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Tonic water and glass in normal light
So, about a year ago I heard about Uranium Glass (also known as radiation glass, or vaseline glass), which is made with small quantities of uranium, causing it to glow under black light, and I wondered, vaguely, whether the drinking glasses which used to be my Grannie's, might be made of Uranium Glass, but I didn't have any source of ultraviolet light to test it with.

Uranium glass in UV light
And then more recently I learned that the quinine in (proper, non-diet) tonic water also glows in the dark, under black light. I learned this in the context of realising that one can make G'n'T jellies, and who wouldn't love a glow-in-the-dark alcoholic jelly? (Well, my family, it turns out. I made some G'n'T jellies at christmas and it turns out that the flaw in the plan is that if you don't much like jelly, adding gin is just a waste of gin. Maybe if I'd had an ultraviolet light so it glowed in the dark we'd have liked it better)

In these circumstances, it was only a matter of time before I acquired a UV light and started to play..

Today was the day it arrived. And it's a weekend, so I was always going to be having some  gin, so I'd have an excuse to play with tonic water...

It turns out that my glasses are uranium glass...

And tonic water does glow in the dark.


And you know what? Drinking a G'n'T out of the glass, you can get some very pretty effects!

Radioactive Gin and Tonic
Well, it kept me amused for a time!

I understand that the level of radioactivity involved in Uranium glass is so low it doesn't present any health risk (unless you grind up the glass and inhale it)
marjorie73: (Default)
At the gig on Monday, Amanda announced that the venue would be open again on Tuesday afternoon for the art, so I decided to go back.
The gallery was deserted so I was able to spend as long as I wanted with the art works.

On Monday, I'd found myself wandering around, and every so often I would see a picture and thinks "that's gorgeous, I wonder who made it?" and then I would read the label and, about half the time, realise that it was an artist I already knew of - some, like Kyle Cassidy and Molly Crabapple I was expecting, (you can buy prints of Molly's pieces here)
Molly Crabapple's art
Others, like Raliel, I should have anticipated but hadn't,Other artists included Judith Clute, Michael Zulli, David Mack, (I immediately loved his pieces, but it took a long time for the penny to drop and to realise that he also did the art work for the 'I Will Write With Words of Fire' prints from neverwear)

Some of the artists were new to me - I immediately fell in love with Vladimir Zimakov's linocuts,(also available as prints)

and was impressed with the photography skills of one Neil Gaiman, who seems to be a newcomer as a visual artist...

I was impressed, too, with the ability of one Amanda Palmer to draw so well, in addition to the singing.

Kambriel's gorgeous 'The Killing Type' dress presided over all, with bullets (or shell cases?) in the bodice..

Alone in the gallery, I was terribly tempted to see if I could take it off the mannequin and try it on myself. I didn't, but when I tweeted about it later, Kambriel said she would have let me, had she been there. I wish she had been!
Kyle Cassidy's 'Bed Song' art
But there was one piece of art which I kept returning to. The set of 5 pictures by [livejournal.com profile] kylecassidy, of people, naked, in bed. I kept returning to them because the pictures are beautiful, of course, but also because they felt so real - the people in the pictures. The pictures were beautiful, and so were the people in the pictures.Every curve, every line, every sign of lives lived. Seeing them on Monday night, during Amanda's show, I loved them. Seeing them the following day, in the quiet of an empty gallery, I was moved to tears.

(22.06.12. Edited to correct attributions)
marjorie73: (Default)
(Originally posted at http://margomusing.blogspot.com/2010/03/more-authors-and-ukulele.html) Comment here or there.

Another post which is almost a week overdue - sometimes real life does slow down the posting!


This was my last Bath Lit Fest event, and was different in that the



others were all to see people I knew of, whose work I'd read or was familiar with - this was one I went to as I read the information in the festival programme and thought it might be interesting. It was a reading / conversation with two authors,Ali Shaw , talking about his first novel, The Girl With Glass Feet and Mathias Malzieu, talking about his book The Boy with the Cuckoo-Clock Heart.(Which has apparently also been made into an animated film, due out in France in October)



It was a much smaller event than the previous ones I've been to - it was in a smaller side room, and there were, I guess, around 30 people there.




Mathias Malzieu was accompanied by Sarah Ardizzone, who translated the book into English and was interpreting where necessary.



Both authors started by reading from their books - I haven't yet started reading my (shiny new & signed) copy of The Girl with Glass Feet, but I bought it on the strength of the extract which Ali read, as I loved the description, and the idea behind the story, of a girl slowly turning to glass from the feet up, so I have high hopes!

I am not sure of their literary significance, but I also feel I shold mention Mathias Malzieu's beautiful red patent leather shoes, which I was vert sad to find I had failed to capture in any of my (colour) photos of the event..

Mathias and Sarah read from the beginning of 'The boy with the Cuckoo-clock heart' and Mathias talked a little more about the plot, which as well as making me want to read it, gave me the opportunity to practice my French comprehension! He also played and sang (He has another career as a rock-singer) It was fun.



I've started reading the book which, as the title suggests features a boy whose heart is replaced by a cuckoo-clock ....so far I'm liking it, although despite appearance it is not a children's story.

At the end, there was an opportunity to meet both authors, and Sarah Ardizzone, although I chickened out of trying out my spoken French, for fear of making a fool of myself..

I wonder who will be coming to Bath in September, for this year's Children's Literature Festival?


marjorie73: (Default)
It's March, which means that the Bath Literature Festival is back in town. This year, there were fewer events which I wanted to see - at least, fewer which were on evenings or weekends and which I was able to get to, so although the festival has been running for a week, the first event I went to was on Thursday evening.
Billed as "QI: Book of the Dead" it featured John Lloyd and john Mitchinson, who are the co-creators of the TV programme "QI" (nd who have written several books together, including the most recent one, The Book of the Dead, (which is a book of potted biographies).
 
John Lloyd was also involved as producer of 'Blackadder', created 'the News Quiz', co-wrote 2 episodes of the original 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'
John Mitchinson is a former publisher, and head researcher for QI.
 
The evening was highly entertaining - both Johns talking about various interesting facts - John M talking about Florence Nightingale, including her invention of the PieChart, and all of the different things which people have speculated may have caused her to spend the last 50 years of her life in bed. John L spoke a lot about teaching,
and in particuar the fact that  he believes that we remember things we find interesting, so teaching ought to focus more on fnding the kind of interesting, counter-intuative facts we get on QI, so as to stimulate interest, and encourage children to ask more quesrtions, and more challenging questions, rather than focussing solely on learning and remembering facts.
 
He had a rather nice quote (unfortunately I failed to make a note of whom he was quoting) that we "spend the first 12 months of out children's lives teaching them to walk and talk and the next 12 years telling them to sit down and shut up" with the comment that as a result children learn to stop asking the difficult questions...
although there were serious points being made, the event as a whole was very funny. (and I learned that there are no such thing as fish...) 
 
After the talk, I was able to briefly meet both Johns and thank them for the evening, and also swap a few lawyer jokes with John Lloyd, (who was a lwyer in early life...)
  
All in all, well worth going. On my way back to my car, I went past the Abbey, and took a few photos, as it in unusual to see it without dozens of people around, and it was looking rather dramatic!

marjorie73: (Default)

(originally posted at http://margomusing.blogspot.com/2010/01/ramdom-thoughts-and-how-my-brain-works.html)

There have been a few interesting things popping up on the internet recently. One which I found really interesting was a story on the BBC about a woman with near-perfect memory for faces, which also mentioned the opposite situation - prosopagnosia, or faceblindness - the inability to recognise or remember faces. For those who have it most severely, this can mean that even family members are unrecognisable, but like so many things, there is a whole spectrum.

I found this really interesting, as one of the things I have always been very bad at is recognising people's faces, and therefore, being able to recognise people. It's something which a lot of people don't really believe - they tend to assume that you're just not trying, or are making excuses for having deliberately ignored them.

One of the links from the BBC story was to some tests which give you an idea of how good you are at this, compared with the average person. Of course, like anything else on the web, I'm sure that it needs to be approached with some caution, but it was very interesting all the same.

According to the test, the average person would score about 80%, on recognising unknown faces; My score was 61%.

On recognising famous faces (which is adjusted to take account of whether you know who the people are) the average score is about 85%. I got 29%.

On the plus side, I shall be fine should I ever bump in to Mahatma Ghandi, Elvis, Princess Diana or Margaret Thatcher....maybe I'm just better at recognising the dead (or nearly dead) which could come in handy if it turns out there is an afterlife. Of course, if the test were re-designed to cover 'famous people I'm actually interested in' I would probably do better - if it included, for instance, David Tennant, Neil Gaiman, Diana Wynne Jones & Derek Jacobi I might have done better, although having said that, I didn't recognise Patrick Stewart...

I suspect that the better score on the first test reflects the fact that it is multiple choice, so you can potentially get some right by random guesses, and on the 'I don't recognise any of them but that looks very slightly more likely than the other two' principal.

The site also says that people with faceblindness often also have a poor sense of direction. Which is certainly true in my case (although my dad, who is very bad at recognising people, has an excellent sense of direction, so there are clearly variations!)

I'd be interested to know how anyone else scores...

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