Archive for October, 2008

When Physicist’s fall in love. Maths geekcake

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

On my previous post (Monday of this week) I showcased a marvellous graph geekcake.

Today I’d like to share with you a jaw droppingly cute wedding geekcake. Originally featured over at Symmetry magazine. Symmetrymagazine.org Symmetry is an online, and paper magazine about particle physics and its connections to other aspects of life and science, from interdisciplinary collaborations to policy to culture.

Jason Rieger married Leah Welty, in August of 2004. Below is a picture of their cake.


symmetrymagazine_org_pyhsics_wedding_geekcake

Original photo taken by: Reidar Hahn, Fermilab

Unfortunately I don’t know physics from a poke in the eye so I have no idea what the equations relate to.

See you on Friday!

Graphs + cake = brilliant geekcakes!

Monday, October 13th, 2008

A bashful woman called Jennifer Harris sent me an email which read thus:

I thought I’d send you some pics of a geeky cake I did for my college’s Economics Liaison bake sale. Every year when the Simmons College Economics Liaison has a bake sale they like to have a supply and demand graph cake. This is the cake from the year. I headed up the bake sale. It’s not as fancy as some of the cakes you’ve featured on your blog, but it will certainly supply anyone’s demand for cake!


Jennifer_Harris_chart_geekcake
I wonder what quantities P and Q represent?

I would just like to say that I think Jennifer’s geekcake is fantastic. The passion and creativity and geek charm of a cake’s topic, are just as important as the finished product.

Jennifer I salute you and your most delicious looking cake!

See you all on Wednesday.

Dem Bones, Dem bones*, Dice and wonderful Geekcakes

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Dice.

Any table top RPG geek will always have a healthy collection of all shapes and sizes of dice.

The oldest known recorded reference to dice, is Sophocles the Greek writer. Sopocles lived between 496-406 BC, and being Greek, he claimed that the Greek invented dice, but there is no way to verify his claim. I’m not saying they didn’t invent them, just that the Ancient Romans and Greeks do want to seem to take the creadit for inventing almost *everything*.

Apparently, before standard cubical dice became common, ancient peoples would use fruit stones, sets of flat sticks, sea shells, nut shells or even marked pebbles to get random results for games. Hmm. Fruit and Nut. Which leads me neatly to my favourite subject – of cake.

The cake pictured below is fashioned after the ever plentiful D20 – the twenty sided die. Every table top gamer I have ever met owns at least ten of these babies.

Used in numerous systems from original D&D to Warhammer, to World of Darkness to GURPS, dice are the universal RPG signature accessory.


rpgdigest_dice_geekcake_top

Doesn’t it look magnificently delicious?

rpgdigest_dice_geekcake_side
I love the fact that the cake looks HUGE!


Original images, can be found at: RPGdigest, the blog of Bob Younce – a hobbiest gamer since 1979!

Thanks for reading.

See you all again on Friday!

[*At various points in history, small animal bones were used as dice. Playing with dice is still sometimes known as "rolling the bones".]

Academic Geekcake: The wonders of Chemistry

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Lori over at the Clever Cake Studio blog, loves to experiment with the art of cake making:

“Since March 2008, I’ve been doing a cake almost every week to practice, learn, cry, recover, learn more, and make local supply shops rich. Here you’ll find the results of each week’s cake project as my little portfolio builds. Share in my relief and amazement each time a cake works out, and witness just how damn clever I have to force myself to be if things don’t quite go as planned. “


Chemistry_geekcake_by_Lori

Lori goes into detail on the cake creation:

“The book is supposed to be reminiscent of the CRC Handbook for Chem and Physics (87th Edition). It is for the birthday of an awesome chemical engineer at Nintendo.It’s made with white cake and chocolate filling. The red Erlenmeyer flash is raspberry with some raspberry liquor in the cake and preserves between the layers. The yellow acid bottle is, naturally, lemon cake with lemon curd filling. They are all covered in buttercream and fondant, and yes, the stopper in the acid bottle is a separate piece and can be lifted out.”

Be sure to check out Lori’s full gallery here, for plenty more fantastic (though not necessarily geeky) cakes.

I wish more cakes referenced textbook editions as inspiration. A true academia geekcake. Sounds delicious too.

See you Wednesday.

Annakin Lego Minifig GIANT geekcake

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

A quick one tonight.

Geeks seem to love Lego. I think it’s the building combination possibilities.

Geeks feel passionate about the Star Wars universe. Even if you don’t love it , I know, that you know, a geek who does.

So it is with great pleasure I present to you a giant, geekcake, Lego minifig, Chocolate, Anakin!


Anakin_Lego_minifig_starwars_geekcake
Original source is over at the Gamespot blog.

Apparently the entire thing is only chocolate cake and icing (excluding the lightsaber).
Whomever it was made for is one mighty luckiy eight year old !


See you Friday !