Showing posts with label bit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bit. Show all posts

Sunday, March 12, 2017

A little bit of sunshine Pineapple Papaya Juice

A little bit of sunshine Pineapple Papaya Juice



Thank you sun, for coming through the window today. You were missed.

Thank you pants, for being so forgiving after 2 nights of peking duck and crème brûlée.

Thank you butter, for making my kitchen smell so damn good.

Thank you legs, for not forgetting how to ride a bike and making me look sporty.

Thank you glasses, for allowing me to spot the bug on my mint. Now I know whos the owner of those black specks of poop on the leaves.


Thank you hand sanitizer, for killing (or claiming to kill) 99.9% of the germs.

Thank you fruit pickers/fruit deliverers/fruit sellers for making sure my pineapple and papaya were in a good state when I bought them.


This wonderfully healthy juice has just three ingredients (or four, I like to add chia seeds into everything and trick my family into eating them).

Papayas have the strangest seeds. Apparently edible too.


Freshly cut pineapples are the best (such a privilege to have non-canned pineapples!)


The mint is essential. Dont worry - the bug didnt get to all the leaves :)


Then you just whizz them together in a blender. Its like a bit of sunshine.


Voila, youre done! 

Plain papaya or pineapple juice by themselves wouldve been well, just plain and boring. But together, they taste great and is a great way to kick-start any day that needs a bit of sunshine. Like everyday.

Pineapple & Papaya Juice
Adapted from Martha Stewart
Serves 2

  • 5 sprigs fresh mint
  • 1 pineapple, peeled and cut into pieces
  • 1 medium papaya, peeled and seeded
  • 1 tbsp chia seeds (optional)

1. Press all ingredients through a juice extractor into a measuring cup.

2. Stir to combine before serving.


Happy Friday and weekend ahead yall!

I am hoping to be eating apple crumbles and snugging in bed to watch movies. But I really should go out and be more active like riding my bike and climbing some stairs. 

Well see.

What are you doing this weekend?

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Monday, March 6, 2017

A Little Bit of Genius at PAX

A Little Bit of Genius at PAX




There were things I saw at Penny Arcade Expothat I wanted to go on about. Something besides Microsoft trying to push us into our exciting Windows 8/Internet Explorer 9 future by providing the world middling adaptions of ancient Atari games for some reason.


There was one game at the Indie Megabooth that deserves special attention from all humans. Not only was it funny, but it has perhaps the best elevator pitch in the history of the human race:
OK. Youre a guy living in the suburbs. You have a wife, two kids, and a secret: Youre actually an octopus in disguise.
Obvious jokes aside, how can you not want to try that game? Especially when you know its called Octodad: The Dadliest Catch.


Octodad!

This game is the purest epitome of the Indie spirit. (Hows that for a pull quote?) Its unique, intriguing, utterly bananas, and no major publisher will ever do anything like it.


Sadly, the gameplay is focused on maneuvering the octopus, which means struggling to do normally simple tasks with an odd control scheme. I am a little skeptical about how much this particular style of gameplay can catch on. On the bright side, if its priced cheaply enough, it can make a ton of sales based on the "Oh God. I have to try this out." factor.


My unsolicited advice for the developers: If the game turns out to not be that fun, sell it for five bucks. Youll move a lot of copies based on morbid curiosity alone.


Edit: Oh, yeah. You can support Octodad at Steam Greenlight here. I voted for it. KEEP INDIE GAMES WEIRD!

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Saturday, February 18, 2017

A Bit of Architectural History

A Bit of Architectural History


 

Last year I wrote a story HERE about a house for sale in River Oaks, Houston’s toniest neighborhood.  The house, an original to the area, had been featured in Veranda in 1999, after it was decorated for its owners by Babs Watkins, the late interior designer.  Watkins played an important role in creating the “Houston Look” – an aesthetic filled with painted European antiques, faux walls, slipcovered furniture, and gilded accessories.  When the photoshoot of this French styled mansion was published, Watkins reputation as a visionary was sealed.   For years, fans of the house had only the photographs from the Veranda to look at, but when the house was put up for sale – suddenly there was a trove of new photos of Babs work to examine, albeit 15 years later.   The decor is still as pretty today as it was then.    

 

The house, whose interiors Babs Watkins designed in 1999.  A French styled manse in Houston’s River Oaks neighborhood, it was the work of the very talented and prolific Houston architect, Joseph Finger.

 

The back side of the house shows the large terrace and the breakfast room – located in the bay window. 

 

The front entry with a winding staircase and scrolled banister – along with a large crystal chandelier.   The decor was typical of Watkins – delicate antique furniture with sparse, oversized accents.

At the time, while this house built in 1937, was being well cared for – across town another French mansion designed by Joseph Finger in 1935 had not met the same fate.  Instead, this second Finger designed French house was left to the elements and was allowed to decay.   The irony of the two twin houses designed by the same architect – one lovingly cared for, the another ignored – was too interesting a story to ignore.

 

The other Finger designed mansion – left to decay, was sold “as is.”  Located on almost five acres, the new owners are restoring the house to its former grandeur. 

 

The back side of the mansion – you can see a similar bay window, one of many architectural details that both houses shared.

Besides the interesting juxtaposition of the condition of both houses, there were other intriguing contrasts.   While the well cared for house was built in the heavily deed restricted River Oaks, the decaying mansion was built in Riverside Terrace, where deed restrictions were abolished when the societal turmoil of the 60s hit Houston.

The River Oaks neighborhood was home to the wealthiest of Houstonians.  But, one section of the population was missing:  the wealthy Jews of Houston.  Instead of living in River Oaks, Jewish families moved en masse to the newly created Riverside Terrace which was platted along Braes Bayou.  Banned from River Oaks, many Jew built their own two story classic colonial, English and French inspired mansions, while others had architects design contemporary houses.    For over 30 years, Riverside Terrace was the center of Jewish life in Houston.  But,  with integration, came a text book case of “white flight” to Riverside Terrace.   A documentary was made in 1987 about the neighborhood  and the strife that ensued:  “This Is Our Home – It Is Not For Sale.”

And so, it was in the atmosphere before religious tolerance, that the largest house in Riverside Terrace came to be built, on a five acre lot on the bayou – designed by one of Houston’s most prominent architect’s – Joseph Finger.  The family that commissioned the beautiful French house was Joe Weingarten – one of the sons of Harris Weingarten, who had started a grocery store chain that at its peak had over 200 stores in several southern states.

Joe and his wife Malvina knew the architect Joseph Finger because he had built many of the original Weingarten stores.  They commissioned Finger to design the French chateau with five bedrooms for their young family, including sons Bernard and Jack and daughter Eveta.  Joe’s brother, Sol, also hired Finger to design a house for his own family right down the street, also facing the bayou.   Their other brother Abe hired Finger to design a large white mansion several streets away from MacGregor on Parkwood:

Joe Weingarten’s brother Abe’s house – similar to his own - was also designed by Joseph Finger.

 

  Joseph Finger was a Jewish architect who in 1905 immigrated from Austria where he had earned his degree.  Finger designed many important buildings in Houston, such as retail stores for Everitt Buelow, and Battelsteins.  He designed many Jewish buildings including an earlier Congregation Beth Israel, Beth Israel Mausoleum, an earlier Beth Yeshurun, and more.  He also designed the Houston City Hall which still stands today along with many other iconic buildings including Houston’s Municipal Airport

 

Besides the house Finger built for the Weingartens, other prominent Jewish families living in the neighborhood were the Battlesteins, the Sakowitzs, the Bordens, the Turboffs, and the Meyers.  

One interesting fact about the Weingarten French chateau concerned his son Bernard, who had grown up there.  He eventually married Houstonian Shirley Caplovitz and when his parents moved out of the mansion, Bernard bought it for his own family which eventually included five daughters.

When Bernard moved out, he sold the house to a family who never maintained the house, allowing it to deteriorate.  They have just sold it to a couple who are now currently restoring it.  Photographs have been showing up in the Houston Chronicle of their incredible progress. 

 

Here is a drawing of how the house will look when the restoration is complete.  The main facade will remain the same with the addition of a new porte cochere to the right of the front door, along with a two story garage.  In the back a new kitchen wing will be added, along with a pool:

The back of the renovated Weingarten mansion – with the kitchen wing projecting out in front of the swimming pool.

 

Before:  The house was a confection of pink carpet.  I talked to Bernard Weingarten’s daughter Ellen and she told me that this pink carpet was not in the house when she lived there as a small child.  And even more strangely – the pink carpet was simply laid over the existing carpets and floors – without ever being installed.   When Ellen recently went to visit her former home, the stairs were especially tricky to navigate because the pink carpet kept slipping.

The Houston Chronicle visited the house in the middle of its incredible renovation: 

 

During:  The floor boards have been removed.  Notice the fireplace – there is no mantel.  Bernard’s wife loved the marble mantel and had it removed when she moved out, installing it in her new house.  Photographs of their new house are coming up!

The French manse already looks so much better now that it has been cleaned and stripped.   This room is going to be so beautiful.  I can’t wait to see it completed!!

 

Before:   The beautiful entry which looks very much like its twin River Oaks house that Joseph Finger also designed.

 

During:  The current owner shows the renovation’s progress to the Houston Chronicle.  The pink carpet has been removed.  Notice the niche.   The railing is so beautiful – I can’t wait to see the house finished!

 

The new owner in the bay window room – similar to the one in the River Oaks house.  Again, the floor boards have been removed.  Notice the wall heater!  

To see more photographs of the restoration – with new pictures of its attic and basement(!) go HERE.

 

After Bernard and Shirley Weingarten bought the house from Bernard’s parents, their five daughters were born and began going to school – on the other side of town.  Before the days of the freeway, the commute from MacGregor Drive to Memorial was taxing.  Along with all the political upheaval happening in their once bucolic neighborhood, the Weingartens began to think about moving closer to the girls school.

And so, in the mid 1960’s Bernard and Shirley began designing a new house.  It would prove to be completely different than the French manse that Bernard had lived in almost his entire life.   Joseph Finger, the architect long associated with the Weingarten family and the one who had designed the French house, had passed away in 1958.  In his place, the family hired a new architect that would be closely associated with a cousin of the family, building developer Kenneth Schnitzer Sr.  That architect was Arthur Evan Jones.

Jones was a very prolific architect who had a hand in designing many of the contemporary buildings in Houston.  He was a graduate of Rice University and he worked with Lloyd and Morgan where he later became a partner.   He is credited with being lead designer on such projects as the Allen Center, American General Center, Greenway Plaza, Smith Tower, Rice Stadium and too many more to list here.  But, Jones will always be best known as the designer of Houston’s famous Astrodome.

 

A beautiful architectural drawing of the Astrodome, called the Eighth Wonder of the World.  The first air conditioned stadium, it opened in 1965 – with its famous faux grass called AstroTurf.

A wonderful interview with the architect Jones is HERE.  

While Jones was busy designing many of Houston’s modern buildings, he took time out to design some residential homes, mostly contemporary ones.  One such home was built for Bernard and Shirley Weingarten and their five daughters. 

Mrs. Weingarten lived a rather short life and unfortunately died at just 56, in 1985.  Bernard Weingarten chose to stay in their home and he lived there until he himself passed away last year at the age of 90.  He refused to move and told his family the only way he would leave his house was “feet first.”

Now that he is gone, the house is for sale and it is quite remarkable.  It’s not everyday that a house designed by such a talented architect as Arthur Jones goes on the market.  And even more exciting is that Shirley Weingarten had hired the Houston legend Herb Wells to design the main rooms.  Very little of Wells original design has been changed over the years which is so interesting to see.

So.  Let’s take a look at the house, located in Piney Point Village.

 

The modern house is set on 1.77 wooded acres, built around two courtyards, which are seen through its many windows.

 

The house is 6900+ sq. ft with 5 bedrooms and 3 full, 2 1/2 baths, along with quarters.

 

The back of the house faces a natural setting.  There are two main courtyards that the rooms overlook.

Here’s the floor plan.  The house is large enough that there is room for a large wet bar in the den, a large powder room, a playroom with another wet bar, and study areas in the kids rooms.  There are quarters over the 3 car garage.   To see the listing, go HERE. 

The beautiful photos were provided by Benjamin Hill.

 

The front doors open onto a gallery hall that leads through to the dining room and past that, to the living room.  Herb Wells used a green slate floor.  Here – two demilunes flank a piece of textile art.

 

 

The view facing the front door.  The kitchen is off to the right of the door while the family room is off to the left.  The living room and dining room are straight ahead from the door.

 

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Friday, February 17, 2017

A bit of history Americans original motivation

A bit of history Americans original motivation



I absolutely love history. In fact outside of programming and basketball it has to be my favorite hobby (and yes programming to me is a hobby since I enjoy it so much). For Christmas my wife gave me the Illustrated Edition of "1776" by David McCullough. I enjoyed the original very much and am looking forward to reading it again along with the 140 images and 37 replicated source documents.

Learning new things I think is why I enjoy history so much. For example, in his new book, Author McCullough starts by including an image of what it regarded as our countries first flag: The Grand Union. Also fascinating was the quote by Alison Huber, "Independence from Britain was not as yet what Americans were fighting for, but rather what they felt their rights as freeborn Englishmen." Its real easy to forget something like this and just naturally think our fore fathers started fighting for independence immediately. Instead they were just fighting for the same rights their brothers had back in England.

Stayed tuned as I plan on posting as I read more of the book; or just hit the space bar in Google Reader if you dont care.

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A Little Bit of History

A Little Bit of History



Here is a little self- portrait of me circa 20 years ago.

Ive spent months trying to come up with the right words to express myself in this post, but I still dont think I can do it justice. Simply put, life is wonderful. If you can dream it, you can do it.
20 years later, that little girl gets to stroll into the Walt Disney Animation Studios every day and walk among giants. It doesnt get much sweeter than that.
I sincerely thank everyone who has ever given me support, and if you are reading this, that includes you. Thank you, thank you, from the bottom of my heart, thank you.

I havent quite gotten settled in the new job yet, so posts might be sparse for a while. I will do my best to keep up, but please forgive me if I am a little slow. I will still be heading out to conventions, including Emerald City Comic Con in Seattle next weekend! If you are in the area you should definitely stop by! And after that I will be back in the Bay for Wondercon! If you have a chance to come to either show, please do. Until then, ta ta for now!

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Thursday, February 16, 2017

A bit of Wildfox Inspiration!

A bit of Wildfox Inspiration!




Wildfox is an American fashion label created by childhood friends Emily Faulstich and Kimberley Gordon. "Inspired by sleepovers, beautiful books, fairies, dreams, vintage t-shirts and their friendship"
Their collections are young and fun, and focus on brightly coloured t-shirts and vests with bold slogans and cute, cartoony designs.
Since discovering this brand recently I can see why it is a hit with celebrities and fashionistas alike. There latest collection is inspired by witchcraft and magic, (but not in a freaky way!) and the pictures are so inspiring and beautiful I just had to share them with you! So go and check them out at www.wildfoxcouture.com. Their collections are also available at choice designer wear and asos.com to name a few stockists. So Ill stop rambling on now, as the pictures speak a million words themselves!

Beautiful editorial images - Fall 2010:



Here are some of my favourite designs from the present and past collections:


Wildfox Fall 2010 collection promo video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDsubx0BBBE

Love Kate x

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