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A boysenberry is a cross among a blackberry, red raspberry, and loganberry. It was created by Anaheim Parks Superintendent Rudolph Boysen Rudolph Boysen in the 1930s, and first commercially cultivated by Walter Knott.

In the late 1920s, George Darrow of the USDA began tracking down reports of a large, reddish-purple berry that had been grown by a man named Rudolf Boysen. He enlisted the help of Walter Knott, a Southern California farmer known as something of a berry expert. Knott hadn’t heard of the new berry, but agreed to help Darrow in his search.

The pair soon learned that Rudolf Boysen had abandoned his growing experiments several years earlier and sold his farm. Undaunted by this news, Darrow and Knott headed out to Boysen’s old farm, where they found several frail vines surviving in a field choked with weeds. They transplanted the vines to Knott’s farm where he nurtured them back to fruit-bearing health. Walter Knott began selling the berries at his farm stand in 1935 and soon noticed that people kept returning to buy the large tasty berries. When asked what they were called, Knott said, “boysenberries”. As their popularity grew, Mrs. Knott began making preserves which ultimately made Knott’s Berry Farm in Buena Park, California world famous.

Today, all boysenberries in the world can trace their roots to Knott’s Berry Farm.

Source: Wikipedia.org

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Curves appear to move; an illusion caused by vertical retinal slips.

Top Four Facts That I Thought About At Least Twice After Watching Super Size Me:

4. McDonald’s alone produces enough trash per day to fill up the Empire State Building from the ground floor to the roof. That’s just one chain, in one day.

3. If you ate a plain McDonald’s hamburger patty ten minutes ago, you’d have particles of meat from over 1000 separate cows from five different nations in your stomach right now.

2. It is projected that by this year, obesity will have surpass smoking as the #1 preventable cause of death in the U.S. (I’m not sure if that’s been confirmed as of late.)

1. One out of every three children born in 2000 will develop diabetes as a result of obesity. In the Latino and Black communities, it’s one out of every two. Guess who gets to pay for their health care later.

So my baby sister has been attending the Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising (FIDM) in downtown Los Angeles, and recently informed me about an event they’re having in the FIDM Museum & Galleries from September 19 through December 10: The Costumes of Star Wars.

With the December 10 deadline approaching, we decided to make a night of it, ignoring of the fact that it was a rainy Friday evening on the freeway.

Included in the exhibit were the actual light sabers (labeled “Darth Vader, Episode IV”, “Luke Skywalker, Episode VI”, etc.) Good stuff if you’re a fan. We got close peeks at Luke and Leia’s Hoth gear, Alec Guinness’ dusty desert cloak, Han Solo’s outfit, and so forth. It was a fun exercise to analyze everything from a design point of view and reverse engineer the creativity behind the design ideas. For instance, on Luke’s Episode IV orange pilot outfit, there’s a mechanical box on his chest with three buttons. In the designer’s imagination, what were those buttons for? Hmm…

Anyhow, it was notable how many stickers were used on the helmets. For instance, something that looked like a three dimensional grill on the jawline of a Stormtrooper’s helmet was actually nothing more than a label. Movie magic.

Included in the exhibit were the Chewbacca suit, Vader’s helmet, Boba Fett’s get-up, and a large array of somewhat unfamiliar outfits worn by characters in the recent new trilogy. There must’ve been fifty different Padme outfits. I would venture to say that Natalie Portman changed clothes more times than Mariah Carey did at the American Music Awards.

My favorite outfit of the show would have to be the black cloak worn by the Emperor, which was made of a very cool material that had some cool relief in the weave. I want that thing. I can just imagine walking the dogs through the neighborhood with it.

Well, either that or the Tuskan Raider costume.

After the stellar gander we took a New York style stroll through the metropolitan drizzle up to Roy’s Hawaiian Fusion Cuisine on Figueroa and 9th. Great food, great bar, great convo, amazing chocolate souffle, and plenty of aloha spirit.

I can’t believe I forgot my camera.

jace

Line segments appears to move; an illusion caused by vertical retinal slips.

“The beginning is the most important part of the work.”
— Plato

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The colored segments appear to move horizontally.

*A railway line in Japan with trains colored with green and orange.

Source: A. Kitaoka

November is the eleventh month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar and one of four Gregorian months with the length of 30 days.

The name is from the Latin novem for “nine”. November was the ninth month in the Roman calendar until a monthless winter period (summer in the southern hemisphere) was divided between January and February.

November begins on the same day of the week as March every year and also February except in leap years.

jace

The rows move.

Source: A. Kitaoka

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Source: Rick Latham

Another big day! After many failed attempts, Vive finally managed to jump into the back of his new Tacoma without assistance.