Covered With Bees!
Aug. 18th, 2010 11:28 amThis year at Burning Man I'll be in camp Covered With Bees!, and I decided I should paint myself a T-shirt to show camp affiliation.
I researched online and at the Cambridge library (and had the help of a nearby friend for precise brushstroke instructions for the Chinese), but didn't make it down to the Boston library. As it turned out, I started with larger fonts than I should have, so the shirt feels rather filled anyway, even without finding more (though I do wish there were more African languages represented). Since bees swarm, I wanted to put language families together (though I didn't do this perfectly), rather than distributing them as I had with the peace shirt.
The languages: Albanian, Amharic, Arabic, Aragonese (which is the same as Galician), Asturian, Catalan, Cherokee, Chinese, Cree, Croatian (which is also Bosnian), Dutch, Dutch Low Saxon, Emilian-Romagnolo, English, Esperanto, Faroese (which is also Icelandic), Farsi, Fiji Hindi, Finnish, French, Gaelic (which is also Irish), Georgian, German, Greek, Haitian Creole, Hakka Chinese, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Kiswahili, Komi, Korean, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Low German, Macedonian, Magyar, Malaysian (which is also Bahasa Indonesian), Maltese, Mongol, Navajo, Norwegian bokmal, Norwegian nynorsk, Polish, Portuguese (which is also Occitan), Russian, Serbian, Shona, Slovenian, Southern Min, Spanish, Swedish, Tajik, Tamil, Thai, Turkish (which is also Azerbaijani), Ukranian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Welsh, Winaray (a language of the Philippines), and Yiddish.
It's silver glitter paint; I'm looking forward to seeing whether it's black-light reactive or not.
Still up for debate: painting a small bee in front, with purple dashed lines to show a flight path through the words.
I researched online and at the Cambridge library (and had the help of a nearby friend for precise brushstroke instructions for the Chinese), but didn't make it down to the Boston library. As it turned out, I started with larger fonts than I should have, so the shirt feels rather filled anyway, even without finding more (though I do wish there were more African languages represented). Since bees swarm, I wanted to put language families together (though I didn't do this perfectly), rather than distributing them as I had with the peace shirt.
The languages: Albanian, Amharic, Arabic, Aragonese (which is the same as Galician), Asturian, Catalan, Cherokee, Chinese, Cree, Croatian (which is also Bosnian), Dutch, Dutch Low Saxon, Emilian-Romagnolo, English, Esperanto, Faroese (which is also Icelandic), Farsi, Fiji Hindi, Finnish, French, Gaelic (which is also Irish), Georgian, German, Greek, Haitian Creole, Hakka Chinese, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Kiswahili, Komi, Korean, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Low German, Macedonian, Magyar, Malaysian (which is also Bahasa Indonesian), Maltese, Mongol, Navajo, Norwegian bokmal, Norwegian nynorsk, Polish, Portuguese (which is also Occitan), Russian, Serbian, Shona, Slovenian, Southern Min, Spanish, Swedish, Tajik, Tamil, Thai, Turkish (which is also Azerbaijani), Ukranian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Welsh, Winaray (a language of the Philippines), and Yiddish.
It's silver glitter paint; I'm looking forward to seeing whether it's black-light reactive or not.
Still up for debate: painting a small bee in front, with purple dashed lines to show a flight path through the words.
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Date: 2010-08-18 03:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-18 03:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-18 03:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-18 03:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-18 06:20 pm (UTC)What's the language in the bottom middle on the front? It looks mostly like Cyrillic letters (could be transliterated into English as "zanbur"), but I can't figure it out.
You know what would be cool? A little web page/app that took a single word and translated it into a bunch of different languages, possibly with groupings, possibly arranged nicely. I wonder if something like this exists already.
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Date: 2010-08-18 06:52 pm (UTC)That would be a cool app; it would save me a lot of time using dictionaries and Wikipedia :-).
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Date: 2010-08-18 07:02 pm (UTC)You do know about Google Translate (http://translate.google.com/), right? (Not that it's 100% accurate, but at least for the languages I tend to use it for, single words seem to be pretty OK.)
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Date: 2010-08-18 07:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-19 02:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-19 04:16 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-19 02:09 am (UTC)I like the swarming, and I think a bee with a flight path would be nifty.
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Date: 2010-08-19 04:18 am (UTC)Another friend voted yes on bees with flight paths, so I might end up doing it. Pictures to come if I do :-)
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Date: 2010-08-21 04:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-19 03:44 am (UTC)>> Turkish (which is also Azerbaijani)
Minor point: Azeri is the word used for language & ethnicity, while Azerbaijani is the word used for citizenship.
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Date: 2010-08-19 04:19 am (UTC)And thanks for the correction.
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Date: 2010-08-19 02:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-19 07:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-20 04:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-08-24 12:59 am (UTC)I like painting T-shirts, but don't feel like I'm artistic enough to draw something freehand. Language is a lot easier :-)
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Date: 2010-08-23 12:42 am (UTC)Hooray, see you on the playa!
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Date: 2010-08-24 01:00 am (UTC)Looking forward to seeing you there!
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Date: 2010-08-24 05:13 pm (UTC)Have you read Mark Helprin's novella "Ellis Island"? There's a marvelous set piece in which a mystically inspired rabbi delivers a derasha on the importance of bees. "God bless the bee!" has since become one of my catchphrases.
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Date: 2010-08-24 05:50 pm (UTC)I read "Ellis Island" far too long ago to remember anything about bees in it. Obviously, it's time to reread that, in some copious spare time that I expect to have... in October? Maybe? :-)