February 2009


we’ve been settling down in Peyrenegre after arriving here wednesday evening…

tara’s favorite moment of the trip so far was opening the shutters (yes, real shutters, wood slats and metal catch and all) our first morning; having arrived at night, stumbling awake and leaning out the window into the bright dawn to be greeted with rolling french countryside was rather overwhelming (and gorgeous) for 8am.

we are staying in a gite, a little cottage/apartment attached to the main house through a large ex-barn. enid and kevin, our hosts, are a charming and straightforward brit ex-pat couple. half the day we help them out with whatever’s needed – painting, gardening, making mulch, cleaning, and the rest off the time is ours to explore and relax. this morning we checked out the nearby town of marmande (which took all of an hour, barely). yesterday we went for a walk around the nearby farms, accompanied by their two little dogs, sam and sally. it’s wonderfully quiet here – except for the hens – and a world away from our normal lives!

How Tara and Molly spent the day:
They decided to derivé
From the Sacré -Coeur
To Montmartre and more
And then they went to the Museé d’Orsay

journey has begun
baguette and cheese for dinner
happy in hostel

tara can do a flip off a wall now! sort of!

and molly can juggle now! sort of!

and we can both swing dance now! sort of! but you don’t get video of that until we’re good and ready, darnit.

Zombie Flashmob: Thriller-Dancin’ Undead to Invade London Bridge Tube Station on Friday the 13th!

Sounds cool, no? Well… The event was publicized (as an ‘organized’ flashmob to ‘promote’ the London Bridge Festival) on Facebook, and the Met police, afraid of an actual, successful flashmob, like the awesome one last week, asked the organizers to take down the event. So they did, and the hundreds of people planning to go figured it was canceled…

We thought we’d head down anyway (after all, you know we can’t resist an opportunity to dress as zombies), but when we got there anyone with fake blood had been banished outside, though the photographers outnumbered the zombies. Lame. Still fun, as long as you were listening to Thriller on your iPod!

For a more detailed play-by-play, this twittering blogger was there and totally had things sussed:

“7:20pm -random fat guy comes along in a “London Bridge festival” T-shirt and Michael Jackson hat and starts bossing everyone around! He orders everyone to attack him and then asks us to dance. Twat. We attack him and I bite his head cos he’s a twat.”

On the upside, now there are more pictures on the Interwebs of us dressed as zombies:

molly wants to eat your brainz

molly wants to eat your brainz

molly and tara are on the far left of the zombie lineup

molly and tara are on the far left of the zombie lineup

and a few more, of our own:

this poster just happened to be there.  coincidence?

this poster just happened to be there. coincidence?

surprise!  the flash mob is actually the photographers...

surprise! the flash mob is actually the photographers...

a representative sampling of our recent culinary exploits:

blackberry pancakes and eggs

blackberry pancakes and eggs

pesto polka-dot pizza

pesto polka-dot pizza

lentil soup, freshly made whole wheat bread, salad

lentil soup, freshly made whole wheat bread, salad

eating breakfast this morning, blackberry pancakes and eggs

eating breakfast this morning, blackberry pancakes and eggs

We have been cookin’ and bakin’ and eatin’ up a storm here. That may have something to do with the fact that our default HQ has become the awesome enormous kitchen at the top of the house..
But we have been documenting all our delicious creations, in the form of tasty photos. Molly definitely has a career in cookbook photography ahead of her. I bet her commission will be paid in edibles. (Don’t ask for recipes, ’cause more or less we were just looking things up online and then changing them so much they don’t even count as the same dish! Totally the best way to make food.)

orange chocolate chip scones

orange chocolate chip scones


lemon chocolate chip triple berry shortbread

lemon chocolate chip triple berry shortbread

More food pics later, we’re about to go out on the town!

-tara and molly

my main preparation for molly’s visit was making legwarmers for us – brown & black crocheted ones for me, rainbow knit ones for molly! now we shall have toasty shins whilst traveling…

warmlegs

hello hello! (that’s two hello’s, one from each of us.) we are reunited in London – and have been since last Thursday – but we’ve been too busy hijinking to post. here’s some of the things we’ve been doing:

setting up our bikes all ready to transport us around london, seeing a honkingly good clown/klezmer show, playing with babies, juggling, cirque-it circus skillshare playtime, teaching ourselves to swing dance from sketchy youtube videos, and baking bread!

tara's loaf

yum! tara wants to give you bread.

As I’ve become more familiar with the graphic design and typography “world,” and begun to identify more of my favorite artists  and type designers (Robert Slimbach, Matthew Carter, David Carson…) I’ve started to wonder why I don’t have more female role models.

The other day I happened upon this fantastic video (I highly recommend it) of a panel discussion on the art of the book, with Milton Glaser, Chip Kidd, and Dave Eggers, moderated by Michael Beirut. I’m very familiar with all of their work, and all four of them are some of my top heroes – my idols! The coolest, savviest, most interesting designers I know! And seeing all of them together in the same room talking about book design, it was a real treat. Until the very end during a Q & A, when there was a question about why there were so few female “superstar” graphic designers – “is there a glass ceiling in graphic design?” Milton Glaser’s response:

He said that the reason there are so few female rock star graphic designers is that “women get pregnant, have children, go home and take care of their children. And those essential years that men are building their careers and becoming visible are basically denied to women who choose to be at home.” He continued: “Unless something very dramatic happens to the nature of the human experience then it’s never going to change.” About day care and nannies, he said, “None of them are good solutions.”

The crowd was silent except for a hiss or two and then Eggers piped up that he and his wife both work from home and share child care responsibilities — but added that maybe New York was different (although we don’t think Eggers really believes this). Then it was clear to everyone in the room that it was time to move on.

In Helvetica (the greatest movie ever) why are only two of the two dozen interviews with women?

Shira asked me once when the first time I was really conscious of my gender was. There are probably some times in my youth that I can’t clearly recall (other kids questioning whether I could play Huck Finn because I was a girl), I think the first time was in a class my freshman year of high school. After completing a month’s worth of assignments for an Intro to Technology class in one day, my parents and teachers realized something should be done. So I was transferred into Visual Communication, where I was the only freshman and the only girl.  I thrived on the material, but I felt really uncomfortable and out of place in that environment.

I’ve take a number of computer and technology oriented classes in both high school and college, and I’ve always been in the minority.  I think it always made me subconsciously want to work harder, to prove that I could be as good or better than the boys.

Graphic Design, Feminism, and Me – Part 2: what I’ve learned from doing design and animation on the documentary film Heretics: Stories from a Feminist Art Collective for the past two years… coming soon.

-Molly

(p.s.  if you read this, you should comment!  the more you comment on our blog, the happier we will be, and the more often we will update.  it’s nice to know when your writing is read.)