Monday, May 18, 2009

The Lumberjack Production.

This is the blow down that we are about to harvest into 6' long Cherry Logs for Kibler's woodworking.....  Rain, Mud, Chainsaws, & Gas.........Look and Watch at your own risk....
Thanks Constable Bruno for showing us what tree we are cutting....


The Architect has finished marking the tree precisely at 6' intervals....

The engineer is working his way up the hillside....





All the logs flopped to the side of the road, easy right?
SURE, now we just have to come back after lunch and load them..


Hey look Kibler's Truck WITH a Gas tank.....










Needless to say everything went great UNTIL Kibler's truck hit the metal above and punctured a garden hose size hole into his gas tank...no logs came home with us, neither did his truck.
It came home on a wrecker....


The old Chevy Came out on top though, just fine, with a solid gas tank and a hung-over crowd too boot!

VIDEOS 
loading tomorrow!


Labels:

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Kirsten Gillibrand (D) , She's getting my vote next time!

June 26, 2008


Dear Mr. Wright,

Thank you for contacting me regarding H.R. 5889, the Orphan Works Act of 2008. Based on the large volume of mail my office has received regarding this bill, I recognize that this is an issue of great importance to the people of Upstate New York. I also understand your concerns regarding this piece of legislation and therefore if this bill were to come to the House floor, I would vote against it.

As you may know, orphan works are copyrighted works whose owners have been difficult or even impossible to identify or locate. This bill would limit liability in most cases of copyright infringement when a reasonable search to locate the copyright owner was made but was unsuccessful, provided that any known information regarding the owner and copyright holder is available. It would also require infringers to submit a Notice of Use when they use an orphan work. I believe that this bill would unnecessarily deprive rightful copyright owners of their just income.

Thank you again for contacting my office regarding the Orphan Works Act. Please do not hesitate to contact me in the future regarding any other pending legislation or other concerns you may have.



Sincerely,

Kirsten Gillibrand
Member of Congress

P.S. Please remember to sign up for my online newsletter.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Memorial Day.

Thank you to all our veterans serving/who served our country.

Thank you to their families who sacrificed their time with them.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

SAY NO to the ORPHAN WORKS BILL!!!

Preface by the illustrator Jason Martin, taken from his email to me:

"Oh yeah, already way ahead of you. I ended up writing Senator Leahey, telling him, "Tell ya what--since you think it's acceptable to go ahead and take my work without paying for it (or paying what YOU think is reasonable, if you get caught) maybe I'll just go visit your house, and if I like your car, I'll just go ahead and take it. But if you catch me, I'll pay you what I think is reasonable for it, and frankly, who WOULDN'T think that $50 is a reasonable price for a BMW?"
This is just flabbergasting that someone thinks this is an acceptable ethic to try to pass through Congress!! ""








Hi all- please give me 5 minutes of your time. I never ask for much but I'm asking you all to help me as a professional illustrator and Emily as a professional graphic designer, we both also have other professional artists in our families, help protect our careers.
please forward this to everyone you know if you support artists making a living from their artwork. BUT YOU NEED TO ALSO TAKE ACTION BY SPENDING 30 sec. at the link below....

********* THE ORPHAN WORKS******** legislation that is being reviewed in the U.S. .....
As artists we DO NOT support this bill- it will take away our livelihoods !!!!! PASS THIS EMAIL ON and take action now.
keep reading but writing the people who represent you is very quick at this link, it does all the work for you..... 30 seconds max.

http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/home/

the following is just a small part of the bigger issue with this legislation.
This bill currently going through the U.S. house and senate WILL affect photographers, graphic artists, designers, illustrators, anyone who makes images in the USA....

In the most basic terms should this bill get passed the visual artist community stands to lose our incomes from creating imagery.
This is not something to take lightly, simply put (using myself as an example)- this bill in essence will take away the ownership that I have of any images I create. Anyone who comes across an image I created and wants to use it, after a "legitimate search documented" may do so without any criminal offense as punishment after they do a quick search to "try" to get in touch with me. If they have no luck- meaning "oh I tried but did not get an answer." can use my image!!!!

UNLESS OF COURSE I BUY A MEMBERSHIP IN A PRIVATELY HELD REGISTRY. YES THAT'S RIGHT I CAN GET COVERED BY PAYING TO HAVE MY ARTWORK IN A PRIVATE DATABASE THAT "WOULD--BE USERS" COULD SEARCH. IN ESSENCE WHAT IS CURRENTLY PROTECTED UNDER COPYRIGHT LAW FREE OF CHARGE TO ME WOULD ONLY BE PROTECTED IF I BOUGHT A MEMBERSHIP TO A PRIVATE CORPORATE DATABASE TO REGISTER EVERY PIECE OF ARTWORK I'VE EVER CREATED.
It get's much more complicated but this is the basic idea.

Currently any images I create are copyright protected and to use any without my permission is against the law. IT will not be against the law if this bill gets passed. PEOPLE THIS IS OUR LIFE. THIS IS OUR JOBS, DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT.

PLEASE do not ignore this email... read below... and go here to send a message to your reps...
it takes 30 seconds and the database does all the work for you.

http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/home/

Thanks,

Nick Wright
more below


Orphan Works: Behind the Talking Points


FROM THE ILLUSTRATORS’ PARTNERSHIP

Backers of the Orphan Works bill are circulating their Talking Points:


“Neither the House nor the Senate drafts of the bill contain the word “registries,” [they write] but rather they require users to search non-governmental databases of copyrighted works. The purpose of any database is not meant to take the place of copyright registration, but to have a way to search for visual images. Any participation in such a database would be voluntary.”


But this doesn’t mean what it appears to say. Take it point by point:

Talking Point #1: “Neither the House nor the Senate drafts of the bill contain the word ‘registries.’ ”
Response: Correct. They contain the word “databases,” a synonym:

Registry: register: an official written record of names or events or transactions
http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

Database: A database is a structured collection of records or data
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database


Q: Why a synonym?
A: Because international copyright law forbids member countries to impose registries as a condition of protecting copyrights: Berne/Article 5(2) ”The enjoyment and the exercise of these rights shall not be subject to any formality.” http://www.law.cornell.edu/treaties/berne/5.html

In other words, if they used the word “registries” in the bills, it would be a red flag to other countries that the US is flirting with non-compliance with international treaties.


Talking Point #2: “...rather they [the bills] require users to search non-governmental databases of copyrighted works.”
Response: Non-governmental databases” means databases maintained in the private sector.
For users to find your work in these commercial databases, your work would first have to be in the database.
Work not in the database would be orphaned.

Talking Point #3: “Any participation in such a database would be voluntary.”
Response: Congress cannot pass a bill making registration mandatory because that would violate Berne/Article 5(2).
And that would state explicitly to other countries that the US no longer intends to honor its international agreements.
There are red flags all over these talking points.

Summing up: The Orphan Work bills would mandate the creation of registries by commercial interests.
You would not be legally forced to place your work with these for-profit registries.
But failure to do so would orphan your work.

The deceptive talking points accompanying this bill are another red flag.

— Brad Holland and Cynthia Turner, for the Board of the Illustrators’ Partnership

Take Action/ Write Congress

http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/home/

Over 37,000 messages have been sent from the site in the last 48 hours. Please spread the word.

Please forward or post this announcement in its entirety to any interested party.


http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/home/

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Beep bee ditybeep beep beep.....


We interrupt this program to bring you a great radio interview with Brianna Grant, author of the children's book we just released...

http://www.radiosandysprings.com/podcasts/FollowingYourPassionsMar25%20.20008.mp3

Copy/paste the above address into your browser.

listen and enjoy!

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Watercolor, Pen & Ink, or Acrylic?..maybe Oil?


I have an outdoor painting job on the table that is begging for some attention. Other jobs are keeping me at bay so maybe I'll get to paint on it tonight.....Maybe if I knew what I wanted to use for a media I would be painting it already!



Anatomy of a painting.

Here's a quick look into my process. I never care much about what this process looks like as long as the final piece is satisfactory to my eye and the client's eye. Indeed, sometimes my process can get quite messy and hard to follow. I tend to work out the image in these phases more in my head than perfecting the pencil on the paper. Putting the lead to pape helps me do just that. Often my wife and children say, "WHAT is that???"

This piece was painted for a private client at the end of 2006. He resides in Massachusetts. The piece is quite large- 3' by 3'!













This final pic is really just a quick digital that I took when I finished the piece. Hind site I wish I had scanned it in sections. The colors in this are a little too saturated and it seems dark.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Latest from the Drafting Table.


Trying to remember to update this thing more often...It's not going so well as of late!
I have a break on another project I'm working on so I thought I'd post real quick.

Painted for CTO outfitters in Texas, a non- for profit organization that is producing these awesome mags and have conracted me to do all of the covers! A great gig and Mike Arnold over there has been fantastic to work with. Its a organization that provides youth support and spiritual guided hunting trips for all kinds and all walks of life....

This one is titled "A Texas Flop".
The sale of the original is split to benefit CTO which is a non-profit org.
It truly is a great group to be a part of and I am lucky to have landed it!

Enjoy the art.
Acrylic on Board - 12 1/2" x 16 1/4"