radfrac_archive_full: (dichotomy)
radfrac_archive_full ([personal profile] radfrac_archive_full) wrote2006-04-03 11:37 pm

userpic fever

I will probably have to get a paid account just so that I can have more userpics. My current choices are all text-heavy, and I'd like to have some that were just imagery, for balance.

It's probably wrong that I think about these things.

Someone really ought to write a Short Treatise on userpics. People's choices, design elements, creative solutions for size limitations, symbolic systems... I've seen such amazingly clever collages and layerings in that tiny 100 x 100 space. I love the way the stress of limitations makes people's creativity flower. It's a bit like Jane Austen's little bit of ivory, two inches wide.

Very fun evening looking at frock coat patterns with K. and going through her incredible collection of velvets. She is going to take the scattered scraps and scrapes of fabric remnants I have and make me a motley that Harlequin would envy.

{rf}

You want a lack of clever?

[identity profile] argus-in-tights.livejournal.com 2006-04-05 09:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Have you seen my icon? Ah well. Yes, the flowering of genius that comes of constraint. I'm always reminded of the high end of the Academie Francaise - Moliere, Voltaire, Rabelais... When choices are limited, there is a certain extra attention to small detail that I think can only be explained as rebellion.

Oh, and by the way...way envious of your motley already. I lurve frock coats!

\i/
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)

Re: You want a lack of clever?

[personal profile] radiantfracture 2006-04-05 10:01 pm (UTC)(link)
In fact I have a usericon that I made for you and just haven't sent you yet. You are under no obligation, of course. It is texty as are all of mine. I can promise it will be clever, though, because it is a quote of yours.

{rf}
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)

Re: You want a lack of clever?

[personal profile] radiantfracture 2006-04-05 10:07 pm (UTC)(link)
I like that, detail as rebellion--the freedom of the mind, or using the tyranny's own fixations against it, exaggerating compliance until it makes itself absurd...

And then there are the excesses of fantasy as means of satire--which is what I think of with Rabelais.

You know, fantasy used to be an entirely more gruesome and provocative tool... I would like to see that done more often in the Genre.

{rf}