Monday, May 31, 2010

possibly boring work stuff

well today i took a leaf out of ray bertolotti's book and repaired a chipped porcelain bridge with a sectional veneer, bonding porcelain onto porcelain. it actually didn't look as good as i thought it might but the patient didn't mind so that's most important. they were just happy, and i quote, 'not to speak like ita buttrose anymore'. my new theory is that even ray bertolotti can't make them look seamless in real life but relies on fantastic photos to wow during his lectures, because my one looked pretty damn amazing with my macro lens under flash. i also did a composite repair on the pontic, with a better cosmetic outcome but not sure about strength and/or flexure.

before:


after:

after (without flash):


so yeah we shall see how it goes, i have multiple digits crossed because my first composite repair on the 22 flicked off really quickly, way to build confidence, but then i didn't triple check the occlusion, which i did today. my boss was/is skeptical so i double triple really really want to prove him wrong.

really i am procrastinating but this might count as work. i pretended to be an orthodontist (via actions, not in name or actual fraud) for like 20 minutes last week and it was not stressful which i enjoy and am starting to appreciate more and more.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

hue, chroma, value

françoise nielly

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

movie roundup, multiple sentences

xx. the white ribbon, michael haneke
this blew me away, i guess it's been a while since i watched anything with true depth and stark depression, reminds me of hopping over to nova on lygon st. i guess it was about the inherent evil and cruelty in all people including children, and how that is manifested in family as well as in a small community, and therefore can be extrapolated to the country at large (germany pre-WWI). fascinating. i wonder how child actors actually work, how are they protected from terrible things even in make-believe?

xxi. 9
well, this was an animation in the same vein as 'wall-e' in that pollution apocalypse scenario, this time with a sci-fi bent with evil robots versus tiny cute frankenstein bobbleheads, both being remnants of a crazy scientist's split psyche!! yeah all that stuff.

book roundup in single sentences

xxxiv. the adventures of augie march, saul bellow
a personal epic, as opposed to being a family epic

xxxv. kitchen confidential, anthony bourdain
all this current glamour surrounding the cooking industry belies terribly hard work, it seems

xxxvi. the house of god, samuel shem
a novel about medical internship which changed internships forever (?!), the writing was average and i couldn't actually pick what was so outrageous about it

xxxvii. zeitoun, dave eggers
a non-fiction account of a family's experiences during and post- hurricane katrina, truly horrifying
dave eggers is like bill bryson in that he can publish whatever the hell he wants

Monday, May 10, 2010

i am watching glee and it is sadly pretty crap

tegan and sara, big top, luna park, milsons point, sydney nsw, australia, the earth
it was pretty good, the jezabels have a good singer, astronautalis i would hazard to guess doesn't appeal to australian sensibilities much. this was my 6th time seeing tegan and sara, definitely their operation is now of a significantly large size! complete with blinding light show. not really going to gripe about it not being the same as being 2 metres from the stage at the corner in melbourne, watching them do their own setup in capes and masks. vocally they are possibly more consistent than ever but the venue's sound possibly let them down a little in terms of that clear nasal tegan and sara tone. anyway i wanted sara to sing more songs, the end.

also i am 2 pages from the end of reading saul bellow's 'the adventures of augie march' and it is well into that epilogue tone so i don't think anything else major is going to happen. anyway most notably i thought that it was really realistic the way that one meets so many different people during life and some of them you never see again and some pop up here and there, and some are constants.

in dentally related self-obsession, tonight i bit on something unexpectedly hard inside another foodstuff of soft texture and had a scary half hour of having pain on biting down on my 36, followed by pain after release from biting. but this sensitivity has now decreased though i am avoiding chewing on the left side. self-diagnosis is not fun, cracked-tooth syndrome!! hopefully i won't bite on my 36 until some significant dentine bridging occurs and that is sadly probably impossible.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

21(iv) crispy crispy benjamin franklin

so, i saw regina spektor play last tuesday at the opera house, it was pretty great! the opening band jupiter one also doubled as her backup band, my only small gripe was that the drums were occasionally too loud, but regina is a consummate professional and adjusted her vocals several times mid-song to suit. opera house, can't be beaten on acoustics. most memorably she played 'samson' right after the encore break and the lights were like stars, esp in that bowl of a stage formed by the side boxes and choir/organ seats behind, it was like lady gaga's diamonds frozen in the air except in real life.

a couple of fillums

xviii. micmacs.
this was notable apart from being a funny french movie full of extremes and escalating cartoonish revenge, by the state of the cinema that we saw it in. a) i saw it on my birthday, b) we had used a buy one get one free voucher, c) due to small audience numbers it had been allocated to the gold class lounge at regular prices. so basically i am cheap and it was awesome. also it was pretty cool that they had a poster for the movie as a gag in the movie itself? ingenious without being self-aggrandising (had to google that last word but my vocabularial hunch was correct [also it is exceedingly hard to google the word 'vocabulary' itself for an adjectival form!!!])

xix. fantastic mr. fox.
as may have been mentioned previously i was initially wary of this movie because of course the trailers focused most on george clooney and his american accent, upon which i based suspicions of americanisation. because roald dahl is nothing if not british. but my suspicions were only half founded, i don't know if it would have been too drab with an all-british cast. but i'm glad that boggis, bunce and bean were british, i mean otherwise it would have been entirely different. which brings me to the obvious issue of accents to demarcate animals and humans (and in other movies, humans and humans), namely, why??? why. and this is why i love quentin tarantino because inglorious basterds not only had correct accents but correct languages, i mean that is what life is like, right? aaanyway for all that i quite enjoyed fantastic mr. fox, more for the little wes anderson details than anything else.

also a slightly movie-related random picture, this shit is awesome, i don't think it quite deserves to be on ugliesttattoos.com.