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radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
radiantfracture

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Jan. 23rd, 2024

Bird Post

Jan. 23rd, 2024 07:06 pm
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
Here's another in the regional bird series -- the American Robin I threatened. (QESḴEḴ in SENĆOŦEN -- pronunciation here.)

Small square gouache painting of an American Robin on a blue background

I was trying for the looseness of the house finch; this has not got quite that freedom, but I really like how it turned out -- the combination of wet and dry work to create the feather texture and the details, and the lively line. And it still has some of that slightly cartoony personality that the freer, slightly exaggerated and simplified shape gives it.

The background used to be much more saturated, and I had to work to desaturate it so that the robin would come forward.

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radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
I'm very pleased by the work the dentist did on the cracked filling, which wobbled alarmingly in my mouth all through December. She's created a sculptural surface with two smooth planes, very pleasant to run the tongue across.

The fix itself was faster than I expected. Then she spent a long time refining her work, for which I am grateful -- now.

During the more arduous passages I was comforted by having recently discovered the details of the Sumerian sexagesimal number system (base 60). I knew about the twelves but not the sixties.

Base 60 sounds huge, insurmountable, but what I learnt was the small essential detail that you count it using the phalanges of your fingers.

(I can't do the long/short months count across my knuckles because I'm short a knuckle, but I have access to a full set of phalanges.)

I don't know how the Sumerians did the counting, but I found you can run your thumb rapidly up the inside of each finger, marking by pressure three on each finger, twelve on each hand, and then the five fingers of the other hand make it beautifully fast to count to 60 -- nothing more natural, using the body's sense of itself I would even say eloquently. I found it quicker and easier than counting tens -- you can store three on each finger instead of just one. (Though I was of course translating into Base 10 numerals, more or less).

So I did that, counted eloquently, while the various drills and grinders sang their high- and low-pitched songs.

Weirdly, I've always found counting by threes a natural way to divide numbers, though I did not use my finger-joints.

During the most arduous bits I could not really think clearly at all, except of what I might have for breakfast once my mouth unfroze.

{rf}
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