All posts by Andrew Green

Going to BotCon

Botcon 09 Exclusive - KupWell, it’s official as I’ve fallen down the rabbit hole into my obession with Transformers. Jessica and I are set to go to BotCon 2009 in Pasadena, CA.

It’s one thing to bake a cake, it’s one thing to take tons of photos of toys, it’s an entirely different matter when you start attending conventions.

This will actually be my first convention of any type that I will have attended. Never done the comic book thing, nor sci fi thing. We did go to a small 3D photography convention during a trip through the midwest last year, but that was Jessica’s idea and quite small.

You know you are going to a big convention when:

  1. There are exclusive toys
  2. When said toys sell out within a couple of days
  3. When registering for the convention takes several hours of faxing due to demand jamming the lines
  4. When packaged admission is several hundred dollars
  5. They are premiering the toys from the new movie, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

I was lucky enough to get my form in time to get into the lucrative Thursday customizing class. Oh yeah, I get to learn how to make regular toys into custom toys. That is really gonna help with my addiction.

So for 4 days at the end of May, Jessica and I will be heading out to Pasadena to further fuel my obsession with toys from my youth. BotCon being in Pasadena this year is actually fortuitous, since we don’t need to fly to get the convention. I actually don’t think we would have bothered had we been required to fly. So most likely this will be my first and last BotCon… maybe…

First works from Two-Dimensional Design Class

I finally got around to shooting then posting my recent completed works from the art class I’m taking. I’m currently taking ART112 – Two-Dimensional Design at Mesa Community College.

All the subject matter of the course is non-objective, so the end results are just shapes and forms. None of the pieces are supposed to look like real objects/things.

The first pieces were 5×6″ Figure and Field cards. The positive or negative forms had to be gestalt, and these pieces were completed with black construction paper on watercolor paper.

Figure and Field Figure and Field Figure and Field Figure and Field Figure and Field

Two of those cards were then enlarged to 10×12″ and painted with black gouache on watercolor paper. The professor found my geometric patterns more interesting hence why the larger piece is a bit more simple.

Figure and Field Painting Figure and Field Painting

The next assignment was for Pattern, and the final piece was a completed set of rotational patterns. Taking a 2″ equilateral triangle, I took a design and began to replicate it by rotating it on a center axis. This generated a hexagon which was then copied further. The final piece is black sharpie on drawing paper and is about 16×20″.

Pattern - Rotational Pattern - Rotational

The final assignment was Rhythm. This one took the most effort to brainstorm for a set of acceptable pieces and I’m quite happy with the final result. Each subject is 6×8″ and is painted with black gouache on watercolor paper. The detail work was very hard but I’m happy with how clean the piece is overall given the size of the brush I was using.

Rhythm Paintings Rhythm Paintings Rhythm Paintings Rhythm Paintings

So I’m happy that I was able to finally get some organic forms and curves in the final piece to contrast the geometrically-simple earlier works.

In addition to the images above, a gallery of all my ART112 work so far is available.

Wordle Your Blog

First pass as FloatingCat.com through Wordle

Looking back through some of my starred Google Reader feeds, I came across a link to a interesting service called Wordle.

It will take a list of text from a source (say a blog or rss feed) and then create a piece of typographic art that lists the most common words. You can then edit some of the settings like fonts, colors, and layout and have the page redraw the piece to your choosing.

A second, more chaotic look at my site via Wordle

What does your blog or site look like in a Wordle?

Upgraded to WordPress

Well it’s been almost a full year since I last blogged, and blog spam finally made me ditch my custom blogging solution for WordPress. I’ve had several WP versions installed hidden on my domain for a while, but I kept holding off until I “could make a custom theme”.

Well several months and tons of comment spam later for my Optimus Prime cake posts, and it was time to just finally migrate. All my old posts since way back in August of 2001 should have been migrated, and I also added 301 redirects for my old URLs to point to the new shiny WP clean URLs. Gotta keep my page rank up for “optimus prime cake” you know.

So right now, if you are catching this site while it still has a temporary WP theme; you are viewing FloatingCat.com version 2.9. Hopefully staring at someone else’s theme installed on my site will force me to finally upgrade this thing to 3.0.

In addition, an easier blog solution like WP should allow me to blog easier and therefore more often.

All the non WP pages such as Ask the Floating Cat, should hopefully still work and if they don’t please send me a line.

Making an Optimus Prime Cake

A bunch of people have asked Jessica and I how we went about making that semi-famous Optimus Prime Cake of ours. This post should contain information on how to go about making one for yourself.

  1. Optimus Prime toy measurements (Excel spreadsheet)
  2. Reference pictures of Optimus Prime toy
  3. Step by step instructions
  4. Photo collection of the making our Optimus Prime cake

I hope this information will help any of you would-be Transformers bakers. Let me know if you need additional help and be sure to share any pictures if you attempt to make the cake!

My Transformers Collection

My G1 Transformers Collection In order to build our Optimus Prime cake, I needed to go into our attic and get down my classic Transformers toys. We needed to see and measure the classic Generation 1 Optimus Prime toy as reference, and in order to get to him, I needed to get them all down. So for the past couple of weeks, I’ve had my entire Transformers collection sitting around in my office just dying to be played with. I figured it was a good time to document all of my stuff, and so I spent a day this past weekend cataloging them all with photos and video. I took tons of pics with at least 2 for each toy; once in robot mode with all their gear and once in vehicle mode. I don’t think I’ll be putting any YouTube videos together, but I did post all of my stuff up on Flickr. Each toy is named, and funny anecdotal information that I could remember was thrown into the descriptions. It’s quite interesting seeing just how much Transformers stuff I actually have.

Optimus Prime Cake: 2007

Last week I sent a link to Jessica about a Transformers cake that was coming to Wal-Mart. It was your standard grocery store sheet cake with a toy topper that was a real transforming Optimus Prime from the upcoming movie.

That link set the gears spinning to do our own Transformers cake. But instead we were going to not just do the topper. Oh no, instead the entire cake was going to be Optimus Prime. And he was going to be big.

So after baking 12 8×8 white cakes (9 of which were used), using 5lbs of white fondant, 6 cans of Color Spray, 3 batches of buttercream, 2 vials of silver dust mixed with vodka, and 2 very long days crafting this piece of edible art: we had ourselves our own Optimus Prime cake.

More details about the process are available in the Flickr set about the project, as well on my wife Jessica’s blog.

In the end, it looks like we completed our goal and also made the 1984 cartoon variant of Optimus Prime quite happy.

Digg this post

Optimus Prime Cake: 1984

My first try at a Transformers cake came back in December of 1984, almost 23 years ago. Using a simple sheet cake made straight from the box; all I needed was some white frosting, a little food coloring, and some colored gels to let my creativity fly.

All in all, I think it turned out well for someone who was 8, had no real experience and only used basic grocery store bought tools. In the end, it tasted good and that was all that really mattered.

10 Years on the Web

Ten years ago the very foundations of this site were built.

Using a Mac application called Claris HomePage, I built my very first web page called oddly enough, “Andy’s Homepage”. There were tons of self created animated GIF’s, stupid pictures, and bits of dumb text. It was very ugly, but it was also hidden behind a FTP server for a few months while I cleaned it up.

Here we are ten years later, and some of the content is still available on this site today.

It’s kinda crazy to think that I’ve been working on the web for more than a decade. Wow.