Salem was quite busy and it was difficult to take pics, but here are a few that I did manage to get.
All posts by Kristi
WTA – Ferrofluid Cells
(above image is a result however it’s very faint and shows up better in video)
I have been working on my ferrofluid visualization technique in my MagKnotic project. I had been studying the video that I am using to replicate the process and just had a ‘d’oh’ moment. I was seeing the process as an imaging technique. But, yes it is a technique, however, it’s technically a DISPLAY. The image that appears is merely an effect of the DISPLAY. As such the liquid between the hele-shaw cell needs to remain relatively clear for it to display any sort of image. I bet that this is how most displays were originally made and maybe even made today.
Maybe instead of focusing on creating an IMAGE I could focus on techniques to display an image. The image is a result of a successful display.
Post: Solving E=MC2
Post: Solving E=MC2
Abstract:
While thinking about the conversation I had lately about the manifest world being an interference and that spirals are expressions of intersections of light, I thought about Einsteins’ equation… and remembered that not too long ago I applied the golden mean, 1.61 to Einsteins’ E=MC2… I think I may be getting somewhere with all this physics stuff and think that conventional physics is extremely wrong in some things… but then I realized I already came to this conclusion last March when I wrote my “Traveling Faster than the Speed of Light” post.
Gallery: Summer 2018
Exploration: Mid-Century Cafe – Chocolate Cafe
EASTHAM, MA – This past weekend, I spent sometime with my family in Eastham, MA. We spent the day boating on Saturday and on Sunday my mom and I stopped by a few local favorites. We had heard of a new chocolate cafe in town and wanted to check it out since the Chocolate Sparrow, has been non-stop crazy crowded since its’ inception. With Eastham being small, local residents are always eager to checkout a new business in town. This cafe has a fun artistic twist in finding inspiration in mid-century design. Their cafe has traditional black and white checkered flooring and cutesy ephemera to help tell the tale of their cafe concept.
Breakfast, Lunch, Homemade Chocolate, Smoothies, Coffee and More

Located on historic Route 6 in North Eastham on Cape Cod, you will find the Chocolate Cafe. Featuring a fun and brightly colored 50’s Diner Theme, the Chocolate Cafe serves freshly made breakfast sandwiches, lunch, homemade chocolate, truffles, pastries, gourmet organic coffee, espresso, hot chocolate, iced and frozen drinks, freshly made smoothies, frappes, root beer floats, assorted bagged candies, fudge and freshly made breakfast sandwiches daily. Looking for a fun gift to take home? The Chocolate Cafe has a very eclectic variety of cards and gifts, both salty and sweet.
Stop by and enjoy a freshly made cup of coffee to go, a “Honeymooner” grilled cheese, an “I Love Lucy” hotdog, a sweet treat or a cold drink, and enjoy it on one of the many seating options available inside and outside on the front porch or brightly colored picnic tables.
Paper: The Language of Knowing
Paper: The Language of Knowing
Abstract:
According to the famous Mayan calendar, this time cycle began when the galaxy completed a rotation, which happens every 26,000 years. This cycle is
composed of 5 lesser cycles, each of which each are 5,125 years in duration. Each of these 5 cycles is considered its own World Age or Creation Cycle. Our present great cycle (3113 B.C. ‐ 2012 A.D.) is called the Age of the Fifth Sun. The initial date that Earth entered the Fifth World, was August 13, 3113 BC, written in Mayan long count notation as 13.0.0.0.0. The ancients have called this the Shift of the Ages and this shift has resulted in a pole shift; north was south, south was north. The Mayans were the only people to survive a pole shift. The prophesized end date, 2012 A.D is the end of the Iron Age, and the beginning of the Golden Age. This current age is known as the Iron Age, the age of technological dominance.
Exhibition: Solo Show at Northampton City Hall
Exhibition History: Moravian College Senior Thesis
Photography: Cape, Aug. 2018
Collection: Fishing
Year: 2018
A series of photographs from a fishing trip.
Video: 5 Striper
News: Greenland Research Trip
I am excited to announce that I will be going to Greenland next spring! I will officially be launching my ‘around the zone‘ project and will be investigating precipitation (water) in organic materials in the tundra climate zone under different imaging techniques. Since I have to stop in Iceland on the way over, I may include Iceland as a tourist but we’ll see how planning goes. More details to come as it gets closer.
WTA – Burdock
I spent a good amount of time in my studio this past weekend and it felt quite freshing, as I’m starting to see my workflow again. I walked the boarder of the property of my apartment and took some photos of the plants I found ‘in the wild’. Immediately I found Red Clover, Queen Anne’s Lace, Pokeweed and Burdock. I began a few pages in my sketchbook of an herbarium. I have a smaller herbarium for the specimens used in my electrography work but I like to sometimes keep an herbarium of the plants and flowers of the locale environment. I have a field guide that I use to help me identify some of plants and use a Facebook group for difficult ones. One particular plant that stuck out to me was burdock and upon looking it up further I was pleasantly surprised that it is connected to the Turkish culture. In Turkish Anatolia, the burdock plant was believed to ward off the evil eye, and as such is often woven into kilims for protection. With its many flowers, the plant also symbolizes abundance.
The meanings expressed in kilims derive both from the individual motifs used, and by their pattern and arrangement in the rug as a whole. A few symbols are widespread across Anatolia as well as other regions including Persia and the Caucasus; others are confined to Anatolia.
An especially widely used motif is the Elibelinde, a stylized female figure, symbolizing motherhood and fertility. Other motifs express the tribal weavers’ desires for protection of their families’ flocks from wolves with the wolf’s mouth or the wolf’s foot motif (Turkish: Kurt Aǧzi, Kurt İzi), or for safety from the sting of the scorpion (Turkish: Akrep).Several protective motifs, such as those for the dragon (Turkish: Ejder), scorpion, and spider (sometimes called the crab or tortoise by carpet specialists) share the same basic diamond shape with a hooked or stepped boundary, often making them very difficult to distinguish.
All the motifs can vary considerably in appearance according to the weaver. Colours, sizes and shapes can all be chosen according to taste and the tradition in a given village or tribe; further, motifs are often combined. To give some idea of this variability, a few alternative forms are shown in the table.







































































































