The first part of my summer vacation definitely was less productive than it could have been. Sure, I have procured gainful employment, but I have found it difficult to spend large chunks of time in front of the easel. Fortunately, I think that spell has passed, and for the last couple of weeks I have been working steadily but intermittantly on a multi-figure drawing.
It is probably the most complicated drawing that I have tackled. I learned a lot in the process and I can see that there is a benefit to working on a long-scale drawing that one doesn’t glean from ’studies’ and sketches. I was planning to use this drawing as the foundation for a painting, and perhaps I still will—though I am sort of glad to be done with the drawing at this point.

For those of you who might not know, this is a rendering of myself holding Gabby, Leah, Alek and Tayler. I guess you could call it Self Portrait as Uncle. This was from a photograph of the event which happened almost a year ago to the day, in Alaska. I wonder if the kids have grown sufficiently that I wouldn’t be able to hold them all at the same time now.
There are a couple of things that could have been better, but on the whole I think I’m rather pleased with it. Let me know what you think….
– Jeremy
Recently, I noticed that one of the hot-water pipes in our basement had started to drip. Nothing too serious, but as they say, ‘a stitch in time…’ Here’s a picture of the culprit…

Not sure if you can tell from the picture, but there is a 1/2″ coupler, connected to a short run of 1/2″ pipe, connected to a t-joint, which serves to convert from 1/2″ to 3/4″, then a short run of 3/4″ pipe. It turned out that it was that last short run of pipe which had rusted and was starting to seep water.
After a conference with my mate, Paul (and—virtually—with his father), it was determined that the correct course of action would be to replace the now-defective plumbing. That requires plumbing tools. Fortunately, Paul’s dad has a complete set of tools and was gracious enough to let me borrow them. So, with tools in hand, Paul and I set out to figure out if plumbers really earned their fees, or if waterworks were simple enough that two college grads could successfully repair a minor problem on their own.
Interestingly, we found that as these parts rust, they tend to become very difficult to un-screw. After using the two largest plumbers’ wrenches—Paul plying forcefully in one direction and I in the other—we found that we still lacked sufficient force to unscrew the coupler. Fortunately, Paul was a physics major and figured out a way to extend the arm of one of the wrenches to gain additional mechanical advantage. Finally we broke the seal, and the coupler gave way, allowing us to separate the two sections of pipe.
Another interesting thing about plumbing: even once the mains have been shut off and it seems that all of the water has run through the faucet, there is a significant, but finite, amount of water remaining in the pipes. Once we allowed the pipes to drain, we were able to remove the rest of the hardware.
Next was a trip to the local hardware store to pick up replacement hardware. That was a simple enough process once we determined that we wanted the galvanized steel and not the ‘black’ steel pipes and acquired some plumbing paste (now with Teflon). We returned, slathered up the threads of the pipe with water-proof goop, and screwed everything into place. Everything fit and looked great.
Now to turn the water back on… hey, look—now it’s leaking worse than before. So, another interesting thing about plumbing: you need to tighten everything past the point that seems to be more than sufficient. Good rule of thumbjust tighten until the wrench feels like it is twice as heavy as when you started the project.
However, perhaps miraculously, after much tightening, water was running smoothly through the new hardware without spilling a drop. Here’s a picture of the shiny new pipes.

One last interesting bit about plumbing: having seen the inside of your plumbing will cause you to want to install filters on every faucet in your home.
A deep heart-felt thanks to Paul and Peter DeStefano.