We Got the Beat

Born this WayA new year – a new you?  If you are determined to become more active in 2012, add music to your exercise formula. It has been scientifically proven that music distracts you from fatigue and energizes you during a workout.

The tempo of the music can help you maintain a steady pace; in fact, many exercisers look for a specific beats per minute (bpm) when creating their workout song list. If you need ideas for songs to add to your list, check out these suggestions from Fitness magazine’s 100 Best Workout Songs.

Who shows up the most often on these playlists? Lady Gaga’s “Just Dance“(127 bpm) and “Born This Way“  (124 bpm) show up on several lists.  Try Britney Spears’ “If U Seek Amy” (130 bpm) or “I Wanna Go” (129 bpm).  “Break Your Heart” (127 bpm) and “Higher” (128 bpm) by Taio Cruz also appear on many top ten lists.

Check out the music selection at your local branch. This Baby Boomer likes “Boogie Shoes“(120 bpm) by K.C. and the Sunshine Band or “Love Shack” (130 bpm) by the B-52s  to get going!

What’s on your list?

 

Cake Pops

Cake pops? What are those, you ask? Well, if you have not been fortunate enough to try these little creations, let me tell you about how wonderful they are!

In a nutshell, here is the description of a cake pop. Crumbled up cake mixed with icing, formed into bite sized balls, on a lollipop stick (hence the name, cake “pops”). Typically dipped in chocolate and decorated in a variety of creative ways!

Register for the program, “Cake Pops” with Fantasy in Frosting, at the New Richmond Branch Library. It’s Tuesday, February 7th, from 6 – 7:30 pm. This program has limited space, so be sure to sign up soon by calling the branch, at 513-553-0570.

Join the “Community”

communityIf you are going through “Community” withdrawal like I am, then find the library and check out first and second seasons of the always hilarious show. “Where is the library?” you say. Well these lyrics might explain where the library is located.

Donde esta la biblioteca. Me llamo T-Bone La Arana discoteca. Discoteca, muneca, La biblioteca Esta en bigtes grande, el perro, manteca. Manteca bigotes, gigante, pequeno, la cabeza es nieve, cervaza es bueno. Buenos dias, me gusta paps frias, los bigotes de la cabra Es Cameron Diaz

Translated to English…Where is the Library? My name is T-Bone the disco spider. disco, doll, the library is in the big mustache, dog, lard, Lard mustache, huge, little head is snow, beer is good, Good day. I like cold potatoes the goats mustache is Cameron Diaz.

Okay that might not help at all, but the Clermont County Public Library can, just visit one of our ten branches and get your “Community” fix.

 

Beadwork is Art

Beadwork is one of those fun creative outlets for someone who wants to wear their art. I’ve been beading for the past ten years and I still love it.

I checked out my first book at the Owensville Branch library. I found all the information I needed to get started. I learned what a “jump ring” was and the difference between an “eye pin” and a “head pin”. There are beginner books and advanced titles, visit the catalog to look at the beading books available.

If you still are a little unsure on how to begin, signup for the Beaded Necklace Design class at the Owensville Branch Library at 2:00 p.m., Saturday, September 10.  When you signup you will get a list of supplies you need to bring to class. I hope to see you there!

Who reads more? You or Art Garfunkel?

Have you ever wondered what Art Garfunkel was reading in 1974?  Probably not, but you can find out on his website, where he maintains a list of every book he read between 1968 and 2009.

A frequent question here at the library is whether or not we can give patrons a list of books that they previously checked out. Unfortunately, at this time, the answer is no.  Once you’ve returned an item, assuming you don’t have an unpaid fine, we don’t keep a record of you having checked it out.  Ohio State law requires that your library records remain confidential, and this is one of the procedures in place to ensure that is so.

So, what is a reader to do?  If you are voracious in your habits, you probably have a hard time remembering what you have and haven’t read.  I can’t tell you how many times a patron has said something like, “I got through four chapters of this book before realizing I had already read it!”  There are too many good books out there and your reading time is too precious to waste.  If you’re not already, then it’s time to start keeping track of what you read.  Not only will it help boost your memory, but a reading log will make it easier to recommend books to friends and family, and allow you to reminisce about past reads.  After a few years of tracking your reading, you’ll find it interesting to go back and see what you were reading in the final year of college, or while pregnant, or on your Caribbean cruise.

More than ten years ago, I began tracking my reading by simply recording titles and authors in a notebook, breaking them down by month.  I’ve seen many patrons take a similar approach.  While I still maintain this paper list, as a backup I suppose, a few years ago I switched to a digital method.  There are a handful of different websites and apps that let you track your reading.  Two of the most popular are LibraryThing and Goodreads.  Both let you track the books you own, the books you’ve read, and the books you would like to read.  Both have social networking qualities that allow you to share book reviews, and meet other people reading the books you enjoy.  I use Goodreads because it has a nice interface, is entirely free, and has apps for both iPhone and Android.  If you’re new to the idea of maintaining a reading log, I urge you to try one of these sites.  Book titles become a jumble as the years go by, and it’ll be a lot easier to remember the details of books you read when you have cover art, your own ratings and reviews, and access to the commentary of others.

And in case you are wondering about 1974… Art kicked the year off with Georges Lefebvre’s The Coming of the French Revolution, and wrapped it up with Clive: Inside the Record Business by Clive Davis, with another sixteen books read in between.

Your Top 10 Books

possessionThe website for World Book Night 2012 is collecting readers’ top ten book lists – your all-time favorite books to read, share, and give. What’s on your top ten list?

The books that I read repeatedly and give as gifts are (in no particular order) -

The Magic of Oz by L. Frank Baum

Possession by AS Byatt

Club Dumas by Arturo Perez Reverte

Golden Compass by Phillip Pullman

Sandman: Preludes and Nocturnes by Neil Gaiman

Hogfather by Terry Pratchett

Eight by Katherine Neville

Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator by Roald Dahl

Blue Sword by Robin McKinley

Dune by Frank Herbert

 

 

 

Interview with a Local Blacksmith

Local blacksmith David Glier will be presenting a program on Saturday, June 11 at 1:00 at the Milford-Miami Twp. Branch. Mr. Glier was kind enough to answer my questions about blacksmithing and his interest in it.

Laura: How did you become interested in blacksmithing?

David: Oh goodness. I suppose I backed into blacksmithing, really.

In 1982 the BBC made a television drama version of Sir Walter Scott’s Ivanhoe, starring Sam Neil and Anthony Andrews. (By far and away the best film adaptation of the book, it’s *finally* made it to DVD!) In 1985, that movie made its way to network TV in Cincinnati. I was three. It must have been a formative experience, because I’ve been blissfully hooked on the middle ages ever since.

By the time I was fourteen or fifteen, like every other teenage boy I wanted a sword -and like every other teenager, I couldn’t afford one. But unlike a lot of teens, I had been working for my father as a grease monkey for a few years, so I already had a good handle on tinkerer’s credo of, “if you can’t buy it, build it!” So with all the enthusiasm of youth I decided that I was simply going to make a sword. After all, I thought, I’d already been making impromptu knives and scrapers to use around the shop for years, and a sword is pretty much just a big knife -how hard could it be?

As it turns out: “Very!”

Laura: How did you learn blacksmithing?

David: For that first project, I must have spent forty or fifty hours over two or three months building a primitive forge from designs off of the early Internet, and then even more time forging and shaping what I still think would have been a very attractive sword blade. Getting metal hot and then moving it around with a hammer is dirt simple to do; very difficult to do well. But I was used to that, and practice makes perfect, so I considered the project a great success -right up until the very end. I got my first real lesson in metallurgy when I shattered the steel with an improper heat-treatment.

At that point, I decided I needed to know a lot more. So, with the help of a lot of books and some very skilled and generous smiths on the Internet, I started studying the science of metallurgy, and applying it with the art of blacksmithing. I’m almost entirely self-taught, and in retrospect I wish I’d taken the time to hunt down a mentor. I’ve been smithing a dozen years now, and I’m barely scratching the surface.

Laura: If someone wants to learn more about the craft, where do you suggest starting?

David: The first, absolutely necessary step is to become familiar with using tools, and to already be in the habit of making things. Foundation skills like that aren’t universal anymore, and they have to be learned and in place so you can build more advanced skills on top of them. The DIY and “MAKE” movements cultivated on the Internet by sites like Lifehacker or Gizmodo or Makezine, are fantastic at fostering this.

But given all that, the first place to visit is the library. Bealer’s The Art of Blacksmithing -an old classic- and The Backyard Blacksmith by Loreli Sims -a new classic- are two books every serious beginner should read cover-to-cover, preferably several times. After that, the Internet is an incredibly powerful tool, not only for the growing number of tutorial texts and videos, but also for the incredible body of human knowledge that congregates in online communities of blacksmiths, bladesmiths, armorers and machinists. And finally, preferably after a project or two, there is a local affiliate of ABANA (Artist Blacksmith’s Association of North America) very nearby in Troy, Ohio. SOFA (Southern Ohio Forge & Anvil) is one of the best local blacksmithing associations in the country; they host regular weekend workshops on all sorts of skills useful to novice members, and even offer a semester-long course on blacksmithing basics in the fall for a very modest fee. In retrospect, I wish I had hunted them down when I was first starting out.

Laura: Do you participate in a reenactment group?

David: Yes, I’ve drifted in and out of several. Reenactment is a wonderful hobby, as it brings together so many people of various skills and backgrounds who all share a common interest in the history of a particular place and time. I’ve made tools for The Company of Wolf Argent (a living history group based on the army of Charles the Bold in late 15th century Burgundy) and I’ve helped out the 77th Highland Regiment (a local group based around American Colonial history and the French & Indian War), and I’m currently a member of the Society for Creative Anachronism, which is a very large group of medieval history enthusiasts. But there are only so many hours in the day, and if comes down to choosing between reenacting things or making things -as it does all too often- I’d rather be at my forge.

Laura: How long on average does it take to create one of your pieces?

David: Much too long!

They say creativity can’t be rushed, but I find the creative design process to be fairly quick and easy. Much more challenging is planning those designs around my limited tool set, and figuring out how to create what I want, without having to work too hard, or make new tools. Most of the time, I wind up making new tools. But that’s just tradition. Never in human history has there ever been a blacksmith who thought he had “enough” tools.

The time I spend actually making the project itself, though, normally hovers around twenty hours, with some extensive projects sometimes taking as much as forty -always spread out over weeks or months (years, in one or two cases) of late nights and weekends. But it’s not so bad; like most hobbyists, I always have three or four irons in the fire at any one time.

Laura: Have you ever created something that you fell in love with and couldn’t put up for sale?

David: Oh, always. I make most of my projects either because I wanted something, or wanted something to use as a gift. So, most things I create have stayed among my immediate family or closest friends.

I have accepted commissions before, but always on the strict understanding that I would work at my own pace. A wise old smith once told me that mixing hobbies, money and friends is a surefire way to loose all three. I’m not eager to find that out for myself!

Laura: Wow! Thank you for such an intriguing look into blacksmithing and your involvement with it.