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(08-16-2021, 04:40 PM)Drunk Monk Wrote: You were the person who turned me on to Boomeria tg. At some point, we must make a pilgrimage. Quote:![[Image: hero_download.jpg]](https://cdn.prod.mktg.evvnt.com/uploads/event_image/1244614/event_image/hero_download.jpg)
B9 PICK: Boomeria: Santa Cruz Baroque Festival- Sat at 1:00PM - 5:00PM
- 60 Verde Dr
60 Verde Drive
Bonny Doon
95060
- $55.00
Santa Cruz Baroque Festival pays annual visit to Bonny Doon's Boomeria, a fairyland creation that features a giant pipe organ.
[color=rgb(55 65 81/var(--tw-text-opacity))]As it does each and every summer, the folks at the Santa Cruz Baroque Festival visit the fairyland in Bonny Doon known as Boomeria, featuring the enormous pipe organ built over the course of decades by Preston Boomer. The annual "Boomeria" event gives local music lovers the chance to listen to brilliant musicians try their hand on the giant organ amid the fragrant redwood forest of Bonny Doon. With selections from Corelli, Monteverdi, Bonelli and others.[/color]
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So happy that it didn't burn to the ground. It's a fun place...Been there several times. Once for an Easter egg hunt and then when my friend John got married in the chapel there. John and several of his SLV neighbors were members of "The Castle Corps", a volunteer group mostly of former Boomer students that would go up to Boomeria to maintain the grounds. John was a keyboard aficionado and did a lot of maintenance on the pipe organ.
It would be fun to see a performance. (not this Sat, but some time in the future) I might have an in...
--tg
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(08-29-2011, 05:14 PM)thatguy Wrote: Ted Orland's "One and a Half Domes"
![[Image: one_and_half_domes.jpg]](http://www.tedorland.com/classic/images/one_and_half_domes.jpg)
He was AA's assistant. I took a two week b/w class w/him in Maine.
This is our class (from a print in one of his books):
http://theonlinephotographer.typepad.com...970c-popup
I'm about the 7-8th one in from the front.
Found out after that he teaches at Cabrillo and lives about a mile from me.
--tg
(09-27-2021, 01:37 PM)thatguy Wrote: I think it might have been Ted Orland who mentioned it. I took a 2-week photo class from him in Maine, and then found out later that he was a teacher at Cabrillo College. He's a funny guy. Used to be one of Ansel's assistants.
![[Image: rendezvous-2019-2014-half-car-from-gl-pt...e_orig.jpg]](https://www.photographersrendezvous.com/uploads/1/6/2/4/16244814/rendezvous-2019-2014-half-car-from-gl-pt-w-title_orig.jpg)
(09-27-2021, 12:43 PM)Greg Wrote: I should look for that.
adding to the list of things to be careful googling: "Tripod Hole Chasing"...
https://www.largeformatphotography.info/...le-Chasing
--tg
Ted Orland is our neighbor. He lives at the corner of our street, two houses down on the other side. He’s a sweet guy - he and his wife Francis walk their dog Spooky every day and we see them regularly. I went to his open studio when we first moved here but didn’t put it together until yesterday when he saw Stacy with her backpack and asked where she was going. He gifted us an autographed edition of his book, Man & Yosemite, which charts the history of humans there with vintage photos. Looks like a great read for Greg’s madness
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Send it to me! Or I could just get it from the library....
As a matter of fact, my anger does keep me warm
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We want to read it first.
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Selfish.
Already on order from the library.
As a matter of fact, my anger does keep me warm
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Well, he is our neighbor. We see him almost every day.
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He would have yosemite & ansel stories...he's a funny guy. Glad to hear he's still around the hood...
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He and his wife are really nice. Always smiling and waving. They were very supportive of Chelsea when Buck died. They’ve been on our street forever and knew Buck when he was a kid. I remember admiring his work when I went to his open studio but did not pick up on the Ansel connection. His books looks fascinating.
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(07-19-2022, 06:23 PM)Drunk Monk Wrote: He and his wife are really nice. Always smiling and waving. They were very supportive of Chelsea when Buck died. They’ve been on our street forever and knew Buck when he was a kid. I remember admiring his work when I went to his open studio but did not pick up on the Ansel connection. His books looks fascinating.
He was one of Ansel's assistants. I learned from him that if you have a print signed with "-A", it was printed by an assistant.
He's got a great sense of humor...
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Midtown Fridays Summer Block Party
remaining summer '22 schedule:
https://www.santacruz.org/upcoming-event...022-06-10/
Quote:MIDTOWN FRIDAYS!
1111 Soquel Ave
Santa Cruz, CA 95062-2105 United States
www.eventsantacruz.com
DETAILS
Starts at 5:00 pm and ends at 8:30 pm
Free
OVERVIEW
Come Celebrate all the vibrancy of Midtown at our Summer Block Party, happening every Friday!
Food – Artists – Live Music – Vendors
The summer series of free events will feature the talents of 25 local bands! Plus, eventgoers will enjoy a selection of local eats as well as the opportunity to check out the work of local artists and vendors. Midtown Fridays start June 3rd and run through to September 30th.- Aug. 5 – Fuse (Opening – John Michael sings Sinatra)
- Aug. 12 – Pacific Roots (Opening – The Dead Kampers)
- Aug. 19 – John Michael Van Halen Tribute Band
- Aug. 26 – Locomotive Breath
- Sept. 2 – The Joint Chiefs
- Sept. 9 – Papiba & Friends
- Sept. 16 – Anthony Arya Band
- Sept. 23 – Sweet Voodoo
- Sept. 30 – The Grand Finale
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Luv these stickers. I had the octopus on my fit Caeser and Stacy has the otters on her civic Phoebe. Been contemplating a shark for my crv Darth...
Quote:Icons of Santa Cruz: From mermaids to otters to VW vans, Life At Sea stickers create a graphic illustration of the California life
![[Image: ?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightsp...ickers.jpg]](https://lookout.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/d0b9203/2147483647/strip/true/crop/3673x2064+0+120/resize/872x490!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F86%2F08%2F81f121c24a13ace7375e6294a495%2Fsanta-cruz-stickers.jpg)
![[Image: ?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightsp...%2F115.jpg]](https://lookout.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/6fb467c/2147483647/strip/true/crop/3424x3424+180+1507/resize/100x100!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F0c%2F74%2Fada7065e41dd9d6d2b4e00e4d1d2%2F115.jpg)
BY WALLACE BAINE
Source: Lookout Santa Cruz
Quick Take
In the latest installment of his Icons of Santa Cruz series, Wallace Baine traces the evolution of the Life At Sea stickers that began with Tim Ward drawing a shark in 2003 and which has bloomed into a many-tentacled operation extending from water to land and from Santa Cruz to Hawaii and Florida.
I really hope no one is paying attention. It’s a lovely Friday afternoon and I’m skulking around parking lots in downtown Santa Cruz, looking at cars that don’t belong to me. For the record, I’m not snooping around for easy smash-and-grab opportunities. Neither am I a property owner with the towing service on speed dial. I mean no harm to you, dear driver.
In fact, I’m looking for bumper stickers. I’m cataloging the astonishingly popular stickers created and sold by Santa Cruz graphic artist Tim Ward and his company, Life At Sea. Those names might mean nothing to you, but if you live in Santa Cruz County and have a functioning car (and/or functioning eyeballs), you’ve seen these things. They’re everywhere.
At least, that’s my theory as I case the parking lots examining rear ends (wait, that didn’t come out right). In this unscientific survey, I am discovering, sadly, that most cars have zero stickers on them (c’mon, Santa Cruz, I really thought you valued personality and pizzaz over paint jobs). But for those that do, a huge number of them have at least one Life At Sea sticker.
After about a half-hour of pounding the pavement, I tallied the following — six of the classic mermaid (swimming version), one variation of the sitting mermaid; five instances of three different variation of trees, including the popular redwood whose roots spell out “Santa Cruz”; four instances of the octopus, one of which was on a car with Texas plates and the other three all on the same car; a monarch butterfly; a starfish; an otter; a sea turtle; the wave; a depiction of a clump of trees I might call the forest; and Bigfoot, leaning against a rock, chewing on a piece of grass.
Many of the stickers are simply gorgeous pieces of commercial art, awash in color and variety, emblematic of life in Santa Cruz. They combine beguiling imagery — mostly, but not always, from the natural world — with artistic renderings of the typography to make the word “Santa Cruz” a central part of the theme. Since its beginnings in 2008, Ward’s line of stickers has exploded in both variety of imagery and in the localities it serves. The Life At Sea stickers are, first and foremost, a Santa Cruz phenomenon, but they are not exclusive to Santa Cruz. They now feature a variety of localities as well, from local (Capitola, Aptos), regional (Big Sur), and even national (Life At Sea has now expanded with a line of stickers in Florida and another in Hawaii).
Neither Ward nor his longtime friend and business partner Chris Smith can say just how many stickers they’ve sold in the company’s 14-year history. But the stickers represent a life exploring all over California, said Smith.
“For Tim and I, growing up in California, both being natives of the coast, we’ve traveled extensively from the top of California all the way down, surfing and camping and just growing up as California kids,” he said. “And I think that that has helped us to understand a broader sense of what represents California.”
Ward began his journey with stick-on decals back in 2003, though the idea was dormant for several years.
“I drew a shark,” he said, “and I put ‘Santa Cruz’ in it. Then, I sat on that sketch for five years.”
![[Image: ?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightsp...ticker.png]](https://lookout.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/eadab21/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1053x496+0+0/resize/1080x509!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F7c%2F52%2Fd872c960481c9234bcb71eb8c30b%2Fshark-sticker.png)
At the time, Ward, a Soquel High School grad, was a commissioned local artist and screen printer, and he knew a lot of local retailers, from surf shops to grocery stores. He had been toying with the idea of producing bumper stickers for a while. He loved logo design and working with symbols, but it was 2008 before he acted on it: “So, I figured, why don’t I just produce this? Show it to some people and see if they bite on it.”
The shark got people’s attention and Ward, a veteran surfer, expanded his vision to include other sea creatures. The company’s name is a reflection on Ward’s original orientation to marine animals.
One of the most popular in the line today is the mermaid, a silhouette of a swimming mermaid which comes in a number of colors. The mermaid marked a kind a new direction for Ward. It was a sea creature, sort of, if you included mythical sea creatures.
![[Image: ?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightsp...ticker.png]](https://lookout.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/e19ceb5/2147483647/strip/true/crop/957x924+0+0/resize/1080x1043!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F11%2Fa2%2Fe2f19f294e20b1af002fda5cf8ae%2Fmermaid-sticker.png)
The line made another evolutionary leap a couple of years later when a friend’s young daughter told her mom, “Tim should do a monarch (butterfly).” At the time, the line’s imagery was entirely ocean-bound.
“When that was repeated to me,” said Ward, “the lights came on. Of course, she was correct. I went right into design mode.”
From there, like the first creatures that emerged from the ocean to walk upon land, Ward’s ideas expanded dramatically, embracing the natural world with trees, flowers and wildlife, to the human world to include bicycles, guitars and the surf wagons known as “woodies.” Even Ward, a Santa Cruz lifer, was shocked at the variety of images that were able to evoke some aspect of life in Santa Cruz. “It’s far deeper than I thought it ever would be,” he said.
The Santa Cruz line features marine life such as crabs, jellyfish, sand dollars and sea anemones, as well as terrestrial plant life from the California poppy, to the sunflower, to the dragonfly. Trees are represented in redwoods, cypress trees, and live oaks.
But even Santa Cruz, with its wide variety of iconic images, can’t contain Ward’s vision. The Santa Cruz stickers are unique to that particular line. But in 2013, he began developing other designs for outside Santa Cruz. He and Smith drove a van down the coast, for months at a time, hawking a “California” line of stickers that presented images resonant on a state level, including a different design for a redwood and a mermaid, with an eye to determine which cities and towns might merit the extra time and expense to do a dedicated line. And, informed by the legwork of searching out small or mom-and-pop retailers in towns and regions all over the state, they created customized stickers — “name dropping,” they call it — for many places in California, from Lake Tahoe to Catalina Island.
“We basically lived in our cars and schlepped stickers up and down the coast,” said Smith. “We did it the hard way.”
Eventually, the California line sparked lines in other states. The “Hawaii” line includes hula dancers and roosters; the “Florida” line embraces flamingos and manta rays. Ward didn’t want to mass-produce designs he developed for Santa Cruz into a one-size-fits-all format for other localities. He decided he had to keep his Santa Cruz designs mostly unique. So he created new icons to export to other towns.
“There’s a different shark that exports to Santa Barbara or Huntington (Beach), for example,” he said. “A different mermaid, a different turtle.”
![[Image: ?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightsp...ticker.png]](https://lookout.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/17a9f2e/2147483647/strip/true/crop/967x439+0+0/resize/1080x490!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Flookout-local-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2Ff0%2Ff7%2F64fefa054c8087f2d5053acceb9a%2Fotter-sticker.png)
The most popular stickers? The mermaid, of course. The otter is a big one, too. The monarch and the Volkswagen bus also remain in high demand.
From the variety of images to the towns represented, the Life At Sea stickers have expanded now into a third dimension: other products, including key chains, ballcaps, pins, refrigerator magnet, and beanies. Life At Sea has also expanded its retail market, moving into California State Parks gifts shops, for instance. And the company also maintains a robust online presence.
“These stickers,” Ward said, “are essentially an expression of a given person’s stoke on their hometown and that particular creature.”
The Life At Sea universe will likely continue to expand in three dimensions, with new designs and products. Smith said the company will probably move into New Jersey next year, with a Jersey Shore line of images.
Ward said the COVID shutdown and the inflation cycles that followed it both brought a lot of stresses and challenges to his company, which now numbers five employees. But, he said, the need and the desire to keep expanding images and products, and to bring more localities into the Life At Sea universe, will keep the company moving forward.
“We do have room to grow,” he said. “We want to continue to go north. There are great Northern California spots we can hit, and great spots in the Pacific Northwest. And, if we can, we will. It might be just a matter of time. We look forward to it. But it’s always going to work by the same mechanism. We need to get in [a given community], find a footing there, and then we can start producing more for that place.”
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But back to Ted Orland. I might have to accidentally bump into him some time. His name keeps coming up in the books I'm reading for photo credits.
As a matter of fact, my anger does keep me warm
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I see him nearly every day when he and his wife take their pup Spooky for walkies. We don't chat much but we always wave 'hello'. He's a very amicable guy. Like I said, he gave us his book when he heard we were going. Stacy thinks I should show him my backpacking pix, but honestly, they pale by comparison.
The funny thing is that I went to an open studio of his when we first moved here. The Cruz has an open studio program every month. I'm not sure that he participates anymore. I remember seeing some of his Yosemite pix and thinking 'cool, kind of a Ansel Adams knock off.'
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Just heard that Michael's on Main suffered a major fire. Bummer. That was a nice place.
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