January 20, 2017
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on Sign Printing at FedEx

Sign Printing at FedEx

I’m super excited that some folks have been able to use the ‘shared’ FedEx print account.  Because my phone number and email are on it, I got notifications that the following orders are ready:

-Ms. Cavenaugh’s order (Del Mar, CA)

-Ms DeLeon’s order (Sacramento, CA)

Thanks!

January 19, 2017
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on 1.20.17: Today’s Signs: Reproductive Rights

1.20.17: Today’s Signs: Reproductive Rights

Anti-Choice = Pro-Poverty

As much as I relate to the seething anger implied by the “Pussy Grabs Back” and “Keep Your Rosaries Off My Ovaries” signs popping up all over social media, I’ve been hankering to try to say something deeper about what is at stake when it comes to the impending Supreme Court nomination, and any erosion of women’s reproductive rights.  It’s easy to want to jump into a screaming match on this one–the pain is so personal, and it’s really hard for me to understand how conservative discourse can be anti-social safety net, anti-minimum wage,  anti-choice, and proclaim to come to those perspectives from a place of concern for ‘the children.”  The true stats for child welfare in this country are bleak, with 21% living in poverty, and many more close to the edge.  Child poverty is correlated with low educational attainment and shorter life expectancy.  In multiple studies, the decline in violent crime in the mid to late nineties has been correlated with Roe v. Wade, and a woman’s right to choose.  This isn’t just about one gender, it’s about everybody.

Speaking personally, the strain of being a good mother stretches me to my limit, almost every single day.  And this is the case even though I have ample social and economic resources, and had children later in my life after establishing my professional career.  I definitely fall into the category of people to believe in attachment parenting, and who possibly throw themselves overly much into their children’s lives– but even for people who manage more regimented, less ‘crunchy’ forms of parenting, having children is a tremendous strain on patience, energy, work, finances, and physical reserves.  It’s not a commitment to be taken lightly.  I think we really need to talk about how we can set parents up so they can withstand this strain, and the first part of this is ensuring that people only take on parenthood when they want to, with an open heart.  I’ve tried to encapsulate how I feel about this in the following sign.  It’s probably a bit to fussy to use as a real protest sign– but I hope it will help us talk about this issue at least online in a more nuanced way.

motherhood choice

 

 

January 19, 2017
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on How to Print Signs

How to Print Signs

ErnestoYerena-WeTheResilient

OK Procrastinators, it’s time to finish those signs!  If you want to print some of the ready-made options from this site, here’s a few options for you.

A. Use your LOCAL independent copy shop:

  • Call your local copy shop, get their email address, and make sure they can print 11×17
  • Email the links of the sign(s) you want to print to the copy shop– be sure to send the link to the PDF.   Here’s how to do it: from the ‘Find your Sign” page, click on the “Get Poster” button for the sign you want.  This will open the PDF.  Go up to your navigation/ search bar in your browser, and copy the link.  You can do this on your phone web browser by clicking the little box with the upward pointing arrow  and then clicking copy, like this:

img_4315.jpgimg_4314.jpg

 

 

 

img_4315.jpg

B. Send to a FedEx Kinkos chain near you to print

I uploaded the signs I made, as well as the beautiful artwork for the Women’s March provided by the Amplifier foundation (thank you to Mina Brown who donated, and therefore got printable versions of these files) to a generic FedEx account that you can use to print.

Go to: https://printonline.fedex.com/v3.8.0_s8/ and click “Log In” in the upper right hand corner.

Username: sparrowpost    Password: WeWillRise1.21

Once logged in, go to the drop down menu under “My Online Documents” and select “Oder from my Online Documents”

my online docs

You will see two folder options.  the “Find Your Sign” signs are in “My Documents.”  The Official Women’s March “We the People” posters are in the “We the People” folder.  Click on the folder you wish to print from.

folder options

Select the sign from the list of items you want to print and then go to “Set Print Options” at the bottom

:list of files

When you set up the document, you want to be sure to

1) Black and White: set black and white documents to BLACK AND WHITE so that you don’t pay the price for a color print.  You change this under the “print color” menu.  Obviously if you want to print color, you should leave this checked.  Color 11×17 prints on standard paper look like they’ll cost ~$2.

black and white

2) Lamination: Further down that same menu, you will see an option to have your sign laminated.  This costs ~$4 for a 11×17 sign, and could be a good investment if you are planning to march in the rain.

2) Size: you want to specify 11×17 printing by “Adding Special Instructions”and just typing in “11×17”

Fedex special instructions

4)  Finally, you will send the document to print, and select a store near you for pickup.  Because you added special instructions, you will pay at the store.  Color printing should be under $5 per sign, Black and White should be under $2 per sign. I’m not sure what lamination costs, so it might be good to check on that.

Hope this helps everyone get their sign printed.

January 17, 2017
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
1 Comment

Signs of the times…

Today from the world of Instagram under the category #WMWArt, I found some pretty amazing inspiration:

💛✌🌹✊ #woc

A photo posted by joan z (@joan_zeta) on

 

When crafting gets tough.✊️✊🏻✊🏼✊🏽✊🏾✊🏿🎨#whyimarch #WMWart

A photo posted by Brooke Feinberg (@befein) on

Last but not least, some inspiration from my mom, who hosted a sign making party with friends this past weekend. I remember finding my mom’s old Vietnam War-era protest signs in a closet in my grandparents’ house when I was a kid. As I recall, one said “Let the Flower Children Grow!” and the other was beautifully executed peace sign made from the word ‘peace’ written out a million times in different colors. She, her friends and her generation continue to be my conscience and my inspiration. For her whole life she has ‘walked the walk’ of peace, love, and #CareNotChaos. I’m pretty excited to be going to San Diego to march with her this weekend.

San Diego Women's March Signs

January 12, 2017
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on 1.12.17 Signs: Be a Lie Swatter

1.12.17 Signs: Be a Lie Swatter

Today’s idea comes from my mother-in-law.  She is a voracious and wide-ranging reader, and suggested the following sign based on a book she’s reading on Eleanor Roosevelt and World War II.  I’m not sure what the context was for “Be a Lie Swatter” in that time period, but it certainly seems appropriate today.  Thanks to Mr. Life Partner for developing a “Twitter Edition” of the poster.  Incidentally, my mother-in-law would love to attend a local Women’s March in Gainesville, FL, in case anyone is interested in organizing one!

Lie Swatter

January 11, 2017
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
1 Comment

1.11.17 Signs: Build Bridges Not Walls

build-bridges-not-walls

this-land-is-our-land

esta-tierra-es-nuestra-tierra

One visitor to the site asked for some signs about ‘the Wall’ that unPOTUS-elect just reiterated his commitment to building in the first 100 days.  I’ve added the signs (above) to the gallery at the end.  The “This Land Is Our Land/Esta Tierra Es Nuestra Tierra” sign is not explicitly about the Wall– but shows an image of the pre-1845 US Boundary.  While the image makes a specific point about the arbitrary nature of our Southern Border (which continued to be undefined in many segments throughout the 20th century), it provides a broader message about our collective residence on this planet.  National boundaries will be forced to the breaking point by US-induced climate change.  No amount of wall-building will shield the US from the moral, humanitarian crisis that is knocking at our door.

Today’s Sign: Tweets are for Birds

January 10, 2017 by cablackmar@yahoo.com | 2 Comments

Making posters for the Women’s March is getting addictive, I think because it’s cathartic to spell out all the things that have me concerned.  The idea for today’s signs came from my mom, who originally wanted tweety bird saying “Tweets are for Birds.”  (She’s an artist, so I’ll let her do that one herself — I have concerns about copyright.)  I liked the idea though, since I’d been wanting to do something about our unPOTUS’s offhandedly incendiary use of Twitter.  In order to make these work, I had to use color– so they could cost a bit more to print than the simple, affordable black and white posters I started with– but the price should still be under $5. For anyone who wants, please feel free to use this Donald Trump twitter bird .jpeg (image) in your own poster!

Thanks for the great idea, Mom!

tweets-are-for-birds-cage

twitter-poop

January 6, 2017
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
13 Comments

Women’s March: Find Your Sign!

womens-march-find-your-sign

There are so many reasons to get our there and march on 1/21, either in Washington DC or in one of the Sister Marches being held throughout our Nation.  A great way to get energized and to get clarity on our reasons for marching is to host a sign-making party– get some big sheets of paper or old sheets to paint, brainstorm some ideas, eat and drink, plan for the day.

If you are looking for a shortcut, though, below are a bunch of free PDFs you can download and print. Detailed printing instructions can be found here.  They are designed to be printed at a copy shop on 11×17 paper.  Simply click on “Get Poster” to link to a downloadable PDF.  You can email it to your local copy shop… you could even send them the direct link for printing.  These signs are in no way exhaustive… but hopefully will help remind us of why we need to get out there and get loud.

[nimble-portfolio post_type=”portfolio” taxonomy=”nimble-portfolio-type” skin=”default” orderby=”menu_order” order=”ASC” ]

December 30, 2016
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
1 Comment

Miracles do Happen: How my baby helped me achieve my 2016 New Years Resolution at the 11th Hour

datacenter-120220-640x4261
It’s a bit unfashionable to talk about last year’s New Year’s resolution at the end of the year, when we’d rather gaze starry-eyed at the novel hopes we have for the year ahead.  I (like everyone) am a chronic breaker of resolutions, and was right on track to do it again in 2016  until my 21 month old did an amazing last minute save on my long forgotten 2016 resolution.

I was doing horrible on my resolution from the start. I’d fully intended to research and write a post on it back in December 2015, and got so far as starting to save some pictures, but ran out of time. The plan for 2015 was to take stock of (and reduce) my digital carbon footprint by going around to all the random websites and email accounts that I’d junked up with words and photos during my 18 or so years on the Internet, and delete all the stuff that was up in the cloud, taking up space that needs to be powered, air conditioned, and transmitted–all for the sake of my NEVER accessing it.

But… of course this takes time,  just like de-cluttering a real house, but without the low-grade exercise component.  And I already spend a lot of hours on the computer,and worry about how this affects my kids.  So the resolution was left unresolved.

Interestingly, there also doesn’t seem to be tremendous agreement on how large the carbon footprint of our cloud-dependent digital world is.  Some claim that the iphone and the cloud network it draws upon uses as much energy each year as a refrigerator.  Others have rebutted this claim.  Increasingly, companies like Facebook and Apple purchase renewable energy to run (or to offset the actual energy that runs) their server centers.  Kudos to Greenpeace for actually analyzing the energy profile  of the servers used by various corporations in this 2015 report.  There also also obvious energy and environmental savings involved with the transition to digital media– according to this website, streaming video over the cloud is significantly more energy efficient than the old DVD-model of production.  Of course, this all gets into how you do your lifecycle analysis.  One thing is certain, the anonymous buildings where our data is housed are in some way sad physical artifacts of the joy of the digital age.

What is clear is that much of the content that I personally have online is unproductive clutter.  Pictures that I printed 10 years ago on Shutterfly, or at CVS.com, are still there years later.  Kudos to Dropbox, which had the wisdom to actually close my account after I went 2 years without using it (and not without substantial advance warning).  I would like to see more common-sense policies like this in place.

So… back to how the baby saved the New Years Resolution…. I’ve had the same Yahoo email account for 16 years.  And, after 16 years there were probably something close to 10,000 emails in my Inbox, many of them unread commercial email.  One night in November, my husband was out of town and I was trying desperately to feed myself dinner.  I handed my iphone over to the 21 month old while he was in his high chair so I could shovel salad into my mouth.  The 21 month old went crazy with his thumbs… LOTS of button pushing, wild swiping to the left and right.

When he handed the phone back over and I checked my yahoo email, I was amazed to find the inbox was empty.  One email came through, and for the first time in… 16 years? there was just ONE email in my inbox.  Well, thought I, I’m sure they’re somewhere, and I’ll see ’em all when I log in on my computer.  But when I logged into the webmail application that night, there were only four emails in my inbox.   In one sitting at the dinner table, the baby did what would have taken me months, YEARS of effort.

Were pictures lost?  Yes.  Will I never have your address again? Yes.  But a month on, I haven’t missed those emails yet.

Will we double down in 2017 and actually clean out the CVS and Shutterfly accounts?  Totally.  The baby’s on it.

reindeer-guy014

December 21, 2016
by cablackmar@yahoo.com
Comments Off on 2016 Holiday Card Competition

2016 Holiday Card Competition


My favorite theory of the apocalypse
comes from the bloggers Eric Knudsen and Kelly Coyne at the blog ‘Root Simple.’  They have attended some interesting conferences on ‘end times’, and from their experiences in these circles, and also from their viewing of choice Hollywood sci-fi/ adventure films, have noticed a tendency in American ‘fantasy’ apocalypse scenarios to use disaster to legitimize re-establishment of hierarchical (typically, male-dominated, white supremacist) social orders–usually through extreme violence.   They point out that this hierarchical, violent, retrograde vision of how humanity will deal with our predicaments is not necessarily fe acompli– but that if we allow the visioning of end-times to always play out along these lines, will most certainly become so.  

Root Simple posted that blog back in 2014, but it’s stuck with me, and seems eerily prescient of global politics in 2016.  Donald Trump ran on what is essentially an apocalypse platform– something along the lines of “the seas are stormy and the boat may be going down, let’s make sure that white people with guns get the most booty before it sinks entirely.”    So far, he’s running his transition according to this scenario as well–ensuring that the companies whose profits brought us to the precipice will also be able to profit by selling us faulty parachutes for our jump.  Will the Donald Trumps and Steve Bannons and Rex Tillersons of the world get to stay on the top of the cliff and have a party to celebrate want they’ve wrought?  Do they drive us towards the end because they expect themselves and their descendants to survive and profit by it? Or are they all closet anarchists and sadists who can’t manage to empathize even with their own grandchildren?  Either way, their approach seems dreadfully shortsighted, as though it could be inspired by a mad hallucination mash-up of Saturday morning cartoons and the worst of 90s sci-fi.

All of this is to set the stage for: the Rice Family 2016 Holiday card!  I’m definitely not the only one who’s felt that our holiday admonitions of peace and love would be ringing especially false this year.  In November, it felt like the right thing to do would be to call off Christmas entirely this year.  But while pictures of Aleppo intervene like static shocks and news of the Trump transition sours each work day, the daily pleasantness of my life has largely continued unabated.  I couldn’t cry on election night because I had to take care of my children.  My older son cried, but my baby just wanted to play basketball.  In the end, I didn’t have the willpower to cancel Christmas either.  

The challenge has been to figure out what, right now, I can do to make the ‘wishes of peace and love’ be genuine statements and less platitudes.  Where in public life do I really see these principles in evidence?  What strategies take us in that direction, present that alternative to a retrograde apoclaypse? That’s what I wanted to put on the holiday card this year.  

And in honesty, as bad as things are when you read the paper, a very different reality presents itself much of the time when I’m out and about on the streets of Los Angeles.  People in my school community, my park community, my neighborhood are, by and large, lovely to one another.   I co-coached a soccer team full of really kind and wonderful kids this year, went back to my family’s church and was surprised by it’s progressive values (the first day I went there was a discussion about what faith communities should be doing about climate change), and in my work I meet people whose commitment to racial equity and ending the inequities in our society is profound, and evidenced by hours worked for a cause often without pay. 

A few days after the election, I took the new Expo light rail line downtown for work.  I was curious as to what I’d find– especially after reading in the press about a rise in hateful speech and incidents, and the countervailing wearing of safety pins etc. Within the small amount of time I spent on transit that day, the primary thing I noticed is that people seemed to be taking extra consideration in reaching out to one another, and in treating each other with courtesy.  I noticed fewer people tuned out with earbuds, more people offering their seats to each other, women from different walks of life sitting together and talking.  Taking transit in LA isn’t always easy.  The platforms and trains get packed at rush hour, bikes jostle with strollers– but in general, people behave with dignity and kindness, and the system supports that behavior.  When I got to Union Station, there’s a piano in the main waiting hall that’s open and available for anyone to play.  There was a young Latino guy in shorts and bike helmet sitting there playing jazz, his backpack beside him on the piano bench.  The old train station is one of our most beautiful places in Southern California– and there was something about the experience that was incredible faith-giving.  LA passed a ballot measure to tax ourselves to invest _more_ in this version of the future.  My design for this year’s card competition “Peace, love and transit in 2017” attempts to capture the hope I felt after returning from this journey. expo-hand-color007

I worked on my design over Thanksgiving, and I’d say that the reaction from my family was lukewarm.  In response, I threw a few other designs into the mix.  One was this drawing I did of a starry night in Great Basin National Park.  Great Basin is in the true middle of nowhere in eastern Nevada, and the night sky is amazing.  It was reassuring to go someplace where this many stars were still visible. 

greatbasinsmallMy third submission was done on behalf of the youngest member of our family, who carries a basketball like a teddy bear from the time he wakes up each morning to the time when he’s tucked into bed with it at night.  He enjoys guiding drawings, pointing to the paper and demanding a ‘dack-I-daw!”  Be placed here, there, everywhere.  The “Basketball Tree” was the result of one such guided drawing– and Oran is quite the fan of the drawing.  

basketball-tree010

Finally, the competition included this drawing from Oliver (the other person who got it together to add a design to competition *ahem*, Andy). santasaunacolor

In it, a spying elf looks on as Santa dives into a hot cocoa-filled house.  We printed all four designs on a page, and then have been sending to each person the card we think they’d like the best.  I’m pretty sure we’re going to run out of Oliver’s design first– which just goes to show you that you shouldn’t overthink these things.

In their blog, the Root Simple people propose an alternative vision of the apocalypse.  Rather than a firey brimstone conflagration with bare-chested He-Men running around with Uzis to keep order, they discuss the human predicament as being a ‘gradual crappening.’  Species go extinct at an accelerated rate, our expectations of human rights are eroded, we live in increasingly deprived physical environments, with worsening water and air quality, higher costs for everything, more refugees, rising sea levels and so on.  At the end of 2016, I think we can safely say that the ‘crappening is happening’ and that we have elected a crappening accelerator to the Oval Office.  The best I am going to hope for in this process is that we push back on the crappening as it  occurs, and maybe, with some of our actions, (fighting for racial justice, advancing equity, building transit not car infrastructure) even start to get ahead of it.  That’s my hope for peace and love in 2017.