Three Slices o’ Strawberry

I’m close to the end of “House of Odd”, and the tones for part 2 is all done. But before that day arrives, I’ll be showing another one of my little arts-and-crafts, a strawberry cream cake (strawberries appear to be super popular in the world of felt cakes).

 

3strawberry1

Step 1: Again, bought off Rakuten.co.jp. It's one in a series of similar kits.

 

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Step 2: Check that everything's there. With Japanese kits, they usually are. Pre-cut pieces too, which saves a lot of time.

 

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Step 3: Sew the base up, which in this case, is a teeny weeny little cylinder.

 

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Step 4: Sew up the little half-strawberry pieces. I've done this a lot on many similar projects... strawberries are the most common things I get to sew in relation to felt cakes.

 

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Step 5: Sew the strawberries onto the cylindrical base. Getting them located right is the hard part, but I manage.

 

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Step 6: Sew the little swab of cream and mint leaves onto the top.

 

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Step 7: Chop up the last piece of felt, and then glue the little triangular chestnut pieces onto the botton of the cake. Not as messy as I thought it would be.

 

Now, for the final product – little felt cake with three slices of strawberry:

 

3-Strawberry

Recommendation: Genshiken

I’m now back from Melbourne, and staying put for the rest of the year, finishing off my book. I’m about halfway through the “House of Odd” inks, and it’s a good feeling to be close to the finishing line! I’m looking forward to finishing the inks at the end of this month.

While I’m at it, I’m making another manga recommendation, this time for something a bit different to what I usually read. If I must describe it in a sentence, I will call it a “character-centered dramedy about Japanese Otaku culture” – aka Genshiken. Otherwise known as “the Society for the Study of Modern Visual Culture”.

 
 

Genshiken (Kio Shimoku)
(9 Volumes, though it’s continuing in a 2nd series)

NB. “Otaku” is the Japanese word for “fan”, denoting anyone who is an obsessive fan of anything. In this instance, nearly all the characters in Genshiken are Otakus of manga, anime and video games. In English, the word “Otaku” mostly refers to manga/anime obsessives, though in Japan it’s used in all instances that involve crazy fandom.

Genshiken was published by Del Rey in English, and boy, am I glad they translated it, because this would otherwise have completely flown under my radar. For some reason, while I’ve seen much more obscure fare in Chinese translations, I’ve not once seen this manga in Chinese stores. Which is… strange. Perhaps it’s too culturally-specific for Chinese audiences to care, whereas English readers will consider this study of Japanese Otaku-ism as a very “hip” reading experience. Mind you, if you’re looking for a window into the lives of Japanese Otaku, this is a very accessible and very well-written series.

 


 

Plot
The main character of Genshiken is freshman Kanji Sasahara, who finally fulfills his long-held dream of joining an Otaku club. The club he joins is called “Genshiken”, short for “the Society for the Study of Modern Visual Culture”, filled with a variety of interesting characters who all share a common obsession – Manga, Anime and Video-gaming. For Kanji, it’s his first time openly hanging out with like-minded people, and he forms a bond with them, eventually learning to accept the parts of himself he was always ashamed of. Especially when he sees the antics of other members who join after him – including fanboy Kousaka, who despite being a hardcore Otaku, is very, very good-looking (and very, very strange).

 

 

Kousaka attracts a “normal” to the club, a strong, opinionated young woman called Saki Kasukabe, who has had a crush on Kousaka ever since they grew up in the same neighbourhood. Running into Kousaka again in her freshman year surprised Saki, but she was appalled when she discovered what he was now into. Undeterred by the weirdness of the Genshiken folks, Saki pursues Kousaka relentlessly, trying to “normalise” him, to little success. Saki’s trials and tribulations with Kousaka becomes the story’s second thread, as she is lead on a crash-course through cosplay, conventions, video-gaming, figurine-collecting and other staples of the Otaku lifestyle.

 
 

Why I Recommend this Story
Genshiken’s genius lies in its accessibility, which sets it apart from other manga about Otaku culture. People reading this blog will know what an “Otaku” is because I explained it above, but generally when you talk to other people about “Otakus”, you get 3 possible reactions: (a) incomprehension, (b) interest if they are American and into manga/anime culture, and (c) a vaguely-disgusted look if they’re Japanese and not interested in manga/anime. You see, Otaku-culture may be Japanese in origin, but these people are considered social outcasts in Japan.

 

 

I actually sorta agree with Madarame here (skinny guy with glasses).

 

 

Unlike other countries where Japanese pop culture has taken root, Japanese Otaku are like Trekkies or Furries – they are looked down on by the general populance as unbearably geeky and socially-challenged. Genshiken is well-aware of this, and instead of telling the story from the perspective of a down-trodden fan, it tells the story of a “normal” who has stumbled into this gathering of freaks and geeks, and due to reasons outside her control, is forced to (grudgingly) hang-out with them, and even try to understand them. Saki Kasukabe and her clashes with her Otaku “friends” is what gives Genshiken a lot of its human comedy, and to Kio Shimoku’s credit, he never softens Saki, and never makes her into a would-be fan who is just waiting to be converted by the “right” anime. At the end of the series, Saki is still resistant to Otaku culture, but she is now willing to overlook and accept what was once so irritating to her. Likewise, all the other characters grow and change throughout the series, and it’s rewarding (and a little sad) to watch them survive their university days and enter the workforce.

Genshiken has a great sense of its characters, who are a varied bunch. Many of them feel like “types” you would encounter at a fan convention, and their interactions has a feel of the “real” about it. Certainly the creator has spent a great deal of time hanging out with Otaku, and if you’ve done the same, you would probably smile in recognition at some of the scenes. The environments also have a wonderful sense of the clutter that such people would collect in their obsessive hunt for the right “doujinshi”, and the meeting room for the Genshiken folks is rendered in loving detail – possibly from a photo of such a meeting room in real life. The dorm rooms of its members, the shops in Otaku central Akihabara, the mass gathering-place of Otakus on their yearly pilgrimage – these are all drawn with a level of care that underscores how much of this series is grounded in the real (if not exactly reality).

 

 

Like all good things, Genshiken does come to an end, a satisfying conclusion at a short 9 volumes. I wonder why the series isn’t longer, because I certainly would have liked to see what the characters did when they became fully-functioning adults (as full-functioning as these kinds of people can be). Perhaps that’s why there’s a second series, separate to this first one, that follows these characters while making room for new, younger members. Personally, I haven’t read it, but I would be looking out for it if it were available in English.

 

Toy Poodle

I’m going to Melbourne next Sunday to Tuesday, to do a two-day series of workshops at Scotch College! Haven’t been back to Melbourne for over a year!

 

Internet Explorer Woes: I’ve been looking at my new blog with Internet Explorer (instead of with Firefox, which is what I normally use), and I have noticed that Internet Explorer is crazy in the way it displays my blog. If you have Internet Explorer 9 it seems to be okay, but it you have version 8, it has a weird tendency to center all the text on the page. Worse still, if you have IE version 7 or less, the blog posts I have actually overlap the side bar on the right hand side of the page.

So, I’ve been going through my old posts and manually aligning the paragraphs to the left, which is the only thing I can do to get my Internet Explorer 8 to show the page properly.

If anyone knows how to fix this issue, please let me know. I have heard from other programmers that Internet Explorer is a broken-down piece of software that no one wants to program in, but Google Analytics tell me that 52% of visitors to this site use IE. So if you’re one of those people who’s looking at a messed-up blog, I’m truly sorry. I have no clue why this is so! Not yet anyway.

 
 

Wool Felt Toy Poodle: This wool felt toy poodle ended up about 8cm tall, and it was quite difficult to do! It seems I jumped into the deep end of wool felting, without checking the difficulty level of this toy poodle kit. As a result, I’ve shredded and pricked the fingers of my left hand a fair bit while making this. I now have to wear band-aids on my poor non-drawing hand.

For this reason, wool-felting has lost a bit of its glow for me. I’ve never, in my whole life, ever pricked a finger while sewing. But while wool felting, I’ve managed to riddle my left hand full of holes. From now on, I shall only wool felt in moderation… or with an insurance policy.

 

Toy Poodle - Part 1

Step 1: Here's the kit. Once again, from Rakuten.co.jp, the Japanese shopping site that wonderfully caters to international folks at a reasonable shipping rate.


 
Toy Poodle - Part 2

Step 2: Open it all up and have a look. Once again, no wool felting needle included, so I used my old one.


 
Toy Poodle - Part 3

Step 3: Stabbed the body, head and snout into shape. This was hard, and took a long. The shape of the body was truly difficult to shape properly.


 
Toy Poodle - Part 4

Step 4: There was extra fluffy material to stab onto the dog as fur, while the ears, arms and legs, and tail took a while to make. They were small and kind of hard to get compact... and harder to get the fur on too.


 
Toy Poodle - Part 5

Step 5: Attached all the arms, legs, ears and tail. Added some of that excess fur to "bulk" the dog up a bit more. Only the face left!

 
Finally, the face. The end product looks a bit odd, because the snout is too big. But at least it looks sorta like the cover of the kit:
 
 
Toy Poodle

 

Recommendation: One Piece

This week, I’m recommending a pirate story that involves little-to-no actual “pirating”. A story that is quirkily-drawn, richly-characterised, tightly-plotted and original in every atom of its being. Yes, I’m recommending One Piece. What else fits that description?

 

One Piece (Eichiro Oda)
(62+ Volumes)

One Piece is a publishing phenomenon. It’s the best-selling manga series of all-time. It has beaten Japanese first print-run records multiple times, the latest record being 3.8 million copies for volume 61. It has been nominated for, and won, multiple awards. It has sold over 230 million books (and we’re only halfway through the story).

So, if you’ve been living under a rock and haven’t yet heard of One Piece, you will eventually hear about it. Might as well be from me.

 

Plot
One Piece is about a 17 year-old “pirate” known as Monkey D. Luffy, a gluttonous and eternally-cheerful kid who possesses the power to stretch his body. When Luffy was young, he consumed something called a “Devil Fruit”, which endows the person with a unique power, but which also makes them unable to swim. A bit of a problem when the world you live in consists mostly of islands, and your dream is to become the King of all pirates.

Luffy quickly gathers some crew members and sails off to the “Grand Line”, a thin stretch of ocean full of danger and adventure. At the very end of the Grand Line is the island Raftel, where the previous Pirate King Gold Roger is said to have buried his greatest treasure – the “One Piece”. Whoever finds the One Piece will become the next Pirate King, and as you can imagine, many other dangerous people are also seeking the One Piece for themselves. Luffy gathers more crew members as he traverses the Grand Line, and encounters lots of strange enemies, many who also have “Devil Fruit” powers.

 


 

Why I Recommend this Story
I love One Piece, but I didn’t always love it. I admit that when I first encountered this story in a late-90s issue of Shounen Jump, I was put off by the weird and stylised drawings. The characters were elongated, the designs were bizarre to the point of silliness, and the humour in it was goofy. If I had bothered to read it properly, I would have realised that the story-telling was solid and that the plot dense and engrossing, but I wasn’t interested. It wasn’t even until much later that I realised that as wacky as One Piece‘s art style was, it was also unique, expressive, and more technically accomplished than most manga artists.

 

 

Years went by, and after hearing multiple people rave about it, I eventually went back to One Piece. And this time, instead of reading one or two issues, I picked up the first 10 volumes and read it all in one sitting. Looking back, I’m glad I did, because One Piece is, no joke, one of the best adventure stories ever created, in any medium. It has possibly the most creative, well-rounded fantasy universes ever wished into being, and if you’re looking to create epic fantasy yourself, One Piece is necessary study. You actually can’t do better than this, in terms of action-adventure.

Ofcourse, with this being a Shounen Jump title, there’s still plenty of room for Pirate-King wannabe Luffy and his crew to Ad-ven-ture~, while extolling the virtues of Dreams! Courage! and Friendship!! All Shounen Jump titles are required to have these values by default, including a healthy dose of battle/action scenes, a formula created by Dragon Ball and responsible for selling hundreds of millions of manga volumes. I’ve read plenty of manga who followed in Dragon Ball’s long shadow, and One Piece is the first, and possibly the last, shounen-fighting manga series to ever completely transcend the box it started in. It surpasses the best parts of Dragon Ball in every possible way – in the inventiveness of the fighting, the richness of the world, the continuity and complexity of the plot, the interplay between the characters… I’d go on, but I’ll just mention that One Piece is the only serial manga I know of that still manages to be fresh, innovative and engrossing at volume 62. Most manga series die around volume 30-40, and anything that comes after is overkill, but Oda definitely planned his story out from the very start – and it shows. When you invest emotionally in this series, you’re rewarded, instead of being jerked around because the creator didn’t properly plan out the story.

There’s also one final element of One Piece I find unique – the juxtaposition of goofy humour with heart-wrenching character moments. As I said earlier, the humour in this story put me off initially, mostly because I thought a story with such a childish sense of humour couldn’t possibly handle serious character drama… but how wrong I was. It’s a testament to Oda’s strength as a story-teller that he can muster both humour and sadness at the same time, and One Piece is one of the few manga that I can call genuinely moving. It’s actually changed my impression of the role of comedy in my own stories – from something to be avoided to something to be embraced.

 

 

Since One Piece is a daunting 62 volumes and counting, I can imagine how picking it up can be a scary experience. People don’t want to waste time on things they may not enjoy, but I also feel that reading just a few volumes isn’t sufficient to judge this story. So I will suggest reading from volume 1~12 first, and if you still don’t enjoy it, don’t bother continuing. As great as One Piece is, it’s one of those stories you either love or hate. If it’s not your thing, it’s not your thing – what can I say?

 
 

I end this with one of my favourite moments from early One Piece: