A place to organize my adventures

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

5" of Fresh Powder


Telluride. It's good to be home, and my first week here was full of sunshine, clouds, and some afternoon over-development. The high peaks all hold an abundance of snow.




But then Tuesday it started to snow, 5" of fresh powder blanketed town. My first snowstorm of the year, and that also meant my first snowballs!

SFO - MTJ


I've been in Telluride for over a week now and have yet to post these pics from my flight here.


Huge development formed late morning and the flight from DEN to MTJ was a zig-zag through massive cells. Flying over the white snowy mountains of Colorado was a striking contrast to the brown snow-less peaks of the Sierras.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

New Business Card Design


I just threw together this collage of photos for a business card, and am anxiously awaiting their arrival.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Back for MountainFilm In Telluride


I returned home today to Telluride, where I'll be throught the end of the month and Mountainfilm In Telluride. The sun is shining and the surrounding beauty once again steals my breath. I'm busy inspecting this years films and videos. Numerous videos are on HD and the quality is amazing, I can't wait to see the image projected in the Palm on the $250,000 HD projector.

Check out the festival at www.mountainfilm.org

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Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Vivienne Westwood at the de Young


Today I saw the Vivienne Westwood exhibit at the de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park.

I N C R E D I B L E

Photos and text taken from the de Young website: http://www.thinker.org/deyoung/exhibitions/exhibition.asp?exhibitionkey=657


Vivienne Westwood is both iconoclast and global icon. In the 1970s, she electrified the world with the launch of Punk fashion and went on to become one of the most inventive and influential designers of our time. Fashion to her became "a baby I picked up and never put down."


This exhibition, which was organized by the Victoria and Albert Museum, London and which makes the de Young its only U.S. stop on an international tour, celebrates Westwood’s extraordinary, nearly 40-year-long career. Known best for her fearless nonconformity, she also has a profound respect for the past and looks to it for inspiration. With tradition as her springboard, she takes historic garments such as corsets and crinolines and reinvents them in new ways or uses thoroughly British fabrics like tartans and tweeds to create fashion that gently parodies Establishment styles. However outrageous or provocative the result, her approach has always been practical. She is driven by a curiosity about how things work, and her work reflects her systematic exploration of the structure of historical costume in museum collections.


Westwood's extraordinary range and inventiveness is showcased in the more than 150 objects that make up the exhibition, all drawn from her personal archive and the V&A's collection. The work spans the extremes of fashion, from London street style to the catwalks of Paris and London, and reveals Westwood’s own evolution from subversive shop owner to one of fashion’s most respected figures.