I have begun work on my next set of drawings. This is a long process that starts out in groups, of photos, and complicated and slightly tedious image generations and organizing. It then carries on to drawings in photoshop, then layering and erasing of versions of the same image, finished with more drawing. I guess the idea is to get the picture to the place where one can't tell quite what it's made of. It takes awhile, and though at some point I may have too many pictures to show you, now there are absolutely none.
This is one of them:
For those readers not hugely interested in my drawings, I can't resist pointing out that this lack of drawing above is not particularly more compelling than having one.
But maybe that's just me.
Up until now I have had to use a mouse to do my drawing, but I have ordered a drawing pad so I can draw with a stylus on my computer screen. I am eagerly awaiting this device! Unfortunately it's delivery to a local fruit and vegetable stand was derailed by my shipment mysteriously becoming "too damaged for delilvery". I had to reorder it and now it is coming to a nearby hair salon. I think this presents us a nice opportunity to briefly discuss the mail and delivery system here in France.
Mail is pretty much like mail from the USA. It is mostly unaddressed junkmail for us, but we do get occasional real things. Our t-shirts with my designs came right into our generously sized apartment lobby box. Once I thought I saw our postal carrier delivering food to someone I think might have been an elderly shut in. A couple of things we received notes for that we had to pick them up at the post office, which for us is a stunning and enormous brick art deco building up the street and near the train station. It was pretty simple once we figured it out. The guard was very cross when we asked him where to go, but quite friendly when we au revoired him.
We had a delivery once at home of large things from Ikea. It went pretty horribly, with a fairly nice delivery person without anyplace very good to put his van needing a fair bit of help. After getting the stuff into our building lobby we had to sign for the nine items, which, because they were of course parts of ikea items to be assembled and couldn't be counted conventionally, only revealed their missing element when we went to assemble. For that we went to Ikea where we were told by a, well, I'm reluctant to use the word, person, that because we signed off on the delivery we were screwed.
Shout out to my homies at the French Ikea: You suck and are going to hell where you will burn for all eternithy.
But stop me before I grow impolite here.
Most places, like Amazon or Darty (a local Best Buy kind of place), don't deliver to apartments. Instead it just goes to some local contracted storefront: a vegetable stand, a Russian imports grocery, a hair salon, and it's pretty simple to pick up from there. Sometimes one can choose where and sometimes its simply... assigned, but it's not a big deal because everything is rididulously close here.
Overall I would say all the delivery things pretty much work, but by the same token they all seem to to me to produce packages that are pretty banged up, like maybe they fell off a truck a few times and were lightly run over, and accidentally dipped in lotion perahps? The fact that the package I am so eagerly awaiting was too damaged for delivery does much to support my feeling on this.
And that covers it.
Now that you know how delivery works in France, feel free to send me stuff.
Make it sturdy.

























