 5

The Little Rascals Save the Day

Feb. 6

Ever After High: Spring Unsprung
Danger 5

Feb. 7

Dead Snow: Read vs. Dead
Elsa & Fred

Feb. 8

Blood Ties
Catch Hell

Feb. 10

Dwight Howard: In the Moment

Feb. 11

Mr. Peabody & Sherman

Feb. 12

Young Ones
The Two Faces of January
Scary Movie 5

Feb. 13

Mako Mermaids: Season 2

Feb. 16

Save the Date

Feb. 17

The Overnighters

Feb. 18

Earth to Echo
In Secret
The Fluffy Movie

Feb. 19

White Bird in a Blizzard

Feb. 20

Richie Rich: Season 1

Feb. 21

RoboCop

Feb. 24

Hawaii Five-­O: Seasons 1-­4
1,000 Times Good Night

Feb. 26

Open Windows
Russell Brand: Messiah Complex

Feb. 27

Ralphie May: Unruly
House of Cards: Season 3
Boys

Are you stoked for any of those new additions? Personally, I’m most excited to get caught up on Spartacus and check out Earth to Echo. None of these titles will fill the hole that may open in my heart when I no longer have instant access to Basil Fawlty losing his shit, but such is the way of the world.

iamsosorry

Netflix giveth, and Netflix taketh away.

(via Daily Dot)

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19 Jan 16:48

Technically

"Technically that sentence started with 'well', so--" "Ooh, a rock with a fossil in it!"
16 Jan 17:09

100 Years of Hair and Makeup Part 2, Featuring Hairstyles For Black Women - Hooray!

by Victoria McNally
Sithel

Music in the first video is fun, the side-by-side video is great for comparison

Early last month we showed you all a video featuring popular hairstyles for each decade of the 20th century, and at the time, we were kind of hoping they would do more for different kinds of people in the future. Now Cut Video has made our hope a reality with this new video; it’s the same “100 years in 1 minute” format, but with a specific focus on the sort of looks that were popular for black women.

Personally I found this video a lot more interesting than the first one—partly because I’m a white lady who’s a lot more familiar with the way my own hair can be styled, and partly because the looks that Marshay models here felt just a bit more accurate than the styles in the original video (some of our commenters pointed out that the ’40s victory rolls seemed more like a modern take on the look rather than a period specific one, for example).

There’s also a comparison video that shows the two models side by side:

In the Youtube comments, Cut Video claims that they’re also working on male versions of the format as well. I am excited to see some finger waves, y’all. What else would you like to see from this series?

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15 Jan 17:24

The Oscar Nominations are Here, and They’re Even More Overwhelmingly White Than You Expected - Everything is less than awesome.

by Susana Polo
Sithel

Ugh. Ugh. So much rage on the score nomination front. Where is Under the Skin?? Inherent Vice??

FUN #OscarNoms FACTS: No female directors screenwriters or cinematographers and no actors of colour nominated today pic.twitter.com/kxgzV4KMhE

— Glen Coco (@MrPooni) January 15, 2015

Dang, Academy. I mean, we know you’re 93% white, 76% male, and have an average age of more than five dozen revolutions around the Sun… but it’s like this year you didn’t even try to hide it.

Twenty spots for nominating actors, and they’re all occupied by white people. Twenty spots for directing, writing, and cinematography, the most prominent behind-the-camera creator roles, and they’ve all gone to men, despite, for example, industry buzz around director Ava DuVernay, whose Selma is the only Best Picture nominee to have garnered less than five total nominations.

And if that doesn’t get your dander up, then at least have the decency to be peeved that The LEGO Movie didn’t get nominated for best animated feature. Let’s go to the list:

BEST MOTION PICTURE OF THE YEAR

  • AMERICAN SNIPER

Clint Eastwood, Robert Lorenz, Andrew Lazar, Bradley Cooper and Peter Morgan, Producers

  • BIRDMAN OR (THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE)

Alejandro G. Iñárritu, John Lesher and James W. Skotchdopole, Producers

  • BOYHOOD

Richard Linklater and Cathleen Sutherland, Producers

  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL

Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven Rales and Jeremy Dawson, Producers

  • THE IMITATION GAME

Nora Grossman, Ido Ostrowsky and Teddy Schwarzman, Producers

  • SELMA

Christian Colson, Oprah Winfrey, Dede Gardner and Jeremy Kleiner, Producers

  • THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING

Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Lisa Bruce and Anthony McCarten, Producers

  • WHIPLASH

Jason Blum, Helen Estabrook and David Lancaster, Producers

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE

  • Steve Carell, Foxcatcher
  • Bradley Cooper, American Sniper
  • Benedict Cumberbatch, The Imitation Game
  • Michael Keaton, Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

  • Robert Duvall, The Judge
  • Ethan Hawke, Boyhood
  • Edward Norton, Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • Mark Ruffalo, Foxcatcher
  • J.K. Simmons, Whiplash

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE

  • Marion Cotillard, Two Days, One Night
  • Felicity Jones, The Theory of Everything
  • Julianne Moore, Still Alice
  • Rosamund Pike, Gone Girl
  • Reese Witherspoon, Wild

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

  • Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
  • Laura Dern, Wild
  • Keira Knightley, The Imitation Game
  • Emma Stone, Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • Meryl Streep, Into the Woods

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM OF THE YEAR

  • BIG HERO 6

Don Hall, Chris Williams And Roy Conli

  • THE BOXTROLLS

Anthony Stacchi, Graham Annable and Travis Knight

  • HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2

Dean DeBlois and Bonnie Arnold

  • SONG OF THE SEA

Tomm Moore and Paul Young

  • THE TALE OF THE PRINCESS KAGUYA

Isao Takahata and Yoshiaki Nishimura

ACHIEVEMENT IN CINEMATOGRAPHY

  • BIRDMAN OR (THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE), Emmanuel Lubezki
  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, Robert Yeoman
  • IDA, Lukasz Zal and Ryszard Lenczewski
  • MR. TURNER, Dick Pope
  • UNBROKEN, Roger Deakins

ACHIEVEMENT IN COSTUME DESIGN

  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, Milena Canonero
  • INHERENT VICE, Mark Bridges
  • INTO THE WOODS, Colleen Atwood
  • MALEFICENT, Anna B. Sheppard and Jane Clive
  • MR. TURNER, Jacqueline Durran

ACHIEVEMENT IN DIRECTING

  • BIRDMAN OR (THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE), Alejandro G. Iñárritu
  • BOYHOOD, Richard Linklater
  • FOXCATCHER, Bennett Miller
  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, Wes Anderson
  • THE IMITATION GAME, Morten Tyldum

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

  • CITIZENFOUR

Laura Poitras, Mathilde Bonnefoy and Dirk Wilutzky

  • FINDING VIVIAN MAIER

John Maloof and Charlie Siskel

  • LAST DAYS IN VIETNAM

Rory Kennedy and Keven McAlester

  • THE SALT OF THE EARTH

Wim Wenders, Juliano Ribeiro Salgado and David Rosier

  • VIRUNGA

Orlando von Einsiedel and Joanna Natasegara

BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT

  • CRISIS HOTLINE: VETERANS PRESS 1, Ellen Goosenberg Kent and Dana Perry
  • JOANNA, Aneta Kopacz
  • OUR CURSE, Tomasz Śliwiński and Maciej Ślesicki
  • THE REAPER (LA PARKA), Gabriel Serra Arguello
  • WHITE EARTH, J. Christian Jensen

ACHIEVEMENT IN FILM EDITING

  • AMERICAN SNIPER, Joel Cox and Gary D. Roach
  • BOYHOOD, Sandra Adair
  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, Barney Pilling
  • THE IMITATION GAME, William Goldenberg
  • WHIPLASH, Tom Cross

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM OF THE YEAR

  • IDA, Poland
  • LEVIATHAN, Russia
  • TANGERINES, Estonia
  • TIMBUKTU, Mauritania
  • WILD TALES, Argentina

ACHIEVEMENT IN MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING

  • FOXCATCHER, Bill Corso and Dennis Liddiard
  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, Frances Hannon and Mark Coulier
  • GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY, Elizabeth Yianni Georgiou and David White

ACHIEVEMENT IN MUSIC WRITTEN FOR MOTION PICTURES (ORIGINAL SCORE)

  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, Alexandre Desplat
  • THE IMITATION GAME, Alexandre Desplat
  • INTERSTELLAR, Hans Zimmer
  • MR. TURNER, Gary Yerson
  • THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING, Jóhann Jóhannsson

ACHIEVEMENT IN MUSIC WRITTEN FOR MOTION PICTURES (ORIGINAL SONG)

  • EVERYTHING IS AWESOME, The Lego Movie, music and lyric by Shawn Patterson
  • GLORY, Selma, music and lyric by John Stephens and Lonnie Lynn
  • GRATEFUL, Beyond the Lights, music and lyric by Diane Warren
  • I’M NOT GONNA MISS YOU, Glen Campbell…I’ll Be Me, music and lyric by Glen Campbell and Julian Raymond
  • LOST STARS, Begin Again, music and lyric by Gregg Alexander and Danielle Brisebois

ACHIEVEMENT IN PRODUCTION DESIGN

  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL

PRODUCTION DESIGN: ADAM STOCKHAUSEN
SET DECORATION: ANNA PINNOCK

  • THE IMITATION GAME

PRODUCTION DESIGN: MARIA DJURKOVIC
SET DECORATION: TATIANA MACDONALD

  • INTERSTELLAR

PRODUCTION DESIGN: NATHAN CROWLEY
SET DECORATION: GARY FETTIS

  • INTO THE WOODS

PRODUCTION DESIGN: DENNIS GASSNER
SET DECORATION: ANNA PINNOCK

  • MR. TURNER

PRODUCTION DESIGN: SUZIE DAVIES
SET DECORATION: CHARLOTTE WATTS

BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE, Daisy Jacobs and Christopher Hees
  • THE DAM KEEPER, Robert Kondo and Dice Tsutsumi
  • FEAST, Patrick Osborne and Kristina Reed
  • ME AND MY MOULTON, Torill Kove
  • A SINGLE LIFE, Joris Oprins

BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM

  • AYA, Oded Binnun and Mihal Brezis
  • BOOGALOO AND GRAHAM, Michael Lennox and Ronan Blaney
  • BUTTER LAMP (LA LAMPE AU BEURRE DE YAK), Hu Wei and Julien Féret
  • PARVANEH, Talkhon Hamzavi and Stefan Eichenberger
  • THE PHONE CALL, Mat Kirkby and James Lucas

ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND EDITING

  • AMERICAN SNIPER, Alan Robert Murray and Bub Asman
  • BIRDMAN OR (THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE), Martín Hernández and Aaron Glascock
  • THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES, Brent Burge and Jason Canovas
  • INTERSTELLAR, Richard King
  • UNBROKEN, Becky Sullivan and Andrew Descristofaro

ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND MIXING

  • AMERICAN SNIPER, John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff and Walt Martin
  • BIRDMAN OR (THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE), Jon Taylor, Frank A. Montaño and Thomas Varga
  • INTERSTELLAR Gary A. Rizzo, Gregg Landaker and Mark Weingarten
  • UNBROKEN Jon Taylor, Frank A. Montaño and David Lee
  • WHIPLASH Craig Mann, Ben Wilkins and Thomas Curley

ACHIEVEMENT IN VISUAL EFFECTS

  • CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER, Dan DeLeeuw, Russell Earl, Bryan Grill and Dan Sudick
  • DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES, Joe Letteri, Dan Lemmon, Daniel Barrett and Erik Winquist
  • GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY, Stephane Ceretti, Nicolas Aithadi, Jonathan Fawkner and Paul Corbould
  • INTERSTELLAR, Paul Franklin, Andrew Lockley, Ian Hunter and Scott Fisher
  • X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST, Richard Stammers, Lou Pecora, Tim Crosbie and Cameron Waldbauer

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

  • AMERICAN SNIPER, written by Jason Hall
  • THE IMITATION GAME, written by Graham Moore
  • INHERENT VICE, written for the screen by Paul Thomas Anderson
  • THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING, screenplay by Anthony McCarten
  • WHIPLASH, written by Damien Chazelle

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

  • BIRDMAN OR (THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE), written by Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris, Jr. & Armando Bo
  • BOYHOOD, written by Richard Linklater
  • FOXCATCHER, written by E. Max Frye and Dan Futterman
  • THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, screenplay by Wes Anderson; story by Wes Anderson & Hugo Guinness
  • NIGHTCRAWLER, written by Dan Gilroy

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04 Jan 17:56

2014, IN REVIEW.

by Melissa Sue
Happy New Year!

As I do every year, I've been going through notes, journals, and photos from the past 12 months and thinking about 'recaps' and 'what it all means'.  My portfolio didn't see a ton of additions, but there were some pretty significant pieces completed and exciting work done.  I moved out of a rotten apartment into an amazing one, which I get to share with an amazing person.  Conquered my first year at my day-job in Advertising, working inside a major Chicago landmark.  Drove through Indiana soooo many times as I travelled through the Midwest exploring, visiting, working.  
Worked very hard, and slept very little.  
.   .   .   .
I realized the other day that the best way to sum up 2014 is with a little black sketchbook that Max bought me for Christmas in '13.  I used it up from exactly January - December last year.  
Moving, day-jobbing, sewing, and a handful of other events kept me from completing as many large drawings and paintings as I would have liked last year.  But, for the first time in a very long time, I managed to always keep my sketchbook with me and always keep it going.  


Each page of this little Hobbit Moleskine has been scribbled and noted and doodled and worked on.
Here's the highlights and best-of's for 2014:

Early every year, February 1st, is Hourly Comic Day.  Last year, Max & I, along with a big handful of great friends, celebrated with a big day-long Drink & Draw, ending at the High Dive. 

We ate a lot of Tater Tots that day.  I have no regrets.

Later in the Spring, I started using the Sktchy app, which continues to be great for quick portraits and studies when there's no one with an interesting face around.


And then throughout the year, there's just a ton of these random sketches and things, usually done at a restaurant or pub.

Me and Max enjoy a good Drink & Draw so much, we started a group in Chicago:

Our first week-long marathon took us all over town, including a quick stop at the Ghostbusters 30th Anniversary show at Rotofugi

In July, I moved out of the Ukrainian Village (it was a sad day), and into a quiet neighborhood a bit further north.  I started taking a long, slow train ride to work - so drawing other commuters became a new pastime. 
There's a whole ton of these faces and sketches in here.  
Pages and pages of strangers.

In the Fall there was Inktober!  I also got a wicked cold, and did my best to keep up.



As the year wrapped up, I started shifting towards fiber, plush, sewing, and getting ready for Craft Fair madness.  These cactus monsters were a ton of fun to stitch up.

And finally, in December, we made the dumbest thing I'm proud of,
Max and I stayed up for, like, 48 hours passing a sketchbook back and forth, drawing and writing this stupid thing.  And it still makes me giggle every time I look at it.  

2014.
(You can see more of what's inside, here)

Cheers! 
To bigger and better, more work, and more adventure.  
Happy New Year, and welcome to 2015!

I cracked open my new, blank sketchbook this afternoon.  
After a very long and rainy winter walk, Max & I stopped into a pub for a beer and a cheeseburger, and spent a couple hours drawing.  
I'm going to keep sketching on this one, and finish it up tonight.  

xo.

03 Dec 06:49

Evening dress c.1909 by Callot Sœurs, from the kyoto costume...



Evening dress c.1909 by Callot Sœurs, from the kyoto costume institute

13 Nov 08:43

The Penguin #Gotham #fanart #oswaldcobblepot #penguin #batman...



The Penguin #Gotham #fanart #oswaldcobblepot #penguin #batman #dccomics #pencil #characterdesign #art #margauxkindhauser #artistoninstagram

24 Oct 16:06

In which Holmes Creates a Painting in the Rain, or: The Case of the Vanishing Castle

by marctaro

10Oct22_Ithaca_Sketchcrawl_02

We arrived at Ithaca New York later than we had hoped, due to no greater misadventure than leaving Montreal too late in the day. Ongoing activities being so pressing, Holmes had been up to the wee hours inscribing books – which are even now being dispatched to the far corners of the earth.

10Oct22_Ithaca_Sketchcrawl_03

10Oct22_Ithaca_Sketchcrawl_04 copy

After meeting our group of temporary Ithacans at the strictly functional Trip Hotel, and finding them a most congenial battalion of scribblers, we attempted a late night scouting mission. Despite the pitchest dark, and an unusual density of spiders clinging to the guard rail of the Thurston avenue bridge, we were able to confirm a suitable view of the Triphammer falls.

Imagine our dismay the following morning, after an insipid packaged breakfast at our inn, to find the day morosely overcast and insistently raining. Worse yet, the subject of our investigation, the ruined foundry, was not found to be artfully crumbling onto the gorge – but in fact – vanished without trace. No doubt spirited away by diligent engineers, myopically choosing public safety over what is eternal in art.

10Oct22_Ithaca_Triphammer Falls_Detail

Not in the least dispirited by this turn of events, Holmes set to work with a briskly applied will, exclaiming that he had always meant to conduct an experiment watercoloring in the rain, and this vanished castle debacle was to be his opportunity.

10Oct22_Ithaca_Triphammer Falls

I will leave it to you, dear readers, to determine – is the evidence of continual drizzle visible in the work? Holmes himself feels, even if it could be considered somewhat smeary by critics, the vicissitudes of nature do not detract in this document of the day.

It should also be said, the thorough soaking visited on the genuine cotton rag paper (provided by the Italian, Fabriano), allowed the work to be pressed below a stack of (inscribed) books overnight, granting a perfectly flat sheet by the second morning.

10Oct22_Ithaca_Sketchcrawl_01

For the remainder of the expedition, Holmes continued to infuriate one and all with his antisocial manner and continual scratchings. Adding tirelessly to his encyclopedic collection of oddities found in leaf-strewn campus courtyards and dusty regional museums.

10Oct22_Ithaca_Sketchcrawl_05

10Oct22_Ithaca_Sketchcrawl_06

10Oct22_Ithaca_Museum_00

10Oct22_Ithaca_Museum_03

10Oct22_Ithaca_Museum_02

10Oct22_Ithaca_Museum_01

For whatever reason this unrelenting chore included a forced march one hour away (and another back) to observe the methods of the glass workers in Corning NY. A task I am unclear as to the value of, but which seemed satisfactory to the artist, for reasons he may disclose in the upcoming weeks.


02 Oct 15:53

New character… New project ;) #characterdesign #inquisitor...



New character… New project ;)
#characterdesign #inquisitor #ghosts #inktober

02 Oct 15:50

random doodle dump

by Tyson Murphy






28 Sep 16:58

Bok Choy Baby

by jen

june014

2011

25 Sep 16:21

Finished Drawing - Jeff

by Melissa Sue

Done!
I recently finished this drawing of Mr. Fox!



Graphite & Colored Pencil on Hot Press Arches

I had originally intended to make a simple quick sketch, but I enjoyed the look so much that instead I hatched away for quite a while.  Most of the drawing was done cross-hatching with a sharp 6H, and then details were laid in with a range from 4H - 4B.  I used about five different blues for the background - they're Caran d'Ache.


Big thanks and hugs to my model, who was patient and gracious as I chipped away at this.  
Apart from being a friend and an all-around fabulous person, he's also very talented himself.  
Check out his photos on Instagram:
and more work/life/style/haberdashery can be found at:

xo!


15 Sep 15:25

Future Self

Maybe I haven't been to Iceland because I'm busy dealing with YOUR crummy code.
15 Sep 15:24

Portrait #cluescomic #akileos #margauxkindhauser #portrait...



Portrait
#cluescomic #akileos #margauxkindhauser #portrait #woman #victorian #colerase #art #sketch

23 Aug 01:04

iamthewolfbird: seraphica: Creatures From El [via] These are...



















iamthewolfbird:

seraphica:

Creatures From El [via]

These are incredibly gorgeous!

06 Aug 15:25

Lanvin | c. 1926



Lanvin | c. 1926

22 Jul 05:05

More sketches… #art #margauxkindhauser #demon #sketches...



More sketches…
#art #margauxkindhauser #demon #sketches #col-erase #lifeisgood

12 Jul 15:36

hollyoakhill: I haven’t thought of the context in this picture...



hollyoakhill:

I haven’t thought of the context in this picture but I so you can think up your own scenario. I think that Hans and his ship was fighting an enemy ship, but lost and got captured. But Ariel, who was caught in the crossfire, got pissed and attacked the first person to fall in the water.

03 Jul 18:05

fer1972: Scrap Metal Sculptures by John Lopez











fer1972:

Scrap Metal Sculptures by John Lopez