It’s amazing companies like Lulu.com can print on demand products like books and, in my case, calendars at all. I was pretty cheesed off, however, when I received a batch of calendars that had, to my eye, a prominent printing flaw on several picture pages. Most people probably would not have noticed the flaws I saw, but it bothered me intensely. After a good bit of back and forth with their support folk and an attempt at printing with a different company, I’m back with Lulu. Even with the printing flaws, the Lulu.com job had richer colors and clearer reproductions of my photographs than did the (literally) lackluster competitor. So, since we’re now past the first of the year, my Lulu-published calendar is available at the lowest price they allow me to charge. In any event, I hope you have a happy new year and will stop back and see what sights I’ve seen as the months pass. My Lulu.com store is here.
2013
All posts tagged 2013
Looking to get out of the house for a while we took a little drive around the area. A quick shop at Target for a couple of items and off we went to Olmsted Falls and their lovely East River Park. I hadn’t even considered that others might be in the park this overcast, cold, and snowy New Year’s Day but, as we entered the driveway, we were surprised to see the parking lot well-used. There’s a lovely hill at the southern boundary of the park with a nice, gentle slope down to an open field … perfect, today, for coasting (aka “sledding”). While especially popular with families and their little children (that gentle hill doesn’t give much speed to the sled) folks of all ages were having a great time, and you could tell that by the delighted screams and the smiling faces of sledders who were leaving for the day. There was, however, one somewhat sad sign of the times: in a space between the field and the parking lot stood a concrete trash barrel. Next to the trash barrel were piled the colorful remains of broken plastic sleds. When I was young, a sled was something you kept and used for years, perhaps even handing it down to one’s own children. It didn’t matter whether the sled was a wooden toboggan, a sled with steel runners, or a saucer-shaped metal disk, it was a durable item. Most of today’s sleds appear to be made of fairly thin molded plastic in a range of colors and shapes. The modern sleds (actually a type of toboggan) are fast and cheap, and so, fun and affordable. It’s just sad to see them broken and discarded at the end of the day. Coasting into 2013 we wish you a happy new year!