也算做了回“设计”

庞德研究专家索教授要承办一次国际庞德研讨会。想弄个会标,苦于资金有限,请不起专业设计。于是赶鸭子上架,把任务交给了我。我也不知深浅,也不好意思拒绝索教授对我的器重,反正就硬着头皮答应了。

接下来,很快就知道这事儿真不那么简单,对于我来说。差点想撂挑子……

后来……
装了个免费版的Photoshop,又找了个免费的LogoDesign……

Google了些庞德素材出来:

 

然后用Photoshop把它们鼓捣成了这样(索教授希望突出南开紫):

后来就先搞了个这,算是一次尝试一下如何使用LogoDesign ——

不满意!——而且索教授要圆的,而且觉得庞德的照片比漫画好~~~于是把南开的Logo拿来,用Photoshop把原来的Nankai University 1919擦掉,掏空成这样:

然后再用Logodesign把各种元素组合起来。于是就有个这:

用微软的Picture Manager剪切了一下:

但是,出于某种原因,最后索教授接受的图标终稿是这样的:

其实这中间失败过很多次
不足为外人道也……
不过,最终算是成功啦~
耶~~~

对了——欢迎庞德爱好者、研究者,各位专家们,欢迎你们今年10月下旬到天津南开大学来参加此次“ 国际庞德研讨会”。

Self-Soothing

 

在做人生的选择的时候
不要过分勉强自己……

“多少次,迎着冷眼与嘲笑
从没有放弃过心中的理想”

其实,
往前一步也未必有幸福
退后一步有可能海阔天空

好吧,那就退后一步吧!
希望看到一片海阔天空……

…………

回首过去·展望未来……

2011年再过几个小时就要过去了。回首过去,这一年很忙。但是感觉个人收获甚少……有点悲愤,有点无奈,还有点悔不该当初我要是不不拉不拉不拉不拉的该多好啊的懊恼和感慨,当然也少不了自责了一下自己的不求上进和庸庸碌碌……好在——都快要过去了~~~

2012年再过几个小时就要到来了。怀揣着几分期待,悄悄地展望一下未来:在新的一年里,可以继续忙并傻乐着,但是要努力让自己的成就感更加真切一些、强大一些——具体的,也说不好。就先展望这些吧~~~

最后
我们大家一起来

新年快乐!

《纽约时报》评选出的2011十佳图书

以下是《纽约时报》评选出的2011年度10本最佳图书。虚构类和非虚构类个5部。

The 10 Best Books of 2011

FICTION

THE ART OF FIELDING

By Chad Harbach

At a small college on the Wisconsin side of Lake Michigan, the baseball team sees its fortunes rise and then rise some more with the arrival of a supremely gifted shortstop. Harbach’s expansive, allusive first novel combines the pleasures of an old-fashioned baseball story with a stately, self-reflective meditation on talent and the limits of ambition, played out on a field where every hesitation is amplified and every error judged by an exacting, bloodthirsty audience.

11/22/63

By Stephen King

Throughout his career, King has explored fresh ways to blend the ordinary and the supernatural. His new novel imagines a time portal in a Maine diner that lets an English teacher go back to 1958 in an effort to stop Lee Harvey Oswald and — rewardingly for readers — also allows King to reflect on questions of memory, fate and free will as he richly evokes midcentury America. The past guards its secrets, this novel reminds us, and the horror behind the quotidian is time itself.

SWAMPLANDIA!

By Karen Russell. Alfred A. Knopf, cloth, $24.95; Vintage Contemporaries, paper, $14.95.

An alligator theme park, a ghost lover, a Styx-like journey through an Everglades mangrove jungle: Russell’s first novel, about a girl’s bold effort to preserve her grieving family’s way of life, is suffused with humor and gothic whimsy. But the real wonders here are the author’s exuberantly inventive language and her vivid portrait of a heroine who is wise beyond her years.

TEN THOUSAND SAINTS

By Eleanor Henderson

Henderson’s fierce, elegiac novel, her first, follows a group of friends, lovers, parents and children through the straight-edge music scene and the early days of the AIDS epidemic. By delving deeply into the lives of her characters, tracing their long relationships not only to one another but also to various substances, Henderson catches something of the dark, apocalyptic quality of the ’80s.

THE TIGER’S WIFE

By Téa Obreht

As war returns to the Balkans, a young doctor inflects her grandfather’s folk tales with stories of her own coming of age, creating a vibrant collage of historical testimony that has neither date nor dateline. Obreht, who was born in Belgrade in 1985 but left at the age of 7, has recreated, with startling immediacy and presence, a conflict she herself did not experience.

 

NONFICTION

ARGUABLY

Essays.

By Christopher Hitchens

Our intellectual omnivore’s latest collection could be his last (he’s dying of esophageal cancer). The book is almost 800 pages, contains more than 100 essays and addresses a ridiculously wide range of topics, including Afghanistan, Harry Potter, Thomas Jefferson, waterboarding, Henry VIII, Saul Bellow and the Ten Commandments, which Hitchens helpfully revises.

THE BOY IN THE MOON

A Father’s Journey to Understand His Extraordinary Son.

By Ian Brown

A feature writer at The Globe and Mail in Toronto, Brown combines a reporter’s curiosity with a novelist’s instinctive feel for the unknowable in this exquisite book, an account — at once tender, pained and unexpectedly funny — of his son, Walker, who was born with a rare genetic mutation that has deprived him of even the most rudimentary capacities.

MALCOLM X

A Life of Reinvention.

By Manning Marable

From petty criminal to drug user to prisoner to minister to separatist to humanist to martyr. Marable, who worked for more than a decade on the book and died earlier this year, offers a more complete and unvarnished portrait of Malcolm X than the one found in his autobiography. The story remains inspiring.

THINKING, FAST AND SLOW

By Daniel Kahneman. Farrar

We overestimate the importance of whatever it is we’re thinking about. We misremember the past and misjudge what will make us happy. In this comprehensive presentation of a life’s work, the world’s most influential psychologist demonstrates that irrationality is in our bones, and we are not necessarily the worse for it.

A WORLD ON FIRE

Britain’s Crucial Role in the American Civil War.

By Amanda Foreman

Which side would Great Britain support during the Civil War? Foreman gives us an enormous cast of characters and a wealth of vivid description in her lavish examination of a second battle between North and South, the trans-Atlantic one waged for British hearts and minds.