I am working on a map for our new cooperative radio show. We're going to pick out a different theme each week and I wanted to make a picture that would map out the themes. I've been reading this book:

My sister gave it to me for my birthday. It's a ripping yarn, and full of illustrations drawn by its fictional narrator, T. S. Spivet, a 12 year old cartographer. He draws maps of everything; not just locations, but actions, thought processes and plans. A map is not just a way to better understand what he sees, but to rewrite and to embellish upon an event; to not only find and document patterns observed, but also to create them.
I have also been reading a book about parabolic line patterns I got from the children's section in the GU library. And trying to make an abstract illustration. And it's deceptively hard to make something that should be, well, more or less nothing.
So I woke up this morning and subconciously merged the two ideas into one, and have started making some pseudo scientific looking string thingys. And then I consciously realised where I had gotten this spiffy idea from and wrote
this blog entry.
Ta da!
note: This work will get better.