A happy crowd gathered in the park today for hot chocolate around the fire pit, in celebration of the unveiling of the latest Little Free Library. It’s the first one in a public park. Most are in private front yards.
You see Danica looking on beside our tireless local councillor Mary-Margaret McMahon. We met Bill and Carolyn, who opened the first Free Little Library in our ward. Andrew, one of the library builders, read a stanza from the A.A. Milne book he was donating and Chris, another builder, cut the ribbon. Kids quickly began to fill the shelves. No free wi-fi yet, but lots of new titles to share.
Month: March 2013
Oh oh logo
This logo design for an Archdiocesan Youth Commission illustrates the trouble you can get into if you’re not careful.
Playing with negative space has its negatives.
The whole business of logo design is fraught wth danger and there are an amazing number of ways to mess up, as the ROM discovered (item below this one).
[logo source]
Ontario's "O" sadly omitted
Royal Ontario Museum’s new logo, designed by New York, NY firm LaPlaca Cohen.
Canadian graphic artists may feel as left out as that “O”. I’ll certainly think of that whenever I see it.
My support for Minuum
The developers are asking for support, any way they can get it… so here’s mine. It looks like a great invention. Minuum got some help from the MaRs Centre over on College Street and the guys are from U of T. Could this be Canada’s contribution to the world of electronic keyboards? Sure looks like it.
With Blackberry back on the rise, Waterloo exploring quantum computing and now Minuum, we seem to be growing out of our role as “drawers of water and hewers of wood”.
Peter Sellers, John Cleese and Ringo Starr
Enjoy 3 minutes of excellent fun at the expense of the snotty art business. The Magic Christian has long been on my good list. I saw it when it came out in 1969. You can watch the whole thing on YouTube if you like.
Worst prime minister in my lifetime
Now the Harper government is issuing gag orders to librarians and archivists. What are the Conservatives afraid of now? Gagging scientists and auditors… loathesome but understandable, considering what the Conservatives want unsaid about their policies and practices. But librarians? Archivists?
“Once you start picking on librarians and archivists, it’s pretty sad”
I don’t mean to belittle the threat that librarians and archivists might represent to the Harper government. Well read people with a knowledge of history might certainly say things about the Harper government that could spoil its chance of reelection.
Lloyd and Cheryl view Edward James
That’s Edward James, in a portrait by famous surrealist painter René Magritte. Mr James was something of a surrealist himself… poetry at first, then art collecting and finally fantastical architecture in the bejungled hills of Mexico.
James was a Brit born in 1907. He inherited enough money to pursue his artistic interests early in life, then built his wealth further as a coffee plantation owner. In Xilitla, he had enough cash, land and cheap labour to create a quirky 87 acre concrete garden complex.
Friends Cheryl and Lloyd Cooke just sent photos of their visit to Las Pozas, Xilitla.
Lloyd Cooke deals in Mexican sunshine
Sorry about the Mexican dealer headline, Lloyd. Your shades and that Miami Vice background made me do it.
Lloyd called my Blackberry Playbook from his Blackberry Playbook today. Those are screenshots you see, taken from our Video Chat. He and Cheryl are chillin’ in
San Miguel de Allende… no, I guess chillin’ isn’t the word. Lloyd says it’s 30 down there, but I think he’s talking Celsius.
So how was the video chat?
Big day at Murphy's Law Irish pub

Whoops and laughter coming from the patio tent behind the local Queen Street pub reminded us that Toronto’s Irish (and wannabes) were getting a sunny day for the St. Patrick’s Day parade. Celebrations are happening all over town.
I’m fond of the big bird (toucan?) on the pub clock.
Who's a silly newspaper?

The National Post is in court, claiming copyright protection for titles and headlines.
The linked item observes, “This position, if adopted by the Federal Court of Appeal, would have startling and potentially absurd consequences. The automated extraction of titles (i.e. headlines) is the very basis not only of Google News and other news aggregators but of Google, Bing and other search engines. Every scholarly article is full of cited titles.“