Thursday, October 30, 2008

Steal Lint


The following is from Robert Breznsy's book PRONOIA and his astrology site Free Will Astrology :

Forgive yourself of every mistake except one.

Create a royal crown for yourself out of a shower cap, rubber bands, and light bulbs.

Think of the last place on earth you'd ever want to visit, and visualize yourself having fun there.

Test to see if people are really listening to you by asserting that Karl Marx was one of the Marx Brothers.

Steal lint from dryers in laundromats and use it to make animal sculptures for someone you admire.

...I haven't done any of these things, well, i guess i've done the third one, visualizing fun in the last place you'd ever want to be...that's easy, the rest are works in progress and I plan to make up a few more as I go along...

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Monday, October 27, 2008

the wolf


who IS the wolf here?

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Dragon House


Here's a story I wrote a few years back, let me know what you think!

Friday, October 24, 2008

sick of it


this poor guy has played this song one too many times...

Thursday, October 23, 2008

eeeeeebay


Just in time for the cold and blustery FALL season that you sick people seem to LOVE...i offer you this falling dead leaf painting, complete with 7 crows and a baffling Chesire cat...i do this for you...and there's a dog painting up for bids too...see HERE for both. xxoo

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

weird scenes inside the goldmine


now offering all the stuff that never made it to ebay...on ebay for a drastically reduced price...all the misfits that weren't cute enough can be found right HERE and best of all, they're only 5 bucks a piece...for an original? Yup, all originals...truly, the world has gone stark raving insane...we all knew it would happen, just didnt know when...

for marty

Monday, October 13, 2008

my dream

I would like to change a small apartment building into a “hotel.” A place for people who like to travel, but also like to just live somewhere different for awhile. Each apartment would have a different feel. Most would contain TVs, computers, stereos, books and a fully stocked fridge, according to the visitor’s likes.

For instance, there’d be an apartment for creative types. Any number of materials to work with would be included for the stayer to play with. They would also be allowed to take their newly made piece with them with the stipulation that material costs are paid for and a good photo of the piece is submitted to eventually hang in the apartment (a $5,000 fee if photo is not submitted).

There’s might be a room decorated completely in the 70s style. All music from the 70s, books, etc. Our Tour Guide would recommend having lunch at a diner or to go to a roller skating rink.

I might also have an apartment designed after a 1940’s apartment in the Bronx. All old appliances, a line for drying clothes…the possibilities are endless.

One apartment, on the first floor, would be turned onto a good restaurant as well as bar with live entertainment friday and saturday nights. There would also be a bar on the roof. You could actually spend your entire time here, if you wanted, but the location would make it easy to get out and experience the town or city without having to drive too much. Oh, and there would also be a resident cat named Poppy who roams the entire place.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

crafts on the cheap


my sister and i went to a partylite candle party last night, where they try to get you to buy overpriced stuff you could get at the dollar store...one thing the gal had was one of those reed diffusers that are all the rage these days (god forbid we're not smelling flowers all the time). Well, she wanted forty bucks (!) for them so we were discussing on the way home how we could make our own. Here's what you do: go outside and grab some dead dried-out stalks of anything porous, has to be porous. Bring them in and pour some perfume or essential oil (mix with a carrier oil) into a glass vase, then stick the stalks in and viola! You got yerself a reed diffuser, or dead stalk diffuser, whichever you prefer...in the picture above i used hazelnut cream simmering liquid, not sure that'll work, but I have plenty of stalks to experiment with!

Friday, October 10, 2008

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

new on ebay!


just this ONE...get it while it's still warm...
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Friday, October 3, 2008

mom doesn't like change


This has been my mother's kitchen wall for, i don't know...30 years? As a child, i couldn't quite figure out what the green thing was, not that i thought about it really, I always kind of thought it was a boxing glove. Why, i dunno, overactive imagination and I really didnt give it much thought, i think i just thought that's what it was. The coral colored shelf has held the mini baskets for as long as i can remember. one of them has many old keys, no one knows what they go to. The picture to the right is called "Status Stew" the recipe is underneath and I think it's got something to do with beef. The latest addition to this ensemble is a small floral done by yours truly.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Poem For Dad

The dark glove of night
Pulls at the veil of breath
With the surprise of shattered glass
Dave Pulver fell on a sheet of feathers
Into the arms of daughters and son
Then tucked in by a blanket of friends
Now Dave sleeps where life begins.

~written by Glenn Miller

Monday, August 25, 2008

a tribute to dad

A Remembrance of David Lee Pulver

aka Dee; aka Ensign Pulver

For: Martha Jo, Sara and Matthew

It was around late August, 1956 when a bunch of young guys were nervously shuffling around the dayroom in Nelligan Hall. That was the men’s dormitory at LeMoyne College in Syracuse. Suddenly, with great relief, I spotted a high school buddy, Jim Mooney. He introduced me to his new roommate, a guy from “Nerk” with the funny name of Dee. That’s how I met your dad.

Le Moyne was just ten years old then with a very compact campus and a small enrollment. As a result, everyone more or less knew everyone else, not unlike a small town I guess. Dee majored in Industrial Relations and I was in Economics so our paths crossed sometimes in class as well as often in the dorm and most certainly down the hill at Wanda’s or Jimmy Benham’s – two of our regular hangouts. When we became upperclassmen, most of us escaped the dorm and its rigid rules and moved into apartments or houses. It was, as they say, the best of times.

While your dad and I were becoming friends, your mother had gone off in the other direction to Nazareth College in Rochester. There she became good friends with Martha Jo Rotoli so now you know why our families were so close if you haven’t already heard this before.

Fast forward to 1962 when Martha and I bought a home at 3955 Culver Road at the corner of Tamarack. At that time, we only had Rita. Joe and Susan followed soon after and Becky not until we had moved on to Webster. Meanwhile, guess who lived just a few blocks down the street on Culver Road? Yep, your mom and dad. We were back and forth all the time. Your dad and I even managed a few visits to the 4700 Club on Culver Road as well as some of the other neighborhood hot spots.

You have heard about the fantastic vacations when we would convoy up to East Brewster on Cape Cod. All ten of us would squeeze into the Small’s cottage. Dee and I would rent a Sunfish and I seem to remember we couldn’t take you kids out – mainly because your father insisted on inventing new ways to capsize the boat! This so amused the next door neighbor that he went out and rented a Sunfish too.

There are stories and stories about your dad who was deeply curious, very smart, and often argumentative but always exciting to be with. He could be difficult to keep track of when you were out with him because of his habit of disappearing!

The Caribbean cruise on the Flying Cloud schooner, a former Vanderbilt yacht, has achieve the status of legend, mainly due to your dad’s frequent re-telling and embellishment of this crazy adventure. One day, we were lying on the side deck, a bit seasick, and a woman passenger brought lunch to us thinking she was being kind. As soon as her back was turned, Dee heaved the tray, silver, glass and food overboard and muttered” I told her I wasn’t hungry!” You can probably imagine why this little vignette sticks in my mind. We had to leave the boat in Martinique to get back to work and our families. Later on we learned some of the passengers assumed we had been put off the boat!!! The sine qua non for that escapade was the story of the two cheeseburgers. Dee was convinced I could speak French because I told him so and he knew I studied it at Le Moyne. To prove my fluency, I read the newspaper to him (mostly making stuff up) when we landed in Fort de France, the capitol city. So, I was in charge when we entered a local bar and tried to order two cheeseburgers. After much commotion behind the bar, the owner came out front and said rather loudly, in English, “I understand you want two women?” At this, Dee exploded. “All I want is a %*#Gd* cheeseburger”, he screamed. Boy, he was really sore at me.

Random thoughts; Fishing in the Genesee for carp; car camping at Fair Haven; Cape Cod, of course; back yard pool parties. Dee was provocative, sometimes exasperating and always entertaining. He astonished me with his knowledge of bird behavior and inspired me to become an amateur bird watcher.

I’ll leave you with the one regret I have and you all will appreciate it more as you age. Dee and I drifted apart and finally lost contact before he moved to North Carolina. The lesson, I think, is that friendship is hard work and requires our attention or we realize belatedly that a friend has gone missing. I don’t want this to sound like a sermon, but keep your friends close and reconnect if you do get separated. In the end, it is all we have.

Jim Coyne

August, 2008

Thursday, August 21, 2008

David L. Pulver

My dad passed away suddenly from a heart attack this past Monday. He wasn't a typical dad. When he'd come home to visit we'd have to have a big party because all of our friends considered him a friend and wanted to see him. Dad was always the life of the party and told all kinds of crazy stories that everyone found hard to believe. He led quite the life. It's very hard to accept that I will never see him again. Rest in peace Dad, I love you.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Monday, August 4, 2008

Get Ready!



For any of you still checking out my blog...i am having a solo show at Gallery 821 in Webster, NY and the opening is this friday (8/8/08) 6-9pm. Show stays up til the 22nd. Lots of new stuff! I will post picts after the big event. Stop down!

Monday, July 28, 2008

Saturday, July 19, 2008