November 05, 2010
New Steampunk'd Anthology - Now Out, Featuring story, "Edison Kinetic Light & Steam Power" by C.A. Verstraete
The 320-page collection, edited by Jean Rabe and Martin H. Greenberg, includes my short story, "Edison Kinetic Light and Steam Power" by C.A. Verstraete, in which an ailing, but resourceful Alva Edison helps her soon-to-be-famous brother, Thomas, overcome a tragedy and find the answers he'd been seeking. As they say, behind every man is a powerful woman, right?
Their story continues in a new romance steampunk anthology, also coming from DAW and I am working on a novella about them. I fell in love with the story and don't want to let go yet!
About the book:
Steampunk can be defined as a subgenre of science fiction that is typically set in an anachronistic Victorian or quasi-Victorian setting, where steam power is prevalent. Consider the slogan: "What the past would look like if the future had come along earlier." The stories in this all-original anthology explore alternate timelines and have been set all over the world, running the gamut from science fiction to mystery to horror to a melding of these genres.
November 04, 2010
New Review, Short Horror Ebook, The Killer Valentine Ball
Blurb: A party at a day camp; a blind date on Valentine's Day.(Can you say loser?) But this is no ordinary party. The Killer Valentine Ball has more thrills than Jess ever expected--or will ever forget.
Excerpt:
As they walked into the shadows, Jess noticed that things weren't quite as they appeared. Sections of the room lightened for a moment before being cast again in deep shadow. What Jess thought she saw in that split second made her heart race. On the dance floor, the same three couples stood, clasped to each other. Jess stared. She swore they never moved.
The music played quietly in the background. When the shadows brightened, Jess caught a quick glimpse of one of the couples. The young man's mouth gaped open. His partner's gown glistened with streams of dark ribbons. The light flashed again and Jess gasped. Those weren't ribbons! The girl's dress shone with dark glimmers. Like-like blood, she thought. No, it can't be! She looked back at Dylan, who shook his head and urged her on.
"Light tricks," he whispered. "It's not real. It's Halloween stuff, like the movie. Don't worry..."
BUY:
November 03, 2010
New Author Snapshot Column: Spooky Reads at Mysterical-e
Witches, ghosts, curses, oh my! Mysteries and even a zombie romance anthology with a detective story. Featured authors include: Lillian Stewart Carl, Cynthia Gael, Carol Costa, Mary Anna Evans, and Jan Kozlowski.
November 02, 2010
A new obsession: Real Miniature Art in Vending Machines
As a longtime dollhouse and miniatures collector, I already had a love for all things small. So, I naturally gravitated to this news story I found about an artist in Germany selling miniature art in old vending machines. Neat idea, I thought.
Then I read the comments and realized that this wasn't a new idea. Apparently, I'd been missing out on something interesting, namely "real" miniature art sold for a "small" price in old cigarette machines across the US. Great way to recycle those old machines, too!
(Image: Art*O*Mat machine, McHenry County College, Crystal Lake, IL)
Art*O*Mat has been offering the miniature vending machine art since 1997. The art, most selling for $5, with half going to the artist, includes a range of subjects and formats as seen in this sample gallery.
Since I'm interested in these for specific purposes, I saw several items that were interesting such as a piece in a small tote bag, some on blocks, pictures in fold-out booklets, a small book, and a picture with two dogs that I really liked. Art*O*Mat's art is sized 2 1/8" x 3 1/4" x 7/8".
* Find Art*o*mat locations
Unfortunately, none of the machines are close to me so I'll have to keep a list in mind when I get to those areas.
Anyone buy something at one of these machines? I'd love to see what kind of art you got and hear what you thought. I still think it's a really cool idea, especially for miniatures collectors!
November 01, 2010
Miniatures Monday: Chicago Thorne Rooms to Get Christmas Decor for First Time - See Thorne Rooms Postcard Exhibit
Thorne Rooms Video
The rooms, commissioned by Mrs. James Ward Thorne, were first exhibited in the 1933 Chicago's Century of Progress Expositiona. Thirty-seven of the rooms were donated to the Art Institute in 1942.
See story and photos here.
** Compare the Thorne rooms from original 1940s postcards and recent photos exhibited by the Chicago Postcard Museum.
Image: The West Parlor 1758-1787 Mount Vernon, Fairfax County, Virginia Chicago Postcard Museum.
October 31, 2010
Halloween in Miniature 2010 - Day 12: Short Halloween Fiction by Gail Farrelly and a Slideshow
(Trick or Treat! - Nancy Cronin)
Welcome to Day 12 of The 12 Days of Halloween in Miniature for 2010! I hope that you enjoyed visiting and seeing the work of some talented miniaturists. I appreciate your stopping by and hope you'll come back for future events (and shameless plug - check out my fiction and books. ha!) I had fun organizing the event, and hope you had fun, too!
(If you missed the beginning, start at Day 1. ** Back: Day 11.)* Don't forget to check out today's slideshow at the end of this post.
To wrap up this year's event, I have a special "treat" - enjoy a holiday tale by author Gail Farrelly. Her latest mystery novel is Creamed at Commencement: A Graduation Mystery. You can read the first chapter at the link above. Gail is also working on a fourth mystery, The Virtual Heiress.
HalloweenTech: A Fantasy Tale
By Gail Farrelly
It's Halloween morning. You're curled up in bed reading your new Kindle. It's light as a feather and holds tons of books. Ah, the new technology. Isn't it wonderful?
You get up and head to the kitchen for a glass of orange juice. Eek! There is none. Thank goodness you invested in a "smart" refrigerator, programmed to automatically inventory and re-order some basic items. You go to the refrigerated delivery box right outside your door and open the combination lock. Eureka! As promised, the refrigerator IS smart. A half-gallon of juice awaits you, having been delivered by the 24/7 gremlins who accept and obey the commands of your refrigerator. Three cheers for the new technology!
Later in the day you're out for a jog and stop at a machine to buy a bottle of water. You deposit $1.50, but nothing happens. You wipe the sweat off your sunglasses and read the message flashing on the machine: "Warm weather surcharge in effect, since temperature is above 70 degrees. Please deposit an additional 50 cents." Yikes! A smart refrigerator in your home is one thing. But a smart drink machine in the park? A machine that takes advantage of high temperatures and exhausted joggers? Forget about it. You have no more change and return home thirsty. What has technology wrought?
At dinnertime, you push the "scan and suggest" button on your refrigerator. Within a minute you receive a printout providing three Martha Stewart recipes based on the inventory of the fresh food contents of your refrigerator. Let's see, you could whip up chicken in wine sauce, spinach lasagna, or a broccoli and cheese omelet. You consider each one in turn and picture all the pots and pans involved. You give a thumbs down to all three. You do have a smart dishwasher, but it's not smart enough to do the entire clean up on its own, and Martha won't be stopping by to help. She's done the before-the-meal work, but afterwards you'll be on your own. Time for Plan B. You stick your head in the freezer and do a manual scan. You find a frozen pizza and put it in the oven. Who needs the new technology?
You finish your pizza and then pick up the mail. Bad news. Your car rental company, doing nationwide monitoring from its office in Snoopville, has caught you going more than ten miles above the speed limit on three separate occasions. Uh oh. Big Brother is watching. You didn't know that the company had the technology and the nerve to do that. A "fine" of $150 has been charged to your credit card. Is this legal? But talk about a dilemma. How can you ask a law enforcement official whether it's legal for someone to "catch" you speeding? Boy, you hate this new technology.
(Boo! Trick or Treat? - Nancy Cronin)
Then the doorbell rings. You open the door to a cast of usual suspects. A witch, a ghost, a ballet dancer, a king, a pirate, a princess, a Miss Piggy, and a Kermit form a chorus: "Trick or Treat." Their eyes light up when you hand over candy corn and dollar bills. You wish each other Happy Halloween.
You close the door and smile. Hmm. Maybe this brave new world isn't so bad after all. Or so new.#
Thanks for visiting and hope to see you next year! Stop by again for other book news and my Christmas miniatures posts! - Chris Verstraete
October 30, 2010
Halloween in Miniature 2010 - Day 11: Halloween Ideas and Projects
Welcome to Day 11 of The 12 Days of Halloween In Miniature. (You can go to the beginning of the party here at Day 1.)
(** Back: Day 10 - ** Next: Day 12 - final day slideshow and illustrated short story)
For a change of pace, today I wanted to share some fun projects and ideas I've come across. Feel free to share your ideas or tell us about a project you've made.
* It's great to see the always creative Joann Swanson again sharing her ideas with us! She has two fun tutorials, a Halloween scene (make some mini books and more, see top pic) and an Autumn scene at her new blog.
* Great toy and game boxes from jennifer's printables (Also great boxes and bags - not Halloween but you can put them under a Halloween-decorated tree, right?)
* Halloween potion label printie
* Cool Halloween silhouettes and pictures - Martha Stewart
* Pumpkin centerpiece idea: Just saw Martha's idea on TV - how pretty this would be in mini for a change of pace! I'm going to try it and will are a pic if it works:
Pick a small and larger pumpkin to make a tower. Paint top pumpkin silver; bottom one black. Cut out small green leaves. Glue pumpkins together with leaves sticking out between them. Cover top pumpkin stem completely with colored glitter. Draw or punch out out tiny leaves and glue a few to pumpkins. Add glitter to leaf shapes.
* About.com's Halloween printies. - Halloween cupcake shop printie (and links to witch costume pattern)
* Make a mini Halloween book: (If desired, first spray with matte sealer and coat with water-based varnish - NOTE: color strip before spraying - or print on gloss photo paper.) Print out small covers. Color center strip, or leave strip as flap, cut out one side and glue over flap so front and back meet. Fold and fill with cut paper.
* Make miniature papier mache ornaments. (Easy to shrink down to dollhouse size.)
* Make Halloween kid's books. (These are full-size but can be re-sized; good tutorial.)
* Make a mini Jack 'O Lantern video:
** Looking for a Halloween read? The Killer Valentine Ball - C.A. Verstraete
Jess agrees to go on a blind date (can you say loser?) to a local Valentine Ball, which turns out to be a "killer" party that she'll never forget! * 5 stars -Ghostwriter Reviews "...The details and events were very descriptive, and captured my attention for the short tour down the ghoulish halls. The ending was quite funny."
* Make a (cute!) Halloween spider cake video:
October 29, 2010
Halloween in Miniature 2010 - Day 10: Visit the Witch's Cottage!
When she's not getting in hay or doing other chores on her small South Carolina farm, Jody Raines enjoys creating exquisite flowers and beautiful miniature upholstered furniture. She also creates wonderful miniature paintings. She sells her work under the name, Peach Blossom Hill.
Jody was lucky as she did have a dollhouse as a child and says she's "dabbled" in minis off and on for years. Creating her country-flavored "Witch's Cottage" was truly a labor of love:
"I love Halloween and wanted to make a witch's cottage I could display during the month of October. I used Creative Paperclay for the stonework and wanted it to look sort of like a Hansel and Gretel cottage.
"I made the crooked chimney from layers of foamcore board. The furniture was mainly online purchases, some of it, such as the bed, were older pieces and the potions cabinet and cupboard were Michael's hutches. I made each of the potions bottles and the polymer clay fruits and vegetables."
** Back: Day 9 ** Next: 12 Days of Halloween in Miniature: Day 11
** Enjoy a video tour of Jody's Witch's Cottage: (Love the details, the colors and that crooked chimney!)
October 28, 2010
Halloween in Miniature 2010 - Day 9: Gruesome Foods!
(Mmm, what's for dinner? New meaning to the term, "mystery meat." No, you don't want to know. ha! - Meal: Pamela Nicholson)
Welcome to Day 9 of The 12 Days of Halloween In Miniature. (You can go to the beginning of the party here at Day 1.
**Warning** to the squeamish: We're now entering the dark side of the party. What's Halloween without a little gore? Heh-heh-heh.
Well, my interest in making yucky miniature Halloween food is well-known. But there are others who also like to let their mind go a little wild...
Don't let Montana miniaturist Pamela J. Nicholson's elegant photo at her website fool you. Pamela, who creates under the name Pamela J Minis has a dark side...
Besides making some fantastic, and yummy-looking everyday foods like pizza, desserts, even a bowl of Trix cereal, (check them out!) she made some, er, dishes for those with "certain" tastes...
Can you hear me now? No?
Pamela says she made up for her "deprived" childhood when she entered the world of miniatures in 2008. "Being a typical girl, I have always been enthralled by dollhouses and miniatures," she says. "I wanted a doll collection; never acquired one. I wanted a dollhouse; never managed that either.
(Snack time!)
"In May 2008 a whole new world opened up for me when I received a beautiful dollhouse (a Greenleaf Willowcrest) for Mother's Day from my daughter. It was completely built, all I had to do was furnish it and what fun I've had in doing so.
"In early June, I started playing around with polymer clay and found that God has blessed me with a talent for creating things with it.
"I have since created many food displays that have been sent worldwide. Each display gives me great pleasure, not only in the creation of it, but in knowing that it brings someone else as much pleasure as it has me."
(And isn't that what miniatures are all about? Thanks, Pamela for sharing one side of your work with us!)
** Back: Day 8
** Next: 12 Days of Halloween in Miniature: Day 10
** This is a must-see! Yes, this is a REAL bakery - and these items are bread! Imagine that for your next breakfast! haa! See more incredibly amazing (and gross) photos here.
October 27, 2010
Halloween in Miniature 2010 - Day 8: Something Sweet
(Halloween table and candies, Megan Conlon)
Welcome to Day 8 of The 12 Days of Halloween in Miniature. (If you missed the party's start, go back to Day 1.)
Mention Halloween and what do you think of? Besides costumes, it has to be the goodies: candy and all things sweet!
As kids, we used to go out for hours and come back with bags of great stuff: candy bars, popcorn balls, etc. The same fun is possible in miniature, letting you fill your sweet tooth without guilt (or extra pounds!)
New Yorker Megan Conlon first became interested in miniatures as a middle school student. She bought some furniture on sale and made rooms with cardboard boxes. While some kids lose interest in their early hobbies, Megan wanted to learn more about miniatures.
"I got my dollhouse in 9th-10th grade for $5 at a garage sale," she says. (See how she decorated the house at her website). "I couldn’t afford dollhouse food so I attempted making some myself, but didn’t try for more accurate pieces until after my freshman year of college. It was during the summer that I was able to create more realistic food with the help of DIY projects from dollhouse magazines. It’s been about nine years since that, and I’ve been working on my craft ever since."
Megan now enjoys creating a variety of miniature food and other items, many of which are now sold under the name, Megan's Minis.
"My favorite foods to create in miniature are desserts; especially cakes and cupcakes," she says. "I’m actually quite good with printies/printables, too. I love working with computers so not only is it easy to scan real boxes and make them mini, but I can also create my own. I enjoy making my own stuff, although I still feel quite new to it all. I’m constantly inspired by real life items and especially by the talent of those who create in miniature."
** And how about this striking candy creation? This black-and-white Nightmare-inspired candy scene is by miniaturist Kate Whittaker.
** Back: Day 7
** Next: 12 Days of Halloween in Miniature: Day 9
** Make some fun candy bar wrappers