net - UK (2020-05)

(Antfer) #1
PR

OF

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A couple years ago, I co-founded a creative
digital studio, Fathom, in Sacramento, CA.
Of course, bootstrapping a new firm involves
plenty of stress, but thankfully we’re based in one
of the most productive agricultural valleys in the
US. When not pushing pixels and hacking on
software projects, I need to get away from my
screen and dive into the garden.
I’ve slowly converted my 1/8th of an acre
suburban lot into a food forest. What started as a
single planter box for fresh tomatoes has turned
into a year-round quest to increase food
production of our little land footprint, while
learning about the natural world in a new way and
designing a space that is both calming and
functional. Being surrounded by lush greenery is
always relaxing for a few specific reasons, which
I’ll tell you about here.
The digital world moves super fast, as we all
know. The plant world has a different timescale,
whether it’s a tomato’s journey from seed to stalk
or a fruit tree’s slow growth over years. Working
on an alternative timescale to the normal agency
project cycle is a refreshing exercise in patience.
A garden is a microcosm of life and processes.
It lets me pull back from technical work to explore
and refine a more complex system. For instance, I

got tired of buying bagged or bulk soil, so built my
own compost bin.
The local farmer’s market has loads of great
produce and it’s almost always straight from the
farm to the consumer. But! There is nothing like
plucking a cherry tomato from the vine, still warm
from the sunshine of an early morning and the
burst of flavour that it contains.
When you’re in an office for five days a week,
sometimes it seems like all the days bleed
together. The garden has created a reason for me
to watch the weather, to follow the rain, to think
about the seasons in a new way.
My garden is still a lot of work (though it’s
getting more self-sustainable each year). Even on
weekends when I hope to do nothing useful, I find
myself picking lettuce or repotting a rescued
cactus. It doesn’t feel like work – it’s calming and
constantly bearing edible gifts. And of course, a
little wood-fired cooking with good friends and all
of that wonderful produce never hurt.

FOOD FOREST


Eric Howard tells us how he likes to get away from work by
cultivating his own lush green food forest

BEYOND PIXELS

Eric Howard is co-founder and
chief technologist of Fathom,
a digital creative studio in
Sacramento, CA.
w: http://www.fathom.company

FEED
Beyond pixels


STUFF I LIKE


LISI LINHART
Lecturer and front-end engineer
w: lisilinhart.info

WAVE ACCESSIBILITY
TOOL
WAVE is a nifty tool that
checks the accessibility of a
site. You can install it as a
browser plugin and test any
site with it. It gives you visual
feedback on where your
accessibility might go wrong
and how to fix it.
https://wave.webaim.org

COLOR HUNT
Color Hunt gives you a simple
four-colour palette and you
can also search for palettes
by colour (red, green, blue,
etc). I prefer this colour
palette site because it’s
limited to four colours. The
search via colours enables me
to quickly find colours that
could match my design.
https://colorhunt.co

SVGSUS
Svgsus is an incredibly handy
tool for Mac OS X that enables
users to search through their
locally stored folders of SVG
icons and then quickly copy
and paste whichever ones
they need. This makes the
whole process of inlining
SVG icons into web projects
much easier.
http://www.svgs.us
Free download pdf