Tuesday, October 29, 2013

SIWC 2013 Workshop #2, Out of the Mouth of Babes


Out of the Mouths of Babes (KC Dyer, Susin Nielsen, Janet Gurtler, Mandy Hubbard)

Q: How much research in order to find your character’s voices? Do you interact with children/teens?
M: stumbled into writing YA, wrote first project when 23, agent directed her into changing to YA. Some authors go to the mall and listen to teens. If you don’t connect with your teen years, you can’t fake it. Immaturity is a plus.
S: Always written in 1st POV to tap into that voice. Like M said, it’s hard to mimic it if you can’t tap into those teen years, but something about 1st POV lets her tap into that character and that ends up how a lot f the humor comes out because the character isn’t aware anything they are saying/doing is funny, but the reader can see it.
*check out a trilogy called “Alice I think”
J: Really not good at being a teenager, so can really remember those years, still a big part of who she is. Gets to go back/relive those years, and in some ways, make them better. Has a teenage son and nieces, gets to eavesdrop/etc.

Q: Who do you look to for inspiration for clear/accurate voices?
J: “It’s Kind of a Funny Story” -> boy POV, a kid who is mentally ill, and the way it’s written, it’s so honest and really captures the feelings of a teen boy. John Green does an intilectual/older teen voice.
M: Lauren Barnhall (sp?), Lauren Miracle (sp?). As an agent, loves issue books, but have to be really unique (esp. voice), like “Living Dead Girl”.
S: Doesn’t read a lot of YA, nervous that she’ll read something, and a year later think, “Oh, I have a good idea for a story...”, but likes John Green, and in MG, Christopher Paul Curtis “Bud, not Buddy”
KC: “Great and Future King”, “The Outsiders”

Q: Something brought up is writing YA books for the male POV, have any of you written a male POV?
J: “Waiting to Score”, difficult to write, talked to husband & son, males/females think/talk differently, and how boys react viscerally, speak shorter, etc. Enjoyed it, but probably wouldn’t write again.
S: 2/3 YA books have male POV characters, had lots of boys come up and asked, “how do you know what we’re thinking?”. Has sons, that’s part of it, but another part is once you inhabit the character (not football type boys, more quiet/outsiders), it comes.
M: Only written in 3rd POV adult romance (NASCAR romance!), had some on my list. “Boy-boy-boy” are harder in YA, there’s the notion that boys skip over the YA section. Even male authors like John Green really appeals to females. If they are too heavily “male” oriented (like a fantasy with a guy hacking up dragons/etc -> adventure), would be hard because they wouldn’t appeal to female readers as well. Has to appeal to both genres. Passed on a book she loved, but was gritty mob-story, digging graves, etc, no good female characters who the girl readers would/could relate to, and since girls are the biggest demographic, have to consider that.

Audience member: has sons, worked with kids, etc. Loved her stuff when they were younger, but now that they’re older, want edgier, more swearing, etc (newest story is about the hockey culture), wanting more street oriented/violence/etc. Do you get pressure (as an agent) to do this, to ask writers to make their stories edgier?
M: No, first author sold at auction is a Mormon, so very conservative, and sold to an editor/publisher who are totally into gritty/dark/etc. Probably there might be something wrong with your characters where they feel they aren’t ‘authentic’.
S: Maybe you want to make it more MG rather than YA?
AM: Could go in either direction...
S: You answered your own question, stick to the story you want to write. Maybe there’s something in the story that made people think it should be more edgy/etc that you need to look at.
J: It’s hard enough to write an entire novel you want to write, much less write a story you don’t want to write.

Q: What makes something edgy? Let’s talk about swearing/etc. This is always an area of controversy. If you’re writing for YA, chances are the people putting down the $ for those books aren’t the target audience, but parents/librarians/etc.
M: In Middle Grade, there are darker lines drawn in terms of content, some that push those boundaries, but in general, if you don’t need to swear, avoid it. Many publishers have guidelines that say no, so that lowers your agent’s number of choices to submit to. Those gatekeepers (parents/librarians) aren’t the same as for YA. Lots of teens buy their own books. You can do anything you want, just not gratuitous. “Nick and Nora’s Playlist” (?) huge number of f-bombs.
J: Some have swearing, but not gratuitous. Had editor ask for words to be changed to no-swear in the first chapter so librarians/parents sometimes look through the first chapter, but not further. Doesn’t like reading books with too much ‘cause it seems like they’re trying to be cool.
K: “Word Nerd” book is more upper MG/lower YA (for 10-14, MG is normally more 8-12), wasn’t thinking about exact target age group when writing, when it ended up on lists for awards, it started getting pulled from libraries/etc because Ambrose (12) calls his mom a bitch at one point, and it is very much in character (dad is dead, lives with single mom), also talks about gettign spontaneous errections, likes books, but it’s because he’s missing his dad and wishing he was still alive to talk to him. Really surprised to see articles with parents writing about how horrified they were, yet look at all the violent video games, stuff on the internet, etc. What I really hate is authors who write for young people have to feel they have to censor themselves. Wasn’t worried when wrote “Word Nerd”, but then when starting the next book, it was harder.
M: Huge selling point is the Scholastic list, because they have nation-wide book fairs, so the agent will think about whether your book would be pitched for that or not.

Q: Language itself, have you ever created your own language/words for your characters use? “Frindle”, story about a boy who renames his pencil and comes up with his own swear word.
J: “16 Things I thought were True”, has this one quirky character, says really weird things, and when the copy-editor went through it, had a really hard time because she didn’t recognize all the bizarre/crazy things. Got an idea for the character from a quirky/odd girl she met in Seattle with Mandy Hubbard. One thing I thought about in my first book is Facebook, whether to use it, or make up something different. 
S: I used the Obama fist bump

Q: What about slang for your characters? Things like the Obama fist-bump get dated really easily.
M: Don’t want to go to “Clueless” slang, but it’s along the same lines as swearing. Not gratuitous. Pop culture references are trickier, had a reference about Brittany Spears (hot one of the moment)
S: Try to avoid it, but looking back, certainly they sneak in there, like the Obama bump, and Facebooks. Do it more than I realize sometimes.

Q: This is different, being mainly Contemporary authors, how to you keep it relevant, to be read in 10 years?
S: How do you do that in any book? You can’t write to become a classic.
M: “13 Reasons Why” came out in 2008, and the author personally used old tapes, so in that case, you can write something already out of date, so 10 years from now there will still be out of date.
J: I think I put more pop culture in the past than I would now since things change faster and faster.
AM: Have you run across something in a book that struck you as inauthentic, offensive, etc. What drives you crazy, as a reader?
J: If it’s not authentic teen dialogue it drives me bonkers. I’m old, but I think I have an ear for dialogue.
S: A pet peeve of mine in some YA fiction is I get really tired of the very earnest/serious stuff. Some books do it really well, but some it just blah. Some YA fiction the pacing is so far off, or the author has gotten taken over by their research
KC: Diana Gaboldon calls that, “I have done the research and now you’re going to pay
S: I’ve also read issue books where they’re all about the issue and not really about the character.

Q: I’ve had some writers come to the conference and say they have a book with a really important message that has to come across
M: I get this more in MG where it’s all about, “ wrote this book about bullying and this should teach kids about how bad bullying” the lesson should be a bi-product of a good book. In every good book the character grows/changes/learns through the course of the book. Don’t focus on a message.
J: Google Pixar’s 10 rules of storytelling. “Don’t come up with the theme until you’re done the story, then go back and work it in”. If you start with the theme/message, it’s hard not to get preachy.

Q: Are there cliches writers should be avoided, like ‘bullies’?
J: -> recap of former workshop. Cliches are there for a reason, but put your own twist on it and make it fresh.
S: That is a good point. Like, in “Hunger Games”, there is a love triangle, but the world and approach was so different. It’s all about authentic character, and that’s how it’s going to make it.
M: I see too much of bullies. Wish eveyr writer could spend a month reading the slush pile, but even if I didn’t know what the last trend was, I’d be able to guess by what’s in my pile as writers are chasing trends (writing the latest fresh thing thy loves). The market is really looking for Contemporary with a hook, “13 Reasons Why”, Allie Carter (sp?) that kind of thing, and every time I offer one one good one, 4 other agents offer on the same thing, so I know that’s what other agents are looking for to. When you’re telling a story about regular people though, there’s  much stronger focus needed on voice, because that’s what’s going to make it stand out.
KC: Also remember the cyclical nature, like vampires. The nature of publishing is very cyclical, so maybe not today, but one day.

Q: Let’s talk about love. What’s your stance on love?
S: I’m not for it. Okay, since my books are upper MG, the characters have crushes on people, but that’s not the focus of the books, and I think I would find it harder to write a romance, maybe because my relationships in teen years were so pathetic.
J: I always have romance in them, and I always think I’m writing one, but when people read them, it’s actually really not what they’re about. It’s a big part of being a teenager, I wish I had more since the ones that focus strongly sell really well. I think my next book is more romance-y is more than before, but still probably not a ‘romance’. Maybe I just have a dark mind.
KC: Love, especially with teens, is multifaceted
J: “How I lost You” is about best friends and how their relationship falls apart, and it’s my book that’s doing the lest well, I think because there’s not enough love/romance.
M: Anything with kissing is good for me. It’s the romance that sells me every time. Since the day I became an agent, I’ve said, “If you’re writing a YA Romance, I want to see it.” Nice thing about YA is you can have an entire book focus on romance, but the ‘happily ever after’ isn’t necessary. MG is great with the stirrings of first love/crush.

AM: Talking about genre, what is New Adult? Is that a sub-category of YA?
M: To me, they’re a sub-set of adult, mostly published by adult imprints/etc. To me it doesn’t make sense because there’s always been stories with characters in their early 20’s within other genres.
KC: Let’s take it down one level. If you’re writing YA, what is the target audience?
M: 15-18, but there are exceptions like Amy Reed’s debut where the protagonist was 13, but she was getting into drugs/alcohol, so it was heavier content. If the characters are any older than the summer after high-school... then don’t query as YA. Sometimes you just have to pitch as YA or NA and see where you find success.
J: My girl characters are usually 17, in the latest book, had to make 18 because that’s the age they legally have to cross the border (road trip to the USA). Readers don’t read down, they read up, so I’m comfortable with that.
S: I’m most comfortable with 13-14, so yeah, more upper MG.
KC: So, you don’t pick the age of the character
M: I’ve had people pitch and choose an age, but the content is for older or younger when you get down to it

AM: This goes back to the topic of love, going back, how do you make it come across how every kid feels like they are unique in wanting love
J: you mean they want to feel like their want for love is special?
AM: Yes
J: I think as teenagers we often think out feelings are unique, and that’s good because teenagers can relate. What’s your question?
AM: How do you show that the character is unique, not just they think they’re unique.
S: Well, looking at “The Fault in our Stars” has this wonderful doomed relationship, first love, first sex, etc, but that’s not what they story is just about, there’s all this stuff going on around the romance.
J: Your character would think their love is unique
M: That’s where readers connect, because they think, “Oh, other people feel that way too.”

Q: What’s your best advise for a beginning author starting out?
M: Give yourself permission to write crap because crap can be fixed. I have 8 books lined up in my office, so when I’m thinking “This sucks!” with my current MS, I look up and go, “I’ve done this before. “Writing a book is a lot like driving at night. You can only see so far, but you can still get all the way home.”
J: Persistence. You have to be persistent to finish, and then to pursue publishing. one book isn’t the only book you’re ever going to write, especially if you want a career.
S:It’s hard for me to add to what the other two said, but my word is just to write. When you have the lousy days, which I have frequently had when you stare at the page and have no idea where I’m going, and the best thing to do is write anything, even if it’s just a paragraph and I throw it out the next day, often the next day I go back and know how to write better. It’s so much better than staring at the blank page.

SIWC 2013 Workshop #1, Cliches in YA


Cliches in YA (Janet Gurtler)

Cliche Phrases
Describes something in a clever/cliche way to create identifiable visual images. Trite/overused expression of idea. Person/character whose behavior is predictable/superficial
Sayings are trendy/popular - get overused and become dated

Why should they not be used?
Overfamiliar, lose impact so reader has little to no emotional response
Cliches exist because it’s short-hand, easy for people to understand/grasp

EDITMINION: www.editminion.com
copy/paste into it and it’ll pick up all the adverbs, weak words, oft-misspelled, homonym, preposition end, passive, cliche

Tropes
familiar/repeated symbol, theme, motif, style, character, etc

YA Cliches
Ideas, plots, stock characters that are overused -> worn-out plots or characterizations become cliche. Vampires, zombies, etc
How do you know what cliches are in your genre? Read ravenously in your chosen genre. No substitute for seeing what authors are writing about and what readers are reading
Yes, everything’s been done, but every author has their own take
Make your story/characters fresh, unique twists, new similes, metaphors etc.
Voice: the way the character speaks, what they say as well as how they say it.

Wisdom from Nathan Bradsford: "it’s not enough to start a story with a high school girl swooning in the midst of the cranky new kid’s smoldering stare. what’s different about this world and about these characters? it’s not enough to start a story with a character who has to save the realm/galaxy/kingdom from disaster. What’s different about this world and this character?"
Publisher’s Weekly: "it can be about anything... as long as the voice is great." (Sara Crowe. her client Nina LaCour has the right kind of narrative voice)
Producing a distinctive voice is harder than adding in fallen angels/risen zombies to an otherwise standard romance “Pulling off that really authentic, quirky, individual voice is definitely hard to do.” Jenny Bent “When it’s done right, it reads as deeply sincere, it’s not something you can fake.”
Other critical ingredient is just as tricky: “Everybody is looking for stories with the hook that will allow them to break out of the pack.” Laura Rennert. Bourret agrees: “It’s always going to be easier to sell a high-concept idea because it’s easier for publishers to sell a high-concept story to readers. There’s a real challenge when you can’t describe a story in one sentence.”
Cliches from the desk of agent/author Mandy Hubbard: Dystopian societies, teens who control the elements, meeting the boy/girl of your dreams -> literally! S/he is in your dreams and then you meet him/her, really bad epic fantasy, MG books about bullies, teaching bullies a lesson.
Daniel Ehrenhaft - Soho Press Editor: Post apocalyptic YA thrillers (involve a brave outsider) “Don’t quote me because nothing makes me happier than being surprised and proven wrong. I could get a post-apocalyptic thriller submission tomorrow that blows my head apart. I wouldn’t want to discourage that. Cliches don’t bother me so much. Stupidity and laziness bother me.”
Leah Hullenschmidt, Former Sourcebooks Fire Editor: Dystopian, mean cheerleaders & football players, love triangles, damsel in distress, drinking/partying/slang,
Todd Stocke, Sourcebooks VP Editorial Director: Interested in cross-over, YA thriller/horror/historical, etc. Everyone’s hoping for the big cross-over books where the audience is big outside just the teen audience. In my experience that’s very, very hard to predict. Sometimes it happens, sometimes it doesn’t, and I’ve yet to see a magic formula.

Joelle Anthony did a popular Top 25 Cliches for YA a few years ago, some are still relevant:
Issue Books - being preachy, drugs are bad, sex will give you diseases or make you pregnant
Adults are clueless or act as guides, who don’t participate in teens life, conveniently absent (often necessary to the plot/character development).
A tiny scar through the eyebrow, sometimes accompanied by an embarrassing story
Virgin lead characters
Sick-Lit (John Green)

Is there something wrong with teens reading books about death & suicide? Why do teens read realistic books like SPEAK, or Jay Asher -> reminder that life could be worse, like curling up with a sad movie and weeping because it feels so good when you stop.

Genre Cliches
Paranormal: having powers appear when puberty starts, girl who discovers she’s actually a vampire/fairy/demon hunter princess and is actually the biggest/baddest one of them all and is better than the people raised to do so, love triangles, majority/entirely of the book taking place in a boarding school for teens with magical powers
Dystopian: Big Brother/The Capital for the younger generations which is iron-fisted with brainwashed masses and one person that wakes them up and leads a rebellion, romantic relationship leads to the reformation of the society, love triangles, trilogies (1st book: immediate reality, 2nd book: aware of struggles greater than them, 3rd book: overthrows the society)

Overused cliches in YA

Authors show their age by naming characters names they grew up with. Also, teens somehow obsessed with pop culture/bands that the authors grew up with. Outdated references to tv shows, music teens today probably never heard of or wouldn’t reference (best place to find names: Facebook, Twitter, Heatsheets)
Really pretty girl who was no idea she’s pretty
Character moves to a new town or starts a new school
The beautiful best friend who gets all the guys but doesn’t want them
The one-touch Google answer that solves everything (at the end of the book)
Alternatively the problem could have been solved by a quick Google search... or asking a question and not assuming...
Stalking as a sign of affection

Character Cliches
Diversity - comparing people of color to food.
Bully with the abusive father
The mean cheerleader/mean girl
Mary Sue character who everyone loves
Quirky best friends
Love at first sight (maybe have a conversation before you plan to die for each other)

Phrases and Attributes

Rolling eyes
Lifting his shoulder (alt/shrug)
Winking
“I let out a breath I didn’t even know I’d been holding”
Characters who chew on their lip or tongue in times of stress - usually until they taste blood
Characters puking from stress
Raising eyebrows
Raising one eyebrow
Smiling

Blasting Away Cliches

Replace worn-out phrases with your own original ones. Write your own observations. How do you, personally deal with anger/stress/etc? Pay attention, and write it down/use them. It’s more interesting to feel sad when you can use it later.
Examine the world around, notice things. Write down times you’ve been afraid, happy, horrified, jealous, etc
Give those strong feelings to your characters with your own flavour and wording. Better yet, adapt the words and phrases to fit the characters in your world.
What kind of analogy would a teen drug dealer use, versus a teen honor student? Even better, make them way something unexpected.
*Do character exercises with Donald Maass (what is the one thing your character would never ever do/say - and then make them do/say it).

Cover Cliches
Diversity issues: gorgeous white girls prominent on covers. Non-white characters hidden in shadows, their face obscured, and or distorted in some other way
Trends and identifying genre
Hair
Eyeballs
Lips
White spaces

Monday, October 28, 2013

SIWC

Hi everyone!

I know, since I mostly went to YA workshops, my notes won't be 100% useful to everyone, but I think there's some good information that is also applicable to adult fiction/etc.

I will put them up in individual posts so no one is overwhelmed by the sheer quantity of my note-taking ways (7,629 words for 6 workshops...). I will try to get them all up tomorrow.

Please excuse any spelling/wording errors as I was typing pretty fast while trying to listen/absorb at the same time... you can give me points for enthusiasm, but probably not for 100% accuracy...


As for the conference? Well, yeah, it was awesome! A fabulous three days that was topped off on the final day by winning a pass to next year's conference... so, my plans for next year are already set :)


I had my agent pitch on Friday morning (no, not going to tell you her name/agency) where writers had 10 minutes to verbally pitch a *finished* project to either an editor or an agent. I was freaking nervous, but due to my... odd tendency to flip into power-extro-mode when I'm highly stressed, my pitch was over and done with in less than 3 minutes. Then we spent the rest of the time talking about sports, the west coast, and other things, including her completely kick-ass shade of neon-green nail polish (I WANT some for when I go down for the Seahawks game in a few weeks!!!)


If you're curious, this is the pitch I boiled down, and thankfully didn't stumble over (too much):


There are rules when you ride shotgun because the driver holds all power and responsibility, but after a bet goes wrong, a boy ends up dead, and the corpse is stashed in their trunk for disposal, two teens must reevaluate the rules of their relationship, and ultimately when to break them.

The twist is that the main character remains completely anonymous, as in, no name, and no defined gender.


To me, that kind of agent pitch was the perfect way to start off my first conference... It helped me relax and really hammered home that everyone there was passionate about writing. Probably, that is what spurred me on to talk to whoever I came across, sat with, or bumped into in the hallways. I haven't nerded-out about books like that since I was last in Victoria (almost a year ago!) with my writing group there... and it's something I am sorely missing.

I am very thankful to that agent :) I may not have had such a great conference experience if it hadn't started out in that way.


My Blue Pencil session was Saturday morning, and by sheer coincidence, the author who looked over the first 3 pages of 'The Rules of Riding Shotgun' knew the agent I pitched to... like, really well. I honestly had no idea... but that was kindof cool, and since I love the author's books, it was doubly cool how nice and friendly she was... and the fact that she laughed at the line on my first page about the shopping cart full of Depends ;) Yeah, that made me feel good ;)


Something I wasn't planning on doing, but ended up 'winging it', was pitching my 'pitch' in one of the workshops (after my agent pitch session) and getting feedback from the presenter and the other audience members, then I also did it with my query.

Both of those were more nerve-wracking then the agent pitch! ...probably because there were, like, 40-50 people in the room both times, but I'm glad I did them as I got some excellent feedback on my query (the IMPOSSIBLY annoying one that was insanely difficult to get into 3rd POV), which I'm going to update on my 'What I'm Writing' Page. It isn't too different, but there are a couple of significant changes that help make it a lot clearer, so that was awesome.

Someone even gave me the name of an author who has also written a gender-ambiguous character, so I'm going to have to check that out :) It's adult fiction though, not YA.


The only disappointment I had about the entire conference, is that I didn't know you could sign up for multiple pitch/Blue Pencil appointments if there were free slots... and only found out on the last day when it was too late. I have no idea how I missed that... but I totally would have taken advantage of as much feedback as possible.

Oddly enough, there was one off-handish comment in a workshop that made me completely re-evaluate a sequence of several scenes in 'The Rules of Riding Shotgun'. Guess you never know when something small you hear will make a big difference :)

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Surrey International Writing Conference day 2

Okay, it's nearly midnight, day-two-going-on-three of the conference, I'm completely exhausted right now, (so prepare yourself for many dyslexic mistakes in this post... I promise to edit it once I am fully awake) but wow... I am absolutely having the best time!

I'm an introvert, right? Lots of us writers are.

But when I'm stressed, or with a lot of people don't know, I click into extrovert mode. What usually snaps me over is seeing another introverted person sitting all alone with a lost look on their face... and I soooooo know that feeling, when you know no one, and you can't seem to just break into a conversation 'cause everyone around you is hugging random people and talking about things from past conventions, or carrying a conversation that obviously started elsewhere...

So I leap.

Out of my introvert skin, and into power-extro-mode.

I smile, I ask questions, I laugh.

Somehow or other I end up introducing people to each other at tables, over meals, and in workshop rooms.

Today I hooked 2 different people up with writing groups since before the conference they had not been able to connect with a good local critique group.

I talked to everyone, and anyone.

And I loved it, I had so much fun, connected (even briefly) with so many interesting people, a few local writers I'm excited to write-in-with during NaNo, and especially one kick-ass writer from Edmonton, Alberta, and we've been sticking together and laughing together much of the past two days, and she always seems to pick the short line at the buffet, so I swear, if I ever take up gambling, I'm taking her along with me.

But I'm exhausted. I'm going to need some seriously long/quiet dog-walking time on Monday to just take everything back down by several notches (yeah, so tired, the cliches are creeping out from under the bed!)

BUT, being in power-extro-mode also means the filter that is usually welded over my mouth in mixed company cracks off in a few place...

Gems like, "I wouldn't climb into a stranger's van for candy, but if he held up a nice bordeaux, I'd hop right in!"

Out of context... questionable, right?

...it came out because we were discussing food likes/dislikes and allergies, and I'm allergic to cane sugar, which means any refined sugar. Someone said something like, it's sad how I can't be bribed with candy... and then the 'jumping into a stranger's van' line stumbled out of my mouth before I could catch it. Thankfully, I did stop the instinctive need/desire to slap myself on the forehead after...

At least the people there all had their senses of humour intact.

I'm not going to get into the workshops, my Blue Pencil Session, or my Agent Pitch tonight because, honestly, it took 11 tries to get a error-free spelling of 'honesty' (thank you red idiot squiggles! You make life infinitely easier) I think I've hit my typing limit for tonight after having my seagull-brain sucked through the jet engine repeatedly over the past 2 days (of course in a good way), and I'm really looking forward to the last sessions tomorrow.

Okay, time for some freaking sleep... woo-hoo! 12:03am!

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

via iPhone update :)

This is Berkeley (from last Halloween, sorry only picture of him currently on my phone)


This is NOT Berkeley



Are you confused?

My painting friend/mentor has a female cat (Tasha) who is literally identical to Berkeley, physically: down to the chocolate brown stripes you can see in his fur when he's in the sun, and personality-wise: very vocal with non-cat-sounds in his repertoire, a habit of laying across your lap and biting you if you touch them, the way they give/accept affection, etc, even the way they hold and move their tails.

Tasha, being female, is just slightly smaller than Berkeley. Every time I come here, I kindof want to steal her home with me, 'cause then I'd have a matched set ;)


Anyways, my obscene amount of paint* is slowly being amalgamated into 'general' colours (pictures, maybe later, when I'm done.)

The pieces for my two friends have had another firing, and I'll fire again tonight. HOPEFULLY I can get one last firing in tomorrow morning before I leave... otherwise, I'm hooped. One of those two friends is due tomorrow!


Okay, that be all for now!




*There is no standard pallet of colours, pretty much anyone can mix up their own paint and sell it, which, for many oil painting teachers, is how they earn a lot of their income... because of this, quality control is as bad as PC parts, which is a problem when many yellows/oranges are 'cannibals', which eat other colours while being fired and make a giant mess.