Friday, March 13, 2009

Frank-Con 2009

My husband and I went out to Thai last night and while we were talking some how the subject of Frank running a Frank-Con at our place (we expect some gaming guests the weekend after next). Then it occurred to me that we’ve already run a Frank-Con!
When everyone visited us to go to the Shrine for Hatsumode, one could argue that was a Frank Con!
Hatsumode Weekend (186)Hatsumode Weekend (187)
Evidence:
  1. There was a Role-playing room…our dinning room
  2. There was a CCG room…Justin and Robin in the living room
  3. There was a costuming workshop: I dressed the girls up in kimono
  4. There was also a Japanese cooking workshop
  5. Nicky and I had a costuming panel
  6. There was a planned excursion that could inspire fantasy books and art
  7. We carpooled to vendors—both gaming and Japanese items.
  8. Some of us attended a party with famous pillars of the gaming community—at the Grubb’s. (Covers the celebrity requirement)
  9. It ran for several days and over a weekend
  10. Many new board games were introduced
:) What do you think? Am I right or am I right?
(For my family, who are not gamers, a con is short for convention. It’s the practice for most gaming conventions to come up with a snappy name that includes “Con” like “Rad Con” in the Tri-cities or “Spo-Con” in Spokane.)

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The Masquerade Report or “All LARPed up and no place to go”

Mr Raven & Mrs Conge
The Masquerade in Pullman was said to be a murder mystery masquerade. I had many ideas of what that meant, especially since we were all required to come up with Clue-like names, but my ideas were all wrong—it turned out to be a puzzle and a riddle-solving exercise. It was not my cup-of-tea, but—as it was rightly pointed out—it was not created with me in mind. Frank, you see, dislikes Live Action Role Playing or LARP games. A good example of that form of gaming would be a How-To-Host-a-Mystery game, where people take on and act out a character in the game. Those styles of games are limited to 8 people, sometimes only 6. They are tightly control with 3 rounds. Each round a person gets to open a sealed envelope for their character. No judge is required. On the larger scale there are game-setting-inspired LARPs, the most successful of which is based off a table-top role-playing game by White Wolf where all the LARPers get to play angst ridden vampires. Neither Frank nor I would touch that one, but I have found a few game settings I did like. The first one was also a White Wolf setting but it was about fairy courts—which inspires cooler costumes and a whole lot less angsty black gothiness. The second one even attracted Frank, who dislikes LARPs in general as I mentioned. It was based off of the 7th Sea Role Playing game and was created to star movie-inspired swashbuckling characters (but mostly pirates) and was loads of fun.
45-Nockers
CLARP-01
The personality of a polymathic Leaverton is well suited to playing in this type of game and I love them. I subscribe to the philosophy that if doing something in game is fun for me, it will be even more fun with another person involved, and if that’s even more fun, then it stands to reason that it will be even more fun to get a whole group of people in on it. That way everyone has a great time. I usually find some person like me…dressed up and friendly, to make friends with and then we begin recruiting all the timid folks who just showed up that day and wanted to play but have no costumes. These are the folks most other LARPers ostracize but their characters are completely equal and with a little push these people can shine. If you can overcome their timid barriers, that is. I can. Mostly by being so outrageously in-character that people feel that they can’t be nearly as silly looking if they stand next to me. Also, I’ve noticed a phenomenon that I have no name for other than proxy costuming. People who are around me and watch how I act in my costume begin to move as if they were dressed like me. For example, I once played a French noblewoman. One of my draftees was also playing a French noblewoman but she was in jeans and a t-shirt. It didn’t take long until she was bending at the hips not the waste, moving as if she had skirts in the way and fanning her bosom as if it were exposed. I never knew jeans and a t-shirt could be that sexy and flirtatious! Sort of bothered her son, who had talked her into doing the LARP…I guess Moms shouldn’t move like that.
larp picture
The structure of this type of LARP is a little different from How-To-Host-a-Mystery. The LARPers are given a character, a primary goal for the evening and a few tertiary goals. A pirate might be given the goal of getting hired on to a ship with one of the captains present plus side goals: to cheat so-and-so at cards and pass on a secret to so-and-so. A noble woman might have a goal to steal something important plus the side goals: hand out a particular item of gossip and get so-and so to like her. Some people are set up as targets…they know so-and-so is out to get them so they must avoid being alone with that person while trying to accomplish their other goals. Most of the characters will be able to achieve at least one goal, so you can end the night with everyone feeling accomplished.
The downside of this style of LARP is that you need judges (AKA referees, storytellers, or Non-player Characters). So if a victim ends up in a room alone with the guy who was out to get him, they can “fight” and the judge says who wins. Sometimes the fighting is just rock-paper-scissors, other times a dice or coin might decide the outcome. The more people you have in the game, the more judges you need. Often these judges play bit parts like a servant or a wall flower, and so blend in until they are needed. Often they take on majorly powerful setting based characters that you couldn’t let just anyone play and very often must do something to move the story along…like the king of the fairy court who is scheduled to die at precisely 11:15pm!
That’s the thing with the Pullman Masquerade…Frank had 21 people to deal with and no judges but himself. He was tasked with the job of involving everyone too, so How-To-Host-a-Mystery was out because there would’ve been only eight principles and all the rest would’ve been detectives. It would’ve turned into dinner theater.
If everyone had a character and a goal to do all at once, how could he alone judge all that? (Plus he dislikes LARPs) So he made it puzzles and riddle clues, which everyone worked on together and no one solved…not so much that they weren’t getting the riddles but that they were letting other people talk them out of the right answer. I was both frustrated with it, and anxious for Frank being successful in this. I shouldn’t have bothered…these were his allies. These kids were his friends and his gaming groupies, long used to picking up whatever gauntlet Frank choose to throw down. Plus, they are enough like him that the things he enjoys are the things they enjoy. So they saw puzzles and riddles and said “Yay!” and got to work on them. I have never felt so out of place in my life. At least there was Nicky…my fellow polymath…to be my refuge. She was the fabulous hostess of the party. She and I gave the game a chance—more than an hour actually—but when the gamers began to debate, we retreated to the other room and played with the cat, talked arts & crafts, discussed costuming, touched on mask & backdrop design, talked about cooking a little, and took pictures. Every now and then we’d look into the other room and watch all the gamers in their element…grinning ear-to-ear…just to make sure they were having a good time (which I was no longer in any doubt that they were), and then go back to our pothmathic topic-hopping discussion. I have to say that I was glad for two things…that I stayed in the game longer than Frank thought I would (he told me this after) and also that I was the only one all LARPed up with no place to go.
DSC_0028

Friday, March 6, 2009

Hello Dolly


Mandy and I are going to put on our Sunday cloths on Sunday the 15th and go see Hello Dolly at the 5th Avenue Theater. I’m really looking forward to it. I do enjoy musicals very much. Frank will also be seeing a show that day. He’s going to Wicked in Portland with friends. I’ve already seen Wicked and enjoyed it very much, but I have never seen Hello Dolly done live. I’ve seen the movie, of course, but going to the theater is a whole different thing.
Mandy and I also plan to go see “The Music Man” in Auburn the following Saturday. A group of old school mates of mine proposed going to see the show together. We found each other on Facebook, you see, and naturally that lead to a desire to meet once again face-to-face. Mandy and I both moved in the drama club circle in school, so we both know people who are going to be there. It should be interesting. Mandy has kept in touch with a lot of her school chums, I haven’t so there’s a lot of catching up to do. The drama circle was more my thing than Mandy’s, so she won’t have seen this crowd in a long time either. Oh yeah…and “Music Man” is one of our faves too. Let’s not forget that!
To round out our theater month and to get in one more blast from the past. We also plan to see “The Merchant of Venice” that weekend as well. The Seattle Shakespeare Company is presenting it at the Roundhouse Theater. In high school, Mandy and I were both in it. We played Solanio and Salerio, the two *male* gossips who serve as an effective substitute for a Greek chorus in the show. I still have old picture of the two of us with glued-on goatees.
So how about that for a theater-going month!

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Goal: I wanna be the Voice of the Light Rail

I think I could do it. I'd be great I'm sure. "Mind the Gap", "Next stop, International Station" and "The doors will open on the left".
Alas, it's probably already done by someone. So I did the next best thing...I read the Sound Transit article on Wikipedia. There's a new project up there for spoken articles. I've been playing around with it. I've learned to use some new software too (I love new software). It's called Audacity and it's a sound editing program. Up until this point, I've been using Camtasia Studio only.
I've also learned that if I want to silence the fan on my laptop--I must put an ice pack under it. Something to remember for sure.
Oh, the first Spoken Wikipedia article I read was kimono but the sound quality was bad. So, I wouldn't want to excite your anticipation. I must redo it without the fan noise some time.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Polymathic Mandy: Mardi Gras Party

In a fabulous display of her diverse skills, my sister gave her annual Mardi-gras party. I’d heard stories of this party and her bread making skills she employs for the king cake. It has to be kneaded and let rise twice, rolled into a ring, baked and decorated. I was rather happy at this picture of her mid-sprinkle:
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I dressed her up in my purple 7th Sea LARP costume. She looked great in the purple…much better than me. I wore the blue one, which I think is the better of the two colors for me.
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There were about a dozen people in attendance and we didn’t do much besides eat, drink and be merry. I took pictures, of course. So did Dylan, but he had to borrow my camera to do it…he forgot his.
Why is Mandy a polymath? Check out her kumihimo:
Kumihimo
And her scrapbook pages:

Greenwood 2005 Page 3

Thursday, February 19, 2009

A Piggy Idea

Some people know that in addition to the various other things I'm up to, I also volunteer for Big Brother Big Sisters in the school based program. My little sister, CS is a 2nd grader at Highland Park Elementary school in White Center Seattle. I've done many things with her over our year and 2 months we've spent together. A second grader is just beginning and she has no idea what hobby or pursuit will become hers in the future. Luckily I have more than a few to share. I've taught her to play the Ancient Chinese game of Go...and she surprised me by being naturally good at it. We've tried recorders...not her fave. We've done origami, which she seems to like as well. We've done friendship bracelets as well as other games. Also, she really seemed to enjoy the times we've done photography together. I got her a starter kids camera for Christmas and she was pretty pleased with it.
Both of our two school years we've been hanging out, she has had the same teacher...a Ms. Norris in what they call a looping program. Ms Norris is a diminutive teacher who is forever smiling and happy. Her students seem to adore her and I, myself, think very highly of her. So when she asked me to teach her class to do Papier-mache, I said "Of course".
But she didn't want to teach them puppets...she wanted pigs. Why pigs? Because the next field trip is to the great Pike Place Market which is famous for the large piggy bank located in the center. So to fit the theme...we are going to make piggy banks. I've never made such a thing before so I sat down with Dad and we put our heads together. I love to brainstorm with Dad. So here's the idea so far...water balloon base:

Because I did try a large balloon but I wasn't happy with the shape. Also, this little guy has got to hold heavy pennies. Even with my special rock hard recipe for papier-mache--paper can never measure up to ceramics as far as strength goes. So smaller means stronger as well as lower capacity for heavy pennies. I did plan to use toilet paper tubes for the legs , but with the smaller size comes the need of reducing the tube size...that might be a tricky step--so will covering them with paper. But Ms. Norris thought it might be okay when I ran it by her.
When I added paint, wiggle eyes, a pipe cleaner tail and some fun-foam ears and nose, here's what I ended up with:

Kinda cute, huh? Plus it's a chance to clear out some serious over stock I have of wiggle eyes and fun foam. Don't ask where I got so many wiggle eyes, because I don't remember myself.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Why Polymathic?

I've often referred to myself as a 'Jill of all Hobbies, Master of One'. So I thought I should name this general blog of "what I'm up to these days" something like that. But when I read the Wikipedia page of 'Jack of all Trades, Master of None', I came across a word: Polymath.
It's an all-together better name for this blog...why? Because it is a goal to work towards.
"Jill of all hobbies" describes my hopping from one pursuit to another quite well. But in certain light, it is a put-down. A Polymath is a person who is good at more than a few subjects--which arguable I am now--but I am no Franklin or Edison yet! It's something to work towards.
I have tried an exhaustive number of activities. Every year I go through three or four hobbies. Of course, only Puppetry sticks with me...and I do loop back to ones that I've enjoyed in the past.
Currently, I'm knitting a new scarf for Frank because he felted the last one. I'm once again doing Contra-Dancing:
Contra Dancing (37)
I'm also dabbling in Photography and Photo-shopping. My current musical instrument is a Native American Flute. I'm in the middle of planning my summer season for puppetry which looks like it'll be May to September. I've made several Yahoo Videos for Dad's website...speaking of websites...In addition to Dad's, I'm working on two others. One for the Puppeteers of Puget Sound and I'm consulting on Greenwood as well.
Add to this the fact that my doctor says I'm not getting enough exercise, which means I must start another activity, and you get a pretty tired Elly and one who is definitely on the path to becoming a Polymath!