“Lean Into It:” Tyler Stalman Talks iPhone Photography on Mac Power Users

Digital photo expert Styler Stalman joins David Sparks and Steven Hackett on Mac Power Users to discuss iPhone photography. It’s a great listen if you know a bit about cameras and photography (or want to learn) but came to this world from your phone.

  • the ultrawide lens is 13mm, which is “beyond ultrawide” (typicallly 16mm)
  • it’s not as good in low light as the 1x lens
  • 4x is about 100mm: a standard portrait length
  • 5x is 120mm
  • Optical zoom = cropped zoom
  • Don’t pinch to zoom: “be on the numbers” due to how the phone processes images
  • He tries not to use Portrait mode when shooting due to the lack of natural blur compared to the camera’s natural bokeh (“be careful of how much Portrait Mode you use”)
  • The latest selfie camera has a greater pixel count than previous versions
  • Follow the path of least resistance: “Apple wants this to be easy for you”

Clip from MP

Photoblogging: TT Artisans UFO and Panasonic Lumix 17mm f/1.7 in New Brunswick

A couple of weeks ago, Rhonda and I visited Aaron at Rutgers for homecoming/parents weekend. We had a great time walking around campus and dining out. I took my camera bag so I could shoot with both the OM Systems E-M10 Mark IV and my older Olympus E-PL5. I kept the Lumix 20mm f/1.7 on the E-M10, and the whacky TT Artisans 18mm f/6.3 lens on the E-PL5. Knowing the TT Artisans took interesting pictures when there’s plenty of light, I thought it might be fun to try to grab some indoor shots where there was a stark contrast between dark and light zones.

Olympus E-PL5 | TT Artisans 18mm f/6.3 UFO | 18mm | f/6.3 | speed 1/40 | ISO 1600 | EV 0
Olympus E-PL5 | TT Artisans 18mm f/6.3 UFO | 18mm | f/6.3 | speed 1/40 | ISO 1600 | EV 0
Olympus E-PL5 | TT Artisans 18mm f/6.3 UFO | 18mmmm | f/f/6.3 | 1/125s | ISO 250 | EV 0
Olympus E-PL5 | TT Artisans 18mm f/6.3 UFO | 18mmmm | f/f/6.3 | 1/125s | ISO 250 | EV 0

Here are two pics I took from inside Zimmerli, looking up from the ground floor to the skylight:

E-M10MarkIV | LUMIX G 20/F1.7 II | 20mm | f/2.8 | 640s | ISO 200 | EV 0
E-M10MarkIV | LUMIX G 20/F1.7 II | 20mm | f/2.8 | 640s | ISO 200 | EV 0
E-PL5 | TT Artisans 16 mm f/6.3 | 20mm | f/6.3 | 100s | ISO 200 | EV 0
E-PL5 | TT Artisans 16 mm f/6.3 | 20mm | f/6.3 | 100s | ISO 200 | EV 0

You can certainly see some differences, but I was impressed by how much detail the TT Artisans picked up, and how similar the images are.

The next two pics show renderings of stained glass, which compelled me to shoot them, as they were in a dark hallway only illuminated by ceiling lights, but because they were strongly backlit, I thought they would make a nice study in contrast between the two lenses.

Here’s the TT Artisans:

E-PL5 | TT Artisans 16 mm f/6.3 | 16mm | f/6.3 | 20s | ISO 200 | EV 0
E-PL5 | TT Artisans 16 mm f/6.3 | 16mm | f/6.3 | 20s | ISO 200 | EV 0

And the Panasonic:

E-M10 Mark IV | Panasonic Lumix 17mm f/1.7 | 20mm | f/1.8 | 1/250s | ISO 1600 | EV 0
E-M10 Mark IV | Panasonic Lumix 17mm f/1.7 | 20mm | f/1.8 | 1/250s | ISO 1600 | EV 0

The Lumix lens grabbed way more detail for sure, but the ultra-cheap TT Artisans did a great job rendering the image because of the light.

I was inspired partly by this shot I took the day before at Working Dog Winery, where I snuck this pic of a bottle of their unoaked chardonnay while we were sitting on the patio.

E-PL5 | TT Artisans 16 mm f/6.3 | 16mm | f/6.3 | 125s | ISO 640 | EV 0
E-PL5 | TT Artisans 16 mm f/6.3 | 16mm | f/6.3 | 125s | ISO 640 | EV 0

There’s nothing terribly compelling about this image, and Friday’s waning sun under the roof of the porch didn’t leave as much room for pics as I’d hoped with the TT Artisans. But I was gassed when I saw the contrast between the lighted side of the bottle and the shaded size that opposed it. It captures neatly the amount of light that the f/6.3 needs… but also some creative potential for future shoots.

Metuchen Inn

Rhonda and I agreed, just after our last visit to New Brunswick to see Aaron, that we’d trade in our annual visit to Rehoboth, Delaware, for another trip up to New Brunswick to visit Aaron. New Brunswick is peripheral to New York City, and represents the tip of the spear where New Jersey converts from bucolic and spacious to the stereotype of what most people associate with the Garden State: choked with cars and traffic, the Turnpike, jug handles, and road rage. Getting your bearings in Camden County is a good training ground for the asphalt jungle of central Jersey.

I had, until I graduated college, managed to exclusively experience the southern parts of Jersey, growing up in Cumberland County, and traveling north to my grandparents’ house in Milford, NJ, a sleepy bedroom town bereft of Wawas and McDonald’s and malls. The landscape transformed before my eyes as we lumbered up old Route 206 to Route 29 from flat farmland and pinelands into windy mountain roads, and later, up the fast but unscenic Route 55 to 42 to 295. Our route’s evolution went from slow but scenic to a blur of competing race car ya-yas, until the familiar undulations of the inevitable Route 29 found our tires.

One thing I learned about Camden County, a place I’ve worked in twice since graduating college, is not the density (which is there in spades), but the sheer variety of experience there. Moore Bros. Great restaurants. Revived downtowns, evolving from sleepy forgotten retails hubs forgotten by 80s mall culture into bespoke cafes, bakeries, and BYOBs.

New Brunswick, and the peripheral Brunswicks, and Edison, and Sayreville, and Newark, all offer bigger iterations on this theme: culturally diverse restaurants, long stretches of highway with every chain restaurant imaginable, and every tier of shopping mall, all within short drives of each other. On our trips, we pop, damp and happy, out of farmland wineries, into the dense traffic of a million souls piloting vehicles in an urgent rush to somewhere.

In a short 90-minute drive, we deliver ourselves from sleepy farmscapes to burgeoning cities, all clinging to the greatest city in the world.

OK Alex, Shut Up and Tell Me What You Ate

Our trips to Rehoboth always feature dinner at either new or favorite spots. We’ve eaten at Salt Air many times, because it’s a consistent favorite. We’ve dined at other memorable spots there, too, including Drift, Blue Hen, and Le Fable, and our stalwart lunch spot, Miyagi Ramen. We go off season, because we’re suckers for a quiet shore town.

And while the familiar, and small iterations thereof, are always enjoyable, Aaron’s decision to attend Rutgers offers our adventurous troupe many opportunities to try new places. So far, so good: The Frog and the Peach was a great dining experience, and we’ve had some of the best Asian food ever in Edison.

While I was tempted to revisit the Frog and the Peach, I found the Metuchen Inn while prowling Open Table, and I made a rez for our visit last Friday. The stately old house welcomed our eager party with dim incandescence on a dark and damp evening, and we were efficiently shuttled to our table. And since the rise and fall of our local and beloved Winfields in Millville, the “American Cuisine” moniker heartens me.

Dining Room
Dining Room

A very good first sign: our server didn’t bat an eyelash at my asking for our Tanqueray Martinis up with olives, mixed at a six-to-one ratio. The drinks were stellar; while Rhonda and I have taken to enjoying a Manhattan preprandial, we still enjoy a Martini as a treat at a nice restaurant.

Martini
Martini

Another encouraging sign: having a hard time picking out an appetizer. I was very close to ordering the Blue Point oysters on the half shell, wrestled with the mussels, but settled upon the clams with chorizo and black beans. I think there’s something about a clam I’ll always prefer to an oyster or a mussel, although in the former case, it’s a culinary crime to say so. I love the assertive brine of a clam, on the half shell or steamed. These littlenecks were steamed to perfection, with a tasteful appointment of firm black beans and small chunks of dried chorizo. Gilding shellfish with a greasy, smoky sausage is always a pro move.

Clams
Clams

Rhonda tried the lobster bisque, a dish she favors quite possibly due to serially excellent executions of the corn and crab chowder at the Knife and Fork. It was perfectly viscous, avoiding the gloopy texture you’ll find at a lesser establishment, and redolent of shellfish roasted into the stock.

Bisque
Bisque

Aaron tried the charred octopus, which I am always tempted by, but often avoid, having watched a lot of YouTube videos demonstrating how much smarter octopi are than, say, me. I tried a bite, and it was pleasingly soft, with a nice smoky chair.

For entrees, I went with the sea bass after wrestling with the wild boar tenderloin. Wild boar and I have a history: on our trip in 2000 to Sienna, Italy, wild board ragù was on every menu, often served with pici pasta, a long tubular noodle expressly designed for soaking up condimento. I recently found boar on a local eatery’s menu, but it had sold out before I tried to order it. I was similarly tempted by the pork osso bucco and the venison tenderloin; there is something about a chilly fall night that invites a curated meat dish, especially game. But I had sucked down my share of wine that afternoon, and future meals loomed in the horizon, so I went with the special.

Sea Bass
Sea Bass

This was a spectacular dish: perfectly crisp skin, tender, flaky flesh, all piled atop cherry tomatoes and asparagus. Not a carb in sight. It’s the kind of dish you can eat and lick clean and not feel bad about it.

Rhonda went for the lamb chops, which looked fabulous. Aaron, my adventurous counterpart in all things culinary, waited to hear what I ordered before pulling the trigger on the boar. Plated tastefully around a mound of mashed sweet potatoes and a pile of asparagus, it was a sous vide masterpiece, cooked to a perfect medium rare.

Lamb Chops
Lamb Chops
Wild Board Tenderloin
Wild Board Tenderloin

The service was attentive and brisk, with impeccable pacing. This all fell apart once dessert was ordered; it took a long time to come out, and we had to flag down a server to bring us our check. It had been a long day of driving, and we were keen to get back to the room for some rest. And maybe some more wine.

I would go back in a heartbeat. It is, to my taste, the perfect spot to celebrate with the ones you cherish the most on a chilly night. Or any night, I imagine.

Sunday Serial: Metuchen Inn, Crossroads Chardonnay, Tab Finder, Hitman Absolution, and Matiz Mussels

This past Friday, Rhonda and I lit out for another visit to New Brunswick to visit Aaron. Our tradition around this time each year is to take the ferry over to Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, and stay at the excellent Hotel Rehoboth. Instead, we decided to visit Aaron again, since the boys don’t have a fall break for the New Jersey Teachers Convention now that they’re both in college. Rhonda and I both remarked though that we’re missing our annual visit and might try to work something out for later in the year. That’s always a fun trip: ferry, hotel, dinners out, ramen at Miyagi, and outlet shopping.

We stayed at a Marriot closer to his dorm, and I made a nice dinner rez (see below), and had some phô for breakfast on Saturday. I got to try a Peloton bike in the fitness center in the wee hours, and got an hour in the pool, too.

Stokelan Estates in Autum
Stokelan Estates in Autum

Metuchen Inn

Dinner on Friday was at the Metuchen Inn, which was reasonably close to our hotel. Friday night was incredibly dark, with cloud cover that made navigating difficult. We were driving in the new WRX, and it was my first serious trip with CarPlay; I didn’t realize that I wasn’t zoomed in sufficiently, so I often missed the small turns that I needed to attend to in such unfamiliar territory. Thankfully Aaron was in the passenger side and helped out.

We made it on time, though, and the manse itself was tastefully lit from inside, with a welcoming, soft amber light. Coming up to it on Middlesex Avenue, in the dark after many hours of driving, was a welcome sight indeed.

I had clams with black beans and chorizo, and then sea bass. I was tempted by the wild boar tenderloin, which Aaron ended up ordering, so I was able to try a bite, and it was delicious. My sea bass was excellent, with crispy skin and perfectly moist flesh. Rhonda’s lamb chops were similarly good. Service fell off at then end after being most attentive; Rhonda flagged someone down so we could pay our tab after a long wait for desert.

Me and Aaron
Me and Aaron
Sea Bass
Sea Bass
Rhonda and Aaron
Rhonda and Aaron

The Crossroads Chardonnay from Stokelan Estates Winery

Rhonda and I stopped again at Stokelan on the way up to visit Aaron; we take 206 up and veer off on Route 70 to Medford for a light lunch and some wine. We’ve tried both version of their Myra rosé as well as the Catspaw Chardonnay. The Crossroads is bit richer than the Catspaw, with vanilla, melon, and pear notes to my taste. We stopped for another bottle on the way home yesterday, and took one to go. Aaron got a turkey and brie sammich on a croissant, which was delicious (he decided to come home with us and stay overnight, and will catch a ride back to school with a local classmate later today).

The Crossroads Chardonnay
The Crossroads Chardonnay
Dips at Stokelan
Dips at Stokelan
Turkey and Brie
Turkey and Brie

Tab Finder

I found Tab Finder on Bundlehunt, and for a couple of bucks, thought I’d give it a try. It’s another utility that lets you view and search your open browser tabs. I’ve taken to using TabTab, which doesn’t restrict itself to searching browser tabs; the search is quick and I use it a lot on all of my Macs. TabFinder is a more focused app, but I love the appearance and the search feature works great. It doesn’t support Firefox if that’s your jam, but it does work with Chrome, Brave, and Opera.

Tab Finder
Tab Finder

The only feature I haven’t found on any of these utilities is the ability to close tabs from the menu.

Hitman Absolution for iPadOS

This is an old game that I played on the Mac years ago, but didn’t get very far. I don’t game on my Mac that much, save sometimes on holidays (my birthday is coming up, and that usually means another go at Firewatch). It runs great on the iPad, and I am very much inclined to dip into a game when I’m on the sofa for a bit after cleaning up from dinner. I’ve played a number of stealth-style games, including all three Space Marshals titles. I think I developed an appreciate for this style of game starting with the original Metal Gear on the NES; I remember trying to barrel into screens in that game and getting my ass handed to me. Nintendo Power to the rescue!

So yeah, it’s fun to sneak around in this game, and the solutions to each level are many, allowing you to replay levels to meet goals and try new strategies.

Hitman Absolution
Hitman Absolution

Matiz Mussels in Olive Oil and Vinegar

I mentioned the Piri Piri sardines in a previous Sunday Serial, and since I enjoyed them so much last time, I figured these might be good too (their other tinned fish is pretty expensive in comparison to the sardines and the mussels). I could do without the vinegar but they’re still really good with some white wine and other bites at the winery.

Matiz Mussels
Matiz Mussels

Wine Pics and Some Glass

Rhonda and I had to take the title for the old WRX back to the dealership, so we stopped at Bellview for a glass of wine. I took both cameras, the E-M10 Mark IV with and the EPL-5, the former with the 20mm 1.7 Panasonic lens, and the latter with the TT Artisans 18mm f/6.3 UFO.

I was pretty sure I’d managed to outclass the Lumix 1.7 with this pic from the e-pl5/TT artisans combo:

But an accidental ev setting and the E-M10 proved too good to beat:

Sales Tactics at the Dealership

Rhonda and I were off work yesterday, and decided to look at a couple of cars to replace our aging 2016 Subaru WRX. It had almost 100k miles on it and was starting to look pretty beat up. We did the dealership visit and decided to purchase a new white 2025 WRX.

2025 WRX Premium
WRX Badge

I’m pretty used to haggling and dealing with dealerships, having bought a few cars of my own and also the boys’ cars. I mentioned to the salesman that once we’d decided to buy, when the time came to meet with the finance manager, that I wouldn’t be purchasing any of the additional items she would be waving in front of me.

I got through the initial barrage of offers as I normally do, bristling at the “why? Is it an affordability issue?” That they use to shame you into buying packages. What I didn’t expect, however, was that once we’d agreed to a loan term and expected an approximate monthly payment, she mentioned that she got us a really low APR on the loan (0.9%) and was “able” to keep the monthly payment the same as we’d agreed on even with an eight-year extended warranty.

I asked if that was an additional warranty beyond the factory, and if so, what it cost. She dodged the question and said that the monthly payment would be the same. So I asked what it would cost without the warranty, because I didn’t want the warranty. She tried pretty hard to push the warranty, but I pulled out the original workup that the salesman had given me and I asked where on the sheet the warranty was. It was not, of course, on the sheet.

So we got out of there with a much lower monthly payment. Over the term of the loan, we would have paid an additional 5k for the extra five years of coverage.

That’s a nasty business. Vipers lurking in every corner.

Blogging: An Immortality Project

All religions, all political movements and national identities, all business ventures, all charitable activity and all artistic pursuits are nothing but “immortality projects ,” desperate efforts to break free of death’s gravitational pull.
Oliver Burkeman, The Antidote

And yes, I did put the comma inside the quote, because that’s where it belongs.

Do we hope to capture these moments… these ephemera… to avoid forgetting them? In the hopes that we’ll see them again one day and remember them fondly? To think that we are, somehow, casting the shadow of our mortality just a bit longer than its natural demarcation?

OCNJ Ephemera

Sunday Serial: Kagi Search, Path Finder by Cocoatech, and Andre Agasse Reading Borris Becker’s Tongue

I mentioned last weekend that I was trying to replace the flushing components in the toilet upstairs. The problem I ran into was that I couldn’t spin the nuts off of the bolts in water tank; the metal used in the bolts was softened by all those years of submersion in water, I guess, and not even some strategic spritzes with Liquid Wrench helped.

I mentioned it to our superintendent at work (who was in the process of installing his own bathtub, which made my problem seem tiny), and he suggested using a hacksaw. I ended up using just a hacksaw blade, over a couple of sessions, to cut the bolts between the base of the commode and the tank.

It wasn’t fun but it’s done! We have a freshly refurbished can upstairs. I did the same for the downstairs bathroom years ago. So I can log another home repair to my spreadsheet. Regarding said spreadsheet, I just started it today to keep track of when I service or repair something so I can remember how long it’s been since I tangled with a wary structure, appliance, or some other thing that awaits my attention.

I do a lot of these things in part to save a buck, and to avoid the hassle of trying to find someone to come out and do them for me. I feel like most of my home repairs have a very imperfect version of doneness, as I’m not the handiest of fellas, and always have something in mind I’d rather be doing. But you can’t argue with feeling a sense of accomplishment having fixed something yourself.

Next Friday is another visit to New Brunswick to visit Aaron. I found a host of places to try for dinner, including some intriguing Portuguese joints. I’m second guessing not trying one of those spots (not that it’s too late) because I met a couple at a party last night, and she was from Sayreville. I not a teleologist but I do find such moments of serendipity intriguing. I think we’ll enjoy the Metuchen Inn, though. Looking forward to the visit and the inevitable stop (stops?) at Stokelan Winery.

Do I have to tell you that we’re enjoying some spritzes in this fine fall weather? Rhonda is toasting up some nachos to accompany them using some leftovers from the week.

Nachos
Nachos

I hope you’re doing something that resonates with you from toes to dome. We only have this moment: the past is gone, and the future lies, uncertainly, in the moments, days, and years ahead.

Kagi Search

I’ve been curious about Kagi search since reading about it on Daring Fireball and listening to an interview with one of the developers. I’ve been using Duck Duck Go for a while, and Google, too, and the AI results I get with the latter really have started to bother me. I decided to try Kagi’s trial tier, and while not exciting by any stretch, I found myself very happy with the results I was getting, and when the generous demo bank of searches wore out, I couldn’t see myself going back. It seems a little wild to pay for a search engine, but as with RSS readers, the value proposition is hard to resist.

Path Finder

I’ve been trialing the Finder replacement Path Finder by Cocoatech for years now, but I never found a reason to purchase a license. It popped up on Bundlehunt so I bought a few for my Macs. It’s an interesting twist on the Finder. One of the features I really like is how it displays labels in a window; it’s much less subtle than the Finder, which I like, especially in looking at a folder organized using the Johnny.Decimal system, which I’m currently half-assing. I also really like the Path Navigator feature. Tahoe’s Finder enhancements have been welcome, though. I has a great Yoink-like feature, called the Drop Stack, that lets you move files without opening multiple windows.

Path Finder’s Labels
Path Finder’s Labels

How Andre Agassi Beat Boris Becker

Andre Agassi was a rock star American tennis player who was divisive in terms of his fan base, but was always fun to watch. He evolved, from tennis rebel to statesman, during his career. This video is great, from the tennis angle and from the how-do-I-get-better angle.

The Sunday Call

When I was a kid, every Sunday at 9 pm, my paternal grandfather, “Gramps” to me, would call our house. The 9 pm time was, by his explanation, when the long distance rates dropped. He would call from a rotary phone in his kitchen, which did not have a long enough cord to afford him or my grandmother to sit down while talking. He did eventually get a cordless phone. He was famously cheap about some things, but extravagant about others.

We continued the call through college, and then into my young adulthood and the earliest years of my marriage and fatherhood. In the waning months of his life, Rhonda and I took to calling him on Sunday nights instead, and we would chat until he would nod off during the call. “Take care,” he’d always sign off.

After we dropped Aaron off at college, the idea popped into my head: we should resume the tradition. Sure, we text during the week; I send him pictures of cars I see and other things around which our interests coalesce. We have the family chat and then our sidebar conversations.

But that’s not the same thing.

So we have that reserved space, that time when we chat after dinner, not worried about long-distance rates, using FaceTime over WiFi. The sound is amazing. I have to sneak off to the apartment upstairs or another room because it’s a three-way call between me, Aaron, and Rhonda, and our audio echos if we’re within earshot of each other. A three-way call with middle-aged parents seems cringey in its way, the stuff of a commercial or sitcom. I’m pleasantly surprised, however, at how long we all chat, often for an hour. Proximity has its charms, of course, but the distance inspires us to soak up the shared digital presence.

It’s a new spin on an old tradition. Sometimes the old ways are the best ways.

Sunday Serial: Underbrush Gum, Michael Caputo’s Six-Color Apple Stickers, and the Shacket

Now this is some fall weather we’re having! Rhonda and I were happy to get to Bellview after a couple of weeks away. It was packed but we found an iron table near the arbor and packed own provisions. The live music featured a drummer I know personally, and the singer/guitarist is Aaron’s former history teacher.

Siesta Saturday at Bellview
Siesta Saturday at Bellview
K and J at Bellview
K and J at Bellview

It’s spritzes while the ribeyes soak in the sous vide tank for a spell.

I have some research to do for our next journey up to see Aaron in a couple of weeks. I also decided to try to fix the leaky toilet in the apartment upstairs, but I can’t get the nuts spun onto the bolts that hold the tank on to shake loose. I hit them with some liquid wrench, so here’s hoping. If that doesn’t work, it’s time for delicate grinder wheel surgery.

Dipping into these kinds of projects always cause me some anxiety: I’ve fixed my share of household problems, but you’re only as good as the last thing you fixed. It’s like a domestic booby trap: one of these days, you’re gonna bite of more than you can chew. I guess it’s all in how you look at things.

Underbrush Gum

I’m generally immune to the bespoke infomercial reels on social media selling products, with one, and now two, exceptions: William Painter sunglasses, and Underbrush Gum. With William Painter, they had a comedian name James Schrader star in breezy, smart commercials for their brand, and they were engaging in the way that the Dollar Shave Club’s ad campaign was. I ended up ordering a pair of the Williams Painters, and I still rock them to this day. I have two pair, in fact.

Underbrush Gum
Underbrush Gum

Underbrush’s commercial is more serious, but I was sucked in by the hand-cut gum and the claim that it can reverse decay. I’m not sure if that’s true, but I wanted to try the gum.

One person who tried a piece said, “I don’t think I’d chew that again,” and Rhonda said it smelled like bug spray on my breath. I’ve enjoyed it, though, and I’m happy with how long both the flavor and texture last chew after chew.

Michael Caputo’s Six-Color Apple Stickers

I saw these on Reddit I think, and it scratched an itch I’ve been carrying for a while now. I’ve always loved the six-color apple logo, as a Mac user since 1993, and an Apple II users since I was a little kid. Only the Studio and phone were spared the sticker treatment.

iPad Mini
iPad Mini
MacBook Air
MacBook Air

The Shacket

Whilst trawling Marshalls for things to wear, I found “The Shacket,” which is basically a flannel shirt designed to be worn with an undershirt, and cut straight at the waist, to be worn untucked. It’s a portmanteau of shirt and jacket, which I appreciate in the vein of the spork, and which has generally been reserved to ladies fashion (a la the skort).

Me and My Shacket
Me and My Shacket

I really like the cheap-o shackets I got, and have been looking for the right weather to wear them: we’re not so formal as we used to be at work, and to be frank, I’ve ignored the dress code in favor of my own sense of what looks good. The line between what looks good vs what’s appropriate is fine, to be sure, but I reserve the right to make my own decisions, because I can. I don’t dress like a slob, and serially strive to look composed even when casual.

Anyway, I was thinking about wearing one of the Marshall’s shackets last week, but I never did. I made up for it today, though.