Speak Your Mind 115 #571-575

QUESTIONS

1. What kind of pizza do you like?

2. Do you think a lot of students in this school drink alcohol?

3. Do you like tomato juice?

4. Do you have a basement in your house?

5. Would you rather have a sliver taken out with a tweezer or a needle?

ANSWERS By: Austin Smith

1. Hamburger and Olive.

2. Yes, when I went to school I know a lot of them did, and still do.

3. No, I don’t like most things involving tomatoes.

4. Sort of, but not really.

5. Tweezers, it feels more tangible, I can feel more release.

Review – Sharpie Black Retractable Pen

So you want to ink a drawing you did, but you can’t find Microns, or any other technical pen. You certainly don’t want to use a ballpoint. What do you do? Well, the Sharpie retractable pen may be an answer. The black version, to be precise.

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The pen itself is a shiny black that gets finger prints on it constantly, though it cleans easily. The body of the pen starts out wide and tapers toward the rear of the pen. Near the front is a rubberized grip section with some grippiness to it. Sharpie pen is written on the back near the clip in silver. The pen looks like it can be taken apart in several places, but it can’t.

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The clip is metal, it’s rather stiff and doesn’t easily go into or out of a shirt pocket. The click mechanism in the back for retracting the pen feels solid, but the plunger is loose and feels a little flimsy.

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As for the most important part: the tip. It’s a fine tip, with the standard very black Sharpie color. It puts down a fairly smooth line. I would compare it to a Micron 01 or that range, but it’s really slightly smaller. The tipping material is very stiff and doesn’t like to bend, which leads to less line variation but a longer usable life. It’s not a permanent pen, or at least permanent like the markers. It writes and sticks on most surfaces, but not on all, but it is very black on everything.

Overall is it going to replace a good technical pen? No, but it is very good for inking in a pinch or if you want a less-used line width in your art. It writes well, it looks good. The main problems for me stem from the fatness of the pen and the cheap-feeling mechanisms. Is it for you? Maybe. I’d recommend trying it out and maybe keeping a few around just in case.

Speak Your Mind 114 #566-570

QUESTIONS

1. How old do you think your principal is?

2. Why do you think indians wore feathers?

3. Do you like exercise?

4. What is one way you think the world will be different in 100 years?

5. Have you ever been playing an outside sport when the sun started to go down and you couldn’t see well?

ANSWERS By: Austin Smith

1. I no longer have a principal.

2. Because they symbolized powerful animals that gave life from their flesh or were great hunters.

3. Sometimes, not in copious amounts.

4. Technology will be through the roof, as in computers.

5. That happens all the time, though I’m not sure I was playing a “sport” or not.

 

Speak Your Mind 113 #561-565

QUESTIONS

1. Why do you think people like to play sports?

2. How many pounds do you think you could carry in a suitcase?

3. Di you think it would be fun to chop wood as your only source of heat?

4. What is something that makes you feel left out?

5. Do you think families should go to church?

ANSWERS By:  Austin Smith

1. Because they offer us an arbitrary way to test our skills and definitely (with no ambiguity) win or lose.

2. About 70, up to 90 probable, but only around 40 comfortably.

3. No, not really, I don’t like to chop that much.

4. The world.

5. If they al believe, then yes, it should strengthen their family bonds, and there is a link to going to church and living longer.