But then when I actually uncurl myself from the fetal position and take a few deep breaths, I realise that I can almost make a semi-sensible sounding presentation and the past 11 months of solid reading, reviewing and getting to know my participant group haven't been all a waste. However, I've got a bit of work to do over the next few weeks. I still promise all of the things I promised you last post, but the blogging might be a bit erratic over the next month and my usual post-every-2nd-day average might go out the window.
Oh yeah, and some batteries for my camera so I can download all of these exciting photos that I need to blog about might come in handy too.
So while I'm combining Science with my craft blogging, I may as well share with you these. As regular followers of this blog may know, I just love it when art and science combine, and I have particular respect for people who go out of their way to make their art anatomically accurate.
This one is particularly dear to my heart. From The Museum of Scientifically Accurate Fabric Brain Art. Thank you very much, Kat, for the link! They did an MRI on it too (but, as they note, they didn't think it was worth attempting an fMRI, hehe).
And here is a frog and mouse dissection kit, by CraftyHedgehog
3 out of 4 biologists agree: Knitting in Biology 101 is the cutest biology project, ever! If you think so too, then this, my friend, is the art object for you.
Cute but creepy!
3 comments:
Wow, you've got some busy times ahead of you there. The knitted brain might be how you feel after all that. Woolly. Get it. God I kill myself.
No matter how accurate all that knitting is, is still a little bit wrong!
Good luck for the upcoming month!
you have a great talent.. but you got idea only about such things to use your talent in....
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