Sunday, July 9, 2017

And then there's the "tradesy" stuff.

When "building" the house, I acted as General Contractor. I didn't do any labor I wasn't licensed to do, but I did what manual labor I could and used others' insurance and bonding to help move things along under their umbrella, and ended up saving a lot of dough that way.

I have to admit that digging ditches by hand is unpleasant. That's the only job where you start at the top. I also have to admit that I learned about working your way up, literally. If I had it to do over again, apart from a couple design changes, I would have done a couple other things in a different order. Always get your yard lines in first: water, gas, and sewage while you're getting the foundation dug.

But I'm not here to write a recipe.

Apart from the landscaping, I've done some other trade-based work that I think is decent, and I wanted to showcase that. It's funny: lately I kind of miss making art, but I've been pretty damn productive the past couple years, always with more projects in the works (and always with some that will probably never come to fruition). So here's what else I've been up to:

HOME STUFF

I found the cabinet at the Habitat for Humanity ReStore. It was pretty much the perfect size for our bathroom. It took some searching to find the closet door, but that really brought the design together. Now we have a shallow broom closet and a bathroom cabinet/laundry hamper.

 I kind of enjoy working with pre-existing pieces more than making things from scratch. I generally prefer to have a "problem to solve" than to design from scratch. I feel like the process is more interactive/surprising/dynamic that way. Above is the install all trimmed out, below is the cabinet painted to match the bathroom.

I wouldn't mind putting a cabinet door on the top, but that would only change the look, not the function. Not a top priority.

But there's more:

Working with more salvaged materials, I made some bookcases for the bedroom. The tops are laminated (doweled and glued-wish I'd had a better clamping setup, but they sanded out OK) cedar 2x4's made into a slab. Most of the carcass is 3/4" ply that I found on the street. Yes, that was pure luck. It had oddly been cut down to 7 feet long and not really anything else had been done to it, other than some running over. The tire tracks sanded out nicely.


I put 3/8" ply on the backs for rigidity. I had recently purchased a dado blade, so I put that to good use. The backs and most of the shelf joints were rabbeted, glued, and nailed. The tops are, too. The smaller shelf in the left hand one above is adjustable. Super easy to do: drill holes at regular intervals along the desired range of placement and use brass pegs to hold the shelf. All the carcass fronts are banded in 1/4" thick poplar. All the shelf fronts are banded with 1" thick strips of poplar for added strength under load. I hate cheap veneer edge banding and "deflection" under load.

The legs were the only significant material investment, but they were worth it. They bracket on very securely and they clear the baseboard.

I stained them with Danish oil, which gave me a little headache, even though I wore a respirator for most of it. Next time I'll wear the respirator when I mix the color. Live and learn.


 I gotta say they sit pretty nicely in the room.

There were some work projects to be done, as well.

The most recent location we opened required a fair amount of build-out. I ended up stripping and grinding concrete, reconfiguring displays, framing walls, and doing some finish carpentry as well.

WORK STUFF:

Here's the big wall that we framed in two days. That was pretty fun.


Here's the new bathroom, stubbed out and framed. Of course the A/C guy didn't mark his compressor locations very well and got miffed at the wall locations. As if he were the one whose project it was. I asked him to spray paint his locations. That didn't end up happening. Would you notice four 1/4" holes in THAT ceiling? I sure didn't. We installed a drop ceiling in the bathroom and it all ended up working out.

Bathroom
 Warehouse Dividing Wall (notice how it's woven into the pre-existing structural and electrical).

And here you see the old countertop that I reworked. It was just laminate over framing and chipboard. I made it ADA-compliant (like the bathroom above), clad it in salvaged wood, and put the butcher block countertop on it with the help of our most recent cabinet guy. Finished with Tung oil, which I prefer to the Danish stuff. It may not look all that fancy, but the sides of this counter are actually on compound angles: the top sits farther out than the base. You can see a little bit of the ground concrete joint to the right, as well. I hope I never have to do that again.

The shelves you see against the wall were in the store already, but reconfigured by yours truly. The library card catalogs were UT Surplus auction.

MORE HOME STUFF:

The last project of recent note is the built-in couch. There's storage under the left side, and the seat cushion on the right actually rolls out on a track to become a bed.


There's obviously storage in and on the back of the thing, too.

I will admit that I'm not much of a tailor or upholsterer, but I covered the thing in beige cotton duck. I started cladding the right-hand wall with wood as part of this project. That will eventually be covered, but there's a folding table and bench to build into the wall first (there's already blocking for them in the framing), then fill in around. Then our "almost tiny" home will be complete. For now we eat outside or sitting on the couch. I don't mind. The wife might a little bit.

Again, lots of angles, space, proportions to consider. Again, I'm just a beginner when it comes to building furniture. But I consider this a successful first foray into built-in seating. Because it's really quite comfy and it's proven to be an efficient use of space.

And there you have it. You're pretty much up to date on the "making" I've been doing.


Saturday, June 10, 2017

4 years Later...

This is going to be a longer post. So, yeah, I did the PDC thing, built a house, and then got into landscaping the lot. This is the view of the yard from our deck:
A friend pointed out that for every plant, I've got one that's doing great and one that's not doing so great. True enough. On the far left you can see the nectarine tree that is taking over that section of the beds. The brown blob to the right of it is where the peach tree is just kind of puttering along. The nectarine is only a year older than the peach.

The design of these two "rockery" beds is intended to accomplish a few things:

1. Provide a "green fence" and a natural division between the front and rear houses. When I had it all planted with Castor Bean last year, it kinda overdid that. I knew it was temporary, so I was fine with it
2. Provide at least seasonal food. It definitely has done that with the herbs, nectarines, and satsumas, and to a lesser degree with the pears, peppers, tomatoes and apples. The bananas are not tasty.
2b. Provide harvesting access to the edible plants, which the lobed design accomplishes fairly well for a tall guy like me.
3. Provide a use for rainwater (and, eventually, greywater). I recently graded the lawn surrounding them so all water will drain towards the border and infiltrate at the base of the rock walls.
4. Provide a nice (eventually lush) environment to hang out in. The western bed definitely does more of that because it's older.

If you look at the previous post, you'll see what I had planned for the shipping container. Someday I'll do a modified version (roof beds only, door on the end instead of the side). Budget has definitely been a constraint. Speaking of budget: out of what you see there, I definitely did it on the cheap. All the soil is sheet-mulched with "failed" hay, manure, and compost. Most of the mulch was free, and all the rock was free (thanks, Craigslist!). It definitely helps that I'm ok with a "crusty" aesthetic. If I had my druthers, I'd have used more natural stone and the drip lines would start at a yard line rather than from the hose bibs, but it works as is.


Here are a couple closer views of the benches. Again, *free*. Again, you can see what I mean about a "crusty" aesthetic. But the forms are functional. I'm waiting patiently for that hackberry behind the fence to die (and trimming it as the neighbors allow), so the rest of the trees along the fence will flourish. It should only take another 10 or so years. I still don't know a ton about the preferences of different fruit trees as far as site, but I'm learning: Citrus seems to be happy in the understory. Pears prefer more exposure.
This is the herb spiral. Notice the placement within a few steps of the back door.  I'm still learning what wants to be where within this thing. It could also be better irrigated. It could also be 1 1/2x to 2x as wide so everything has more room. I'll say that I *have learned* that in Texas, neither parsley nor cilantro has a place in one of these. They belong in the shade so they won't bolt. I moved those and some chard over to the shade of the nectarine. And basil prefers "danker" soil than is in here (I used Geo Grower's soil on this. The hardier/shrubbier guys like it).



 I stained the posts and welded those arbors on the underside of the deck last year (thanks for letting me borrow the welder, Juan!). The grapes on the west side totally took off this year! They're all sitting in wicking beds made from troughs. They're planted with mint, chives, and tomatoes as companions. Everyone seems to be getting along famously. (I've got alliums under a lot of the trees in the garden, too. Apparently they suppress grasses?)


I have to harvest the tomatoes ASAP due to pilfering squirrels, so this isn't the most impressive photo, BUT they really like being trained up these little trellises on the south wall. They like the wicking beds, too. Interplanted with cucumbers, jalapenos, and (until today) kale.

This is a shot of the pawpaw grove, compost tumbler, and one of the pear trees. The pawpaws are kind of in a swale (rather than a berm) due to spatial constraints, but they seem to be ok with it. 2 years with flowers, but no fruit. At least they make nice dappled shade.


Enough about the edible plants.


Bambusa Textilis (weaver's bamboo) as a screen between our lot and the McMansion deck next door. You can see it on the right in the panorama (top of this post). These really took off! One more would be ideal, but at the price, I couldn't see buying three at once.  I hope to get the third one this year. I think the neighbors are happy that I planted them, as well. They block the view of us Beverly Hillbillies.

These next two are my solution to the ugliness under the landing that is comprised of our greywater valve and mini split A/C units.

See those tools just sitting out? Told you: Beverly Hillbillies.


More tomatoes and wicking beds in the foreground of this view. The overflow from this one cascades to the lower tomato. You can't see it, but there's an Akebia (chocolate vine) planted behind that lower tomato as well. It's getting established pretty well. I think it'll take off after I pull the tomato this year. Yeah, I know, I said I wasn't gonna talk about edible plants any more. I lied.


Following is the gate from the front drive. Oversized square steel tubing to link it to the cedar framing that's on the privacy fencing on both sides. I don't really like pressure treated lumber for outdoor uses in Texas. It just doesn't last. In the background you can see our deck. The railing is all p/t and it's not holding up. So I'm saving up to weld a railing/pergola for that thing. With built-in wicking beds and vines crawling up the posts. Our deck gives us plenty of "prospect" as architects would put it, but not a whole lot of "refuge". So I'mma fix that.


And this is the gate to the back. Solid to 6ft per City of Austin restrictions. 7th foot is trellis. Roses for a touch of green and security (because, yeah, we live downtown near a lot of bars). I never water those things.

The corrugated was the roof to the old garage that was in a bad place on the lot. In fact the "urbanite" that I used for building the start of the rockery walls was sawed wall footer from that same garage. And the siding is now the trim inside the garage apartment. I love reusing things.


Pano of the whole back fence. Rolling gate track is sitting on angle iron welded to the posts. It works great on a light footprint. More of that oversized square tubing to resemble wood framing.


If I had it to do over again, I'd probably have asked them to skip the flat bar that runs horizontally across the framing. I thought the corrugated would need it, but it would've been just as strong and looked better installed vertically at the overlaps. You can see the trees starting to peek out over the top. More roses will go in on the right. I had originally thought of planting sunchokes there, but I think they'd get out of hand.

So yeah, apart from building the house and getting it all permitted and inspected and installing built-ins, that's what I've been up to. Plus I got married. And built out and opened a fourth location of the business. I'll catch you up on the other projects soon.

-Tim






Thursday, June 20, 2013

Update:

I still like the title "Intended Use".

I just finished designing something for intended use: the garage apartment described in the last one. As far as these more practical problems being interesting, they are definitely more compelling, maybe not always more enjoyable. Dealing with the city is definitely not my favorite thing. But I'm learning a TON!

Speaking of learning, I finished a Permaculture Design Certificate course in May. I'm available for this kind of work if anyone's interested. I've got two design/build projects lined up already (our home/yard and my sister's yard, too). But if you only want some design work, I'm willing to work pro bono for a few jobs. So bring it.

I've got another sketchup model in the works. Yes, it's a practical thing that I used a modeling program to design. Imagine that. It's a simple one. Guess I'll have to get good at welding before I start this one.

It's a shipping container turned into a couple storage spaces (sliding doors added to the rear right) with a terraced wicking bed garden. The water chambers of the wicking beds cascade, so that you only fill one spot, but they all get full. The "stairs" are steep, more of a ship's ladder. And there'll probably be a view of downtown from the top.


Next will most likely be "before" pictures for the construction site. And maybe some "after" pictures of the front garden. But yes, progress reports are forthcoming.


Saturday, January 21, 2012

intended use

You know, the more I think about it, the more I'm interested in design: interior design, furniture design, illustration. I've become increasingly aware that my thinking has moved from saying something about life (as if someone else couldn't say it better) to saying something to life. By this, I mean that I'd rather solve my/our everyday problems in an elegant way than make objects that collect dust. I've also noticed that my work had moved towards creating an imaginary world that I wish existed: an unpopulated world full of good design.

The viewer was supposed to populate this world, each one alone in his/her perception of what they saw. But I'd rather let it happen in reality, negotiating that. Because the "issues" in art are imaginary. I have a much better handle on issues that stare me in the face every day.

I spend time at home. I want that space to function well. I don't want to store a bunch of crap (which is what happens to my art: it gets stored. usually by me), and I don't want to encourage anyone else to do so. By no means am I saying that art is "crap". I just think it's for people who have room. And money. I don't know many of those people. (People who have money tend to buy enough crap to fill their place pretty quickly). And there's a ton of great art in the world already, really.

So there you have it. I guess the title of this neglected little blog was prophetic. I'll write more later, but for now I'm working on designing a garage apartment. The problems (posed by budget, city code, intended purpose, best use of the site, and desired aesthetic) are pretty engaging. And if I do it right, it'll end up useful.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

a swift pass

I know, I know: Corny title. I couldn't resist.

So here's the next pass on the chimney swift from before. I decided to keep the tail. And nix the nest. It didn't seem necessary. Again, striving for tactility in the marks, proper "structure", and line weight to give depth and convey hard/soft edges in space.

In other news, I've been thinking again about teaching myself to tattoo. Free simple tattoos! Any takers?


Sunday, February 13, 2011

The Next Pass

Finally got back to work on this after a long work week. Headed off on a work trip in a couple days, so this is probably the last entry for a while. I'm pretty satisfied with it in its current state. Might need to spend another few minutes on the face. It's definitely a lot cleaner now. The marks are more tactile and the line weights are more effective. I find it difficult to ignore value (and in this case, the pattern on the feathers) and still try to accomplish the illusion of a change in plane. That's what's got the left side of the face looking so much heavier than the right at the moment.

If I make the time to finish up those chimney swifts, we'll be back in business on the computer...

Thursday, February 3, 2011

The Other Stuff

So this is what I've been keeping under my hat: Anaglyph stereo images. I'm still getting a handle on this part of it, but it's about time to start making prints and paintings out of them. These are just objects, but I do have environments (meaning buildings) in the works. The current long-term goal is to create an entire world in 3-D so that I can basically compose my own interiors, still-lives, etc.  I think it'd take me a year of full-time work to finish everything I've started so far, and I'm already more excited about things I haven't even started yet...

...which is now making me wonder why I'm drawing those birds...

Considering past events regarding my process, I'm hesitant to go into the details of how these have gotten to their current state. I was hesitant to even let anyone see this stuff, but this forum seems "safe". Anyone with a decent amount of smarts and motivation could do this, anyway. In the end, it's the natural idiosyncrasies of the individual that make the piece what it is. If your idiosyncrasies are more charming and accessible than mine (and many are), then you'll end up making it yours and not mine. There's no more intellectual property among individuals, anyway. That kind of opens up the big old can of worms called ethics (no, not morals: ethics. The way I see it, morals are oriented towards specific actions and social control, ethics are oriented towards a worldview and how one wants to effect the world). And that's beyond the scope of this blog.

All that said, this is extremely time consuming work. The birds were public property, the cages mine. The rest of it is made from the ground up by me using various methods. One of the guiding principles of this body of work is to make the thing "all the way through" to paraphrase Robert Irwin.

Having worked from photos for most of my life, I'm at a point where I feel like I have to use the reference to make something that's my own, rather than pay homage to it. I'd like the end product to be something interesting, as well, but that's another matter. I'll probably be working on that one for the rest of my life. I guess that's the point.

Red lens on the Left
I plan on re-drawing this one to put the light source at the center of the honeycomb. And right now it's too washed out in comparison to the hand
(and this one is better at full screen)

It's a good idea to play around with the viewing size, as that has a major effect on the quality of the stereopsis.

Red lens on the Left
Needs more contrast, but you get the picture.


But I think, dear Imaginary Reader, that you can see how I would say that I'm not really thinking in terms of painting at the moment.

Red lens on the Right
using an old method, making the cage to this took two weeks and was full of flaws. with this method, it took maybe two hours. total. and then i got more ambitious.



As far as how to view these, send a dollar in a SASE (Self-Addressed, Stamped Envelope) to:

Red lens on the Left

Tim Brown
c/o Oat Willie's
617 W 29th St
Austin, TX 78705

Red lens on the Right
...big plans for this one...


And I'll send you a pair of red/cyan or red/blue glasses to view these with. You can also use any other glasses that use those colors. Hell, red/green may even work. But if you can't find any, I'm here for you. Funds will go toward buying more glasses and (hopefully) making some screen printed mailers some day. If you buy glasses from me or if you just send me your snail mail address, I'll save it for that project.

Red lens on the Left
domes will fade to white at the base. better larger...


I'm also sorry to say that not everyone can see in stereo. I've been kicking this idea around for over a decade and working on it for over two years now. I recently found out that someone important to me doesn't see in stereo, and it breaks my heart to be unable to share this stuff with him. He and his brother are two awesome little men.