CRAIG CONLEY (Prof. Oddfellow) is recognized by Encarta as “America’s most creative and diligent scholar of letters, words and punctuation.” He has been called a “language fanatic” by Page Six gossip columnist Cindy Adams, a “cult hero” by Publisher’s Weekly, a “monk for the modern age” by George Parker, and “a true Renaissance man of the modern era, diving headfirst into comprehensive, open-minded study of realms obscured or merely obscure” by Clint Marsh. An eccentric scholar, Conley’s ideas are often decades ahead of their time. He invented the concept of the “virtual pet” in 1980, fifteen years before the debut of the popular “Tamagotchi” in Japan. His virtual pet, actually a rare flower, still thrives and has reached an incomprehensible size. Conley’s website is OneLetterWords.com.
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Images Moving Through Time

June 22, 2011 (permalink)

From Prof. Oddfellow's sketchbook:

Dedicated to Alayna Williams, of course.
#vintage illustration #tarot #illustration #möbius strip #infinite loop #alayna williams
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June 5, 2011 (permalink)

Prof. Oddfellow offers this free collection of vintage frame clip-art, culled from 110-year-old issues of Cosmopolitan Magazine and painstakingly restored to their original glory.  The frames are available for download in high-resolution GIF and vector EPS formats.  See samples of the corners below:

Vintage Frame #1 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #2 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #3 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #4 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #5 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #6 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #7 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #8 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #9 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #10 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #11 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #12 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #13 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #14 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #15 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1901)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #1 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1906)
GIF | EPS
Vintage Frame #1 from Cosmopolitan Magazine (1914)
GIF | EPS

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April 24, 2011 (permalink)

From Prof. Oddfellow's sketchbook:

This collage is in honor of Emily Dickinson, our beloved 21st cousin.

#vintage illustration #cosmos #illustration #emily dickinson
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March 12, 2011 (permalink)

Our 9th cousin, the visionary Dr. John Dee (adviser and tutor to Queen Elizabeth I) is here beautifully celebrated by the artist Sev.
#magick #occult #john dee
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January 26, 2011 (permalink)

We understand this is the first and last time Hollywood extras were acknowledged in a film's opening credit sequence.  The film is the stunning noir masterpiece The Shanghai Gesture:

#vintage film #vintage hollywood #hollywood #film #hollywood extras
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January 19, 2011 (permalink)

"The Heaven of the Time Machine" from Louis Untermeyer's Heavens, 1922.
#vintage illustration #illustration #art deco #time machine
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January 1, 2011 (permalink)

Happy new year!  (This drawing is from Louis Untermeyer's Heavens, 1922.)

#vintage illustration #pennyfarthing #illustration #art deco
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December 29, 2010 (permalink)

We're delighted that the Vangobot robot has created a painting in our honor.  The piece is entitled "4 Prof. Oddfellow."  It's like looking in a mirror!
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November 30, 2010 (permalink)

Punctuated Cloud Divination

(an excerpt from our whimsical new manual on Divination by Punctuation)

An ancient druidic art, divination by cloud formations offers punctuation insights on many different atmospheric levels.  The little fluffy altocumulus clouds may coalesce into periods, colons, semicolons, ellipses, and quotation marks.  The thin altostratus clouds may form long dashes.  Airplane vapor trails and cirrocumulus clouds may form forward or back slashes.  The tall cumulonimbus clouds may combine with their altocumulous cousins to form question marks or exclamation marks.  The lower stratus clouds may form short dashes, while the highest cirrus wisps may form commas and parentheses.

Students of art history will know that billowing punctuation figures into fifth-century Roman mosaics: "the cloud is simply a punctuation mark (a kind of parenthesis) that derives its meaning from the position that it occupies in a linear sequence” (Hubert Damisch, A Theory of Cloud, 2002).  So, too, with modern cloud divination: the position of the punctuation within the hieroglyphic clouds is of vital importance.

Punctuated cloud divination can be likened to Klexographie—the European parlour game that inspired Swiss psychologist Hermann Rorschach to develop his famous inkblot test.  One views a cloudscape through one’s inner eye so as to unlock the wisdom of the inner voice—that primal vestige that knows the answers but doesn’t always speak loudly enough for one to hear.

To begin, cast your eyes down to the ground and meditate upon your question.  When the moment feels right, look up to the sky.  The cloudy symbols and patterns you see will shed light upon your question.  You may see multiple pictures within one cloudscape, joined or separated by punctuation icons.  Do they tell a story?  There’s no need to over-analyze what you see in the clouds; trust your initial responses to the images.  Punctuated cloud divination speaks to your intuition, so allow your inner wisdom to pour forth.  If you are uncertain of how the clouds illustrate your answer, or if you require additional insight, perform a second reading by casting your eyes downward again, allowing time for the animated cloud shapes to evolve, and then look up again.

A scattering of punctuated cloud details:

Apostrophe ( ’ )
If an apostrophe cloud dissipates quickly, the loss of a possession is indicated.  "O little cloud of faery hue, / Wither so fast away?” (Anonymous, "An Apostrophe”).

Bracket ( { )
Shaped to resemble the rounded contours of a cumulus cloud, "cloud brackets” are common architectural features in Buddhist pagodas.

Comma ( , )
Cloud commas (also known as mesocyclones and hook clouds) sometimes develop eye-like features at their centers.  "The cloud eye-lids that shadow / Stay not to see what will be done” (Edgar Lee Masters, "The Battle of Gettysburg”).

Dash ( — )
A cloudy dash may foretell hurriedness.  "The moon slowly arose, amid a fitful dash of clouds, and was no sooner from under one than she would dart beneath another” (Samuel M. Kennedy, First Loves).

Ellipsis ( . . . )
Ellipsis clouds point out superfluousness: more than enough of a thing.  "A few cumulus like ellipses at the horizon’s end . . .” (Christopher Buckley, How Much Earth).

Exclamation Point ( ! )
The Hawaiians revere clouds as "the only animated features of the landscape, . . . ever with us.”  The storm cloud is feared less than "the whirlwind with that exclamation point, the whirling chimney of red dust” (Charles Warren Stoddard, Hawaiian Life).

Question Mark ( ? )
The mystic Osho considered the "immensely significant” question mark to be emblazoned "on each cloud, on each star, on each atom,” since the question mark addresses the eternal mystery of existence (The Book of Wisdom).

Semicolon ( ; )
Postmodernist author Mia Couto likens the semicolon to a raindrop "born prematurely from a cloud.”  Raindrops are ephemeral links between heaven and earth; as semicolons, they highlight the fluidity of the boundary as they simultaneously connect and separate (Phillip Rothwell, A Postmodern Nationalist: Truth, Orality, and Gender in the Work of Mia Couto).

#vintage illustration #punctuation #divination #illustration #cloud shapes #cloud divination
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September 2, 2010 (permalink)

We're honored to have captured the spirit of Brentwood for DGuides' resource on the greater Los Angeles area.  Our photo shows the hilltop Getty Museum from the Angeleno Hotel.
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August 20, 2010 (permalink)

From Prof. Oddfellow's sketchbook:
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August 5, 2010 (permalink)

"The only difference between Comedy and Tragedy is when the curtain falls.  After the applause, Time keeps on its relentless march."  —Myrlin A Hermes, The Lunatic, the Lover, and the Poet

#vintage illustration #comedy and tragedy #illustration #greek tragedy #myrlin a. hermes
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July 29, 2010 (permalink)

Prof. Oddfellow exits a door to nowhere at Portmeirion's colonnade.
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June 1, 2010 (permalink)

We have a new item for the running joke about how water and other things spin clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.  In New Zealand, the rotary phones went from 9 to 0.  (The illustration is from Peter Jackson's horror/splatstick film Dead Alive.)  Our insightful friend Tamara notes that in both hemispheres the zero is fixed at the bottom of the dial.  Aha!  That's why we sometimes put a slash through the zero — it represents the equator, angled in honor of the Earth's axis!
#telephone
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May 25, 2010 (permalink)

Why I Have Never Left Portmeirion

(for Ken Smith, in the style of Emily Dickinson's
"I Never Saw a Moor"

I never saw the port,
I never heard the sea;
Yet I waved down a flagstone boat
(an Atlas guided me).

A Golden Dragon's treasure:
the Buddha's missing hand;
A wild, Gwyllt-y pleasure:
the estuary sand.

The Watch House has no clocks,
The bell tower makes no sound;
Yet the humming of a Mermaid's rocks
has rendered me spellbound.
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April 30, 2010 (permalink)

Apparently, cutting out the faces of ex-boyfriends dates back to the mid-1600s.  (Actually, this an intermediate plate from when Cromwell's head was replaced with Charles I's.  See the before and after of Pierre Lombart's engraving here.)
#faceless #no face
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February 9, 2010 (permalink)

"He wondered briefly if the waiting was getting to the Medusa like it was to him, and then knew it wouldn't be."
Marvin Albert, The Medusa Complex, 1983
#vintage illustration #medusa #illustration #museum of lost wonder
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January 30, 2010 (permalink)

"Head gear prevents most soft tissue injuries to the face but is not as protective to the brain as many believe."
—Steven J. Karageanes

Illustration c. 1882
#big hair #head gear
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January 6, 2010 (permalink)

From Prof. Oddfellow's sketchbook.  "Life goes on.  Yes, child, and we fill our pockets with the shells and bright moments we collect along the way, one for every face we will have forgotten when our experience is fulfilled." —Jeff Hawkins

#life goes on #shells #memories #bright moments
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December 31, 2009 (permalink)

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