Sunday
Jun062010

Flash for Splash?

I made this animation (click to enlarge) with plans to use it as my splash page, but am hesitant to leave any iPhone and iPad users to only encounter the rather unwelcoming "Get Adobe Flash Player" button as a first impression. What does the future hold for Flash??

Get Adobe Flash player

Monday
May312010

Barney 1998-2010

After 18 months of living on love and subcutaneous fluid injections, my faithful companion of 12 years succumbed to chronic renal failure. He will be sorely missed.

Thursday
May272010

800 mg of Clarity

Here's a logo I designed in a graphic design course I'm taking. It's for a fictional company that makes drugs to enhance mental clarity and focus. How nice! I'll stick to coffee though.

Thursday
May202010

Like a Tokyo Wave Pool

This is a work-in-progress, which ultimately will be a poster for a biotech company. It doesn't look too crowded yet, but will be packed to the gills when it's done. Another interesting design problem. But it's a nice reminder that, as was pointed out in a seminar I saw yesterday, the components populating the inside of a cell are less like synchronized swimmers, and more like a Tokyo wave pool: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inA-36YRV0Y

Thursday
May062010

Non-Science Illustration Break

As the Wall Street reform bill moves through Congress, it seems a good excuse to post this drawing that I did as an assignment for my illustration class (with real pen and paper!).  The task was to incorporate a fictional character (here, Alice in Wonderland's Red Queen) into a current event.

Tuesday
Apr272010

Flash 101

Lately I've been learning Flash as an alternative to my old standby of making animations in Keynote and exporting them as Quicktime videos.  I had high hopes of creating a new Flash-based homepage for this website, but I think what I came up with in the first attempt is a bit too chaotic. You can see the animation here.

Wednesday
Apr212010

The argument for glycan-based targeting

I am excited to be working on a manuscript in lab this week.  More details to come, but here is a visual preview:

Thursday
Apr152010

TB-causing bacteria poisons itself when robbed of key enzyme

Today the latest Functional Glycomics updates came out in Nature and can be found here.  One of the highlights featured an article from our lab about drug delivery to B cells by targeting glycan-coated liposomes to an endocytic glycan-binding protein on the B cell surface.  The other three highlights were all about bacteria: B. fragilis triggers interesting chemistry and a negative feedback loop, a promising target for the treatment of tuberculosis was identified, and both a help and a hindrance to the bacterial agglutinating Surfactant Protein D were discovered.  Three of the four images that I made for these highlights have also been added to the Illustrations page. The fourth, shown here, was more of a design project, showing that silencing of one enzyme in M. tuberculosis causes an accumulation of its substrate, maltose-1-phosphate, to levels that are toxic to the bacterium.

Wednesday
Apr142010

Virtual Nerd

For the past couple of nights I've been working on projects for Virtual Nerd, a relatively new company that was started by graduate students at Washington University in St. Louis. The idea was to combine algebra and physics tutoring with graphic design to create interactive online video tutorials that help high school students through rough spots in these subjects.  Chemistry is on the horizon too, which got me interested.  See www.virtualnerd.com for more information and for links to all of the great press they are getting.  For my part, I get to turn videos into graphical content and make fun drawings like these: 

Saturday
Apr102010

Slow news day

This afternoon I was organizing my Illustrator and Photoshop project files on the computer when I came across this image I made several months ago.  I quickly filed it in my "What in the world were you thinking?" folder.  But I think it's kind of funny in its embarrassing ridiculousness.  So I thought I'd share.

Thursday
Apr082010

Strong enough for a product inhibition feedback, but pH-balanced for a protease activation

I recently did some remodeling of the website and decided to add a blog to give it a little life.  Given that this is a website about science illustration, I suppose an illustration would be a good place to start. 

Here is one project I’m currently working on, in the evening hours and on weekends, when I’m not being chased from my desk by scary earthquakes.  This illustration is to accompany a research highlight for a monthly update of the Consortium for Functional Glycomics, published by Nature, and is meant to describe the article “Carbohydrate Oxidation Acidifies Endosomes, Regulating Antigen Processing and TLR9 Signaling” by Colleen J. Lewis and Brian A. Cobb, Journal of Immunology, 2010, 184(7), 3789-3800. 



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