Updated workout schedule
Playing in the Epperson Garden
We planted alot and still have a small area left to work with. I'm developing a major green thumb, I'm digging gardening, it makes me feel a bit more grounded.
I think today I'm going to pull weeds, just so that I have an excuse (like I need one) to play in the dirt.
We have mint from last year springing up (photo above) and we planted chocolate and pineapple mint in another location. I can't wait for that. Our compost is empty. My hubbie took it all and put in the soil before we started planting.
STEFAN BUCHER
Stefan G. Bucher --- pronounced SHTE-fawn BOO-ker, the G is silent --- is a Los Angeles-based illustrator, graphic designer and writer.
Most recently he is the creator and driving force of the online illustration and storytelling experiment http://www.dailymonster.com
In March HOW Books published “100 Days of Monsters” a book/DVD time capsule of the first 100 monsters.
http://www.dailymonster.com
When did you first decide to become a graphic designer/ illustrator? Was there a pivotal moment?
There was never a pivotal moment. I can’t remember a time when it wasn’t clear that I’d be an artist. If I wasn’t born pen in hand then I didn’t waste much time after that. I didn’t necessarily set out to become either an illustrator or a graphic designer, or anything else for that matter. I just knew that I loved drawing and that I loved seeing my drawings in print even more. Every decision was based on getting more things printed. Fanzines, high school yearbook, selling ad designs door to door at 15. Next thing I knew I had a career.
Who or what inspires you?
I’m a fan of Ronald Searle, J.J. Sempé, Paul Flora, H.G. Rauch, and Ralph Steadman, of course. I think Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips knows how to have a good time as an artist, as do Ricky Gervais and Ben Folds. Randy Newman and Joe Jackson do, too, but Joe, in particular, seems cranky and I don’t need a role model for that. Also, it goes without saying that Bill Waterston and Matt Groening are gods.
Where does your training come from? Self-taught? College/Art School?
When I was growing up my dad volunteered at the Wilhelm Busch Museum for Caricature and Critical Graphics in Hannover, Germany, so I went to a lot of exhibits and always had catalogs around. That was the foundation. He’s an accountant and doesn’t draw, but one day he made a big X and a small x on a piece of paper and connected the corresponding end points --- voila! --- perspective drawing. I’m still dealing with that moment today.
Much later I got a degree at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, which didn’t hurt, either.
How do you keep "fresh" within your industry?
I love seeing what everybody else is doing, and it obviously influences my work, but I never set out to keep up with a trend. I just do what comes into my head. I’m not very strategic.
What are some of your current projects?
We’ll see where the monsters will go. That’s obviously the big project of the moment. I have a few other books in the works, as well --- some as designer, some as author or editor. None of it’s ready for prime time yet, but keep an eye out, please. I’m also continuing my designs for the Echo Park Time Travel Mart. I design and illustrate all their products, and take care of all the store graphics, so that’s a fun gig that’s ongoing.
Which of your projects are you the most proud of? And why?
I’m most proud of the monsters, of course. It’s nice to see that something so personal and odd turns out to be so universal. I’ve never worked harder on anything or had more fun.
Are there any areas, techniques, mediums or projects in your field that you have yet to try?
I’m somehow completely afraid of painting. I’m so used to the control of pen and ink that Paint on canvas seems incredibly intimidating. I grew up looking at warts and all original drawings at the museum, so that seemed much more attainable. Now I get to see a lot of amazing contemporary paintings up close through my work with the art gallery L.A. Louver, and I’m starting to see how that might work. I think large format work is going to be next on my list.
Any advice to the novice designer/ illustrator?
Do what’s fun and don’t worry about it. Worry just slows you down --- it does me --- and it never really leads to your best work.
What makes a designed piece or illustration successful?
A successful piece gets the point across, but it’s not right until it’s also surprising in some way, and beautifully executed on top of that.
What do you do to keep yourself motivated and avoid burn-out?
Motivation isn’t much of a problem anymore. There’s too much work on my desk to worry about motivation. Burn-out gets to be problematic every few years, but then some external factor usually comes into play that forces me to take a little time off. Usually that external factor is complete physical exhaustion and a nervous breakdown, but hell... that’s the cost of doing business. It would be nice to slow down a little bit every now and again, but then the ideas have to get out of my head and onto the page to be real. I can always rest when the ideas run out.
Finish this sentence. "If I weren't a designer/illustrator I would have been a..."
If I weren't a designer/illustrator I would have been a melancholy and slightly disheveled person wandering the streets, arranging leaves in perfect circles. Wait, then I’d be Andy Goldsworthy and I think he’s a genius, so I don’t want to put myself anywhere near that. I hope that I’d have learned to play piano, but maybe I’d be running an office-supply store. I love office supplies.
And finally, what is the best thing on prime-time TV right now?
Gotta go with Battlestar Galactica. Or John Adams --- which is very much like Battlestar Galactica, except with muskets, wigs, and Laura Linney.
Pose of the Day
Half moon pose with hands to feet pose
photo by Tara's Bikram Experience
Benefits
Works into the whole skeletal and circulatory systems
Opens shoulder joints
Reduces or eliminates pain in the lower back
Good for abdominal obesity
Improves and strengthens every muscle in the central part of the body Increase the flexibility of the spine
Increases flexibility and strength of rectus abdominis, gluteus maximus, oblique, deltoid and trapezius muscles
Alleviates anxiety and reduces mental stress
Stimulates pituitary gland
Exercises colon, pancreas, kidneys, muscular, skeletal, respiratory and glandular systems
Firms and trims waistline, hips, abdomen, buttocks and thighs
Terilynn says:
photo by Bikram Yoga-Takoma Park
This pose is in three parts. It gives a very nice side and back stretch. This is the first "back bend" in the series and the first chance to open the heart area a bit.
My biggest challenge with this poses is keeping my palms "glued" together, but I'm sure with time they will happen.
Bend it like Bikram
My first class (on Saturday) I did forget a few poses and I forgot what my body was capable of doing within those poses. But by the time I did Sunday's class and this morning's, I was in the flow and I was at where I left off 9 months ago.
I noticed the practice seemed lighter and a bit less constricted than previous experiences. Then it dawned on my that I'm practicing in a new and lighter body. Duh, that makes all the difference in the world.
I can't wait to see where the practice takes me. I have a feeling that I will be doing this for awhile. I love the practice so much, I'm very happy it's back in my life.
I thought on my yoga days (Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday), I would talk about well...yoga. Each session I'll discuss a different poses, it's benefits and my experience with it.
On Monday, Wednesday and Friday I continue to 'learn how to run' and weight training, although, I'm changing up the weight training a bit, but I'll discuss that tomorrow.
I also want to talk about the garden. We bought seeds and plants last weekend and I planted some wheatgrass. No more spending $2.50 for a shot. I'm drinking my own brew, yeah! More on the garden, later.
With the poses, I'm going to start at the beginning of the series until I cover all 26 poses, including two breathing exercises and then I'll choose a random pose in the series and discuss why I'm feeling that Pose for the Day.
Pose of the Day
1. Pranayama ( prāṇāyāma)"Standing deep breathing"
Benefits
Good for lungs and respiratory system
Helps with mental relaxation
Helps high blood pressure
Relieves irritability
Good for detoxification
Exercises nervous, respiratory and circulatory systems
photo and info by Quick Fit Yoga
Free Unlimited Yoga!
You are reading the posting of CorePower Yoga's newest stocker! How are ya'll doing? Nice to meet you.
All that is required of me is, twice a week I windexed the glass and mirrors, clean yoga mats, wipe counters, re-stock items that need re-stocking and take out the trash. For that commitment on my part I will receive unlimited yoga at any CorePower Yoga studio.
Heaven, heaven, heaven.
I have been practicing Hot Yoga (Bikram) off and on for about 2 years.
Mostly off because of funds, but it was something that indulged in every single day when I had the chance. I absolutely L-O-V-E it.
It has been the only workout (for me) where I did the same poses over and over and over again and I never got bored or burned out. With each session something different happened to challenge me and I always learned something new.
A bit of history about the practice.
photo by TegMaru
Hot Yoga, or traditionally known as Bikram Yoga, is a style of yoga developed by Bikram Choudhury. It is practiced in a room heated to 100°F -105°F.
You just don't know how happy this makes me. I am over the moon happy! Getting this opportunity to further my practice is so important to me. I will be the best stocker CorePower Yoga has ever seen! Okay, I'm being a bit dramatic but hey, who cares, I've got free yoga!
Here is my new workout schedule to add Hot Yoga into the mix.
Monday: Running, Weight training
Tuesday: Hot Yoga
Wednesday: Running, Weight training
Thursday: Hot Yoga
Friday: Running, Weight training
Saturday & Sunday: Hot Yoga.