Showing posts with label Society for Commercial Archeology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Society for Commercial Archeology. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2008

I have a title


"Hodags, Happy Chefs, and Hiawathas: Practical Applications of Materials Science along America's By-ways" The proposal has been submitted, along with a cover letter emphasizing the presentation will be highly visual (always a plus with the Commercial Archeology folks), so if all goes well this fall I'll have an excuse to be in Albuquerque.
Despite the fact that all three examples mentioned in the title are fiberglass, the presentation will discuss other materials (concrete, metal, wood) used for humongous fish, dinosaurs, and other oddities and how one tells the difference if/when they're painted and construction materials aren't obvious. It'll also get into differences between mass produced (Happy Chefs in various sizes) and custom (this green dude with the impressive canine teeth and claws).
This hodag is fiberglass, he sits outside the Rhinelander information center on the west side of town, and he is not a product of F.A.S.T., the Sparta, Wisconsin, company usually associated with oversized fiberglass statuary. The photo was taken on a rainy day in late September 2007.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Thinking about fiberglass


I've been sitting at my desk this afternoon thinking about fiberglass when I should be thinking about my job and editing epidemiology articles. Somehow fiberglass fish are pushing biostatistical jargon to the cliched backburner. Not to mention fiberglass Indians. Fiberglass muffler men. Fiberglass buffalo. Fiberglass Happy Chefs. Fiberglass, big and small and in all sorts of strange configurations.

And why am I thinking about fiberglass? Because I want an excuse to attend the Society for Commercial Archeology meeting scheduled for October in Albuquerque, New Mexico. That means submitting a paper proposal -- and so I'm thinking about fiberglass and a follow-up to the paper I gave in Seattle on Rocket Science and Muffler Men. I've got the graphics -- now all I need are the words. I've got the start of a catchy and alliterative title -- "Hodags, Happy Chefs, and Hiawatha: something semi-profound" -- so maybe by the end of the day I'll have the rest of it.

The Happy Chef pictured is located on the outskirts of Mankato, Minnesota, on US-169 north of US-14.