5 MONTHS IN THE MAKING. BEHOLD. DRESS.
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Stranger Things

@theartofmadeline
Game of Thrones Daily
noise dept.
Cosimo Galluzzi

titsay

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Today's Document
occasionally subtle
Keni

izzy's playlists!

Kiana Khansmith
$LAYYYTER

shark vs the universe
styofa doing anything
Three Goblin Art
Jules of Nature
sheepfilms
KIROKAZE

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@alexiphanic
5 MONTHS IN THE MAKING. BEHOLD. DRESS.
I want everyone to have universal basic income please
me and my mending pile until the end
tomorrow i fix my life #fixmylife #tomorrow
this is big al from the pubs favourite jumper, he gave it to my auntie asking her to fix it, she gave it to my granny asking her to fix it, and now it’s made my way to me to try to fix it.
this jumper is truly in awful condition, the sleeves look like they’ve been chewed off by a rabid animal
there’s an incredibly worn patch on the sleeve which i’ve only just decided on how best to mend
and it’s just generally covered in holes and wear and tear
here i will document my process of repairing this jumper for big al. he is paying me in chocolate so i am happy.
brings me a lot of joy to see people have patience to keep their clothes going rather than letting it go to waste
any advice on how best to go about this would be greatly appreciated, definitely a big project
I dont know who needs to hear this, but don't trust shitty "plant health" apps that give off the walls advice like pouring milk or sugar water into your plants.
Most plant problems are gonna come down to:
Too little or too much light:
-If its lanky (growing tall thin and weak with not a lot of leaves or buds), pale, or droopy it may not be getting enough light. Figure out which windows face south and west, or will otherwise get the most direct light. If its been in high shade do this slowly over a few days to avoid burns
-If its leaves look pale and reddish, especially after a move to more light, it could be sunburn. If its a high light needing plant it could just be shock from the move out of shade, so see if it worsens or bounces back. If it keeps looking sickly and drying out too fast, move it somewhere with northern/eastern or more indirect lighting. Remember plants will still need SOME light source
Too wet or too dry: Limp and pathetic looking - stick your finger into the dirt and see if its moist 1" down
-If its moist DONT water it may have root rot and needs to dry out. Move to a sunnier spot and water less.
-If its dry, add water and watch to see if it absorbs or flows right out of the bottom. If it does, your soil may be hydrophobic and the pot needs a good soaking in a bottom-watering tray & more regular watering.
Too much or not enough nitrogen:
-Knowing how long this soil has been used (most "potting soils" aren't real soil and run out of available nutrients in about a year) and if youve ever added fertilizer or nutrients will tell you the most here
-If it's old soil 1.5 yrs + you can uppot into a larger pot with fresh soil or shake out and slightly trim the roots and repot in fresh soil.
-If lower leaves are yellowing and higher leaves are yellowing at the base, its lacking nitrogen & needs a good dose of fertilizer. Nitrogen is the first number on the 1-2-3 lists on fertilizers, get one higher in nitrogen (not JUST nitrogen) and follow directions so you dont burn your plant
-If leaves are getting much darker green or seeming to burn out at the ends without any additional sunlight, or yellowing like above and you know youve added nutrients recently, it could be too MUCH nitrogen - shake out roots and put in fresh soil, if you really cant do that then run water through the soil for a while because nitrogen is water soluble and will be flushed out
Pest or disease: Treatment varies a lot based on what's wrong, so look for clear signs of predation (leaves eaten, hole-y, or have translucent tunnels inside, poop, webs, bubble spit nests, actual pests themselves) or disease (mildew spots, rotting leaves, discolored spots or splotches, leaves curled) and find a good resource to narrow down what it is. In the USA your local university extension should have a pest problems page, for Oregon its OSUs solve pest problems site. Good general practices are keeping things pruned to allow in good light and air flow, while removing diseased or infected areas - use rubbing alcohol to disinfect between/after diseased cuts
Thats it. Thats the common problems. Too much or not enough of what they need, and sickness/pests. All of them are simple answers, at least to start troubleshooting with. None of them include dumping milk or sugar that will drastically change the soil microbiome, restrict water/nutrient uptake, and GIVE YOU ANTS.
If any app is advising you to START solving a problem by 1) buying something or 2) dumping a bunch of random shit into what is essentially your little mini dome of life - RUN AWAY!!! There's a difference between specific home remedies that involve mixtures of say 1:10 milk to water only on the leaves for mildew, or dumping a whole cup of milk in. There's a difference between some light compost or fermented fruit tea from your old banana peels, and dumping sugar water or pure coffee into your pot. We are not baking a cake we are feeding a PLANT with roots that take in specific things, not a stomach lining. This goes TRIPLE for any "weeds advice" that tells you to dump vinegar or salt on an area - itll kill your weeds, and everything else.
Just. Dont trust anyone who's advice is "pour a bunch of random shit on there," especially if its an app thats supposed to be figuring out from NO CONTEXT which of the causes could be making these leaves yellow.
I'm probably never going to find it again, but there was a response to one of those "artworks we think we can make" posts that was like "Okay, go for it." Like, dead serious.
Are you going to come out of it with a Klein-level work? No. Dude was bonkers skilled. But I am here to tell you that if you've ever gone to Home Depot and shuffled through paint chips and been like "God, this is such a gorgeous color, I fucking love this color" and then immediately been like "...but I can't imagine painting a wall with it." and bought a can of soul-killing eggshell off-white or what the fuck ever, you absolutely can go pick up a $10 canvas from a craftstore and a $5 sample of that color and just hang 6 square feet of it on a wall and enjoy the fuck out of it.
For real, buds. If you see an artwork and you're like "Shit, I could have made that," that is a reminder that god can't stop you and probably neither can science.
Weediness as a quality of Art?
something i wrote down while I was at work
When I was walking in the town I saw some cool graffiti, and I thought, Hmm. Graffiti is a lot like weeds. It pops up in neglected and overlooked places, and thrives until someone destroys it in routine maintenance.
Like an ecosystem, art is a living system.
I quickly began to think of ways that graffiti and weeds are alike.
It is perceived as worthless or threatening economic incentives.
There are active efforts to destroy or eradicate it, which are eternally futile because of the aliveness of the system.
It appears in areas of active, violent neglect, disruption, and abandonment.
Its absence or presence can be a visual signal of class.
I thought, what are some other "weedy" artforms?
Fanfiction could be a weedy artform.
Huh, I thought. Are there domesticated or cultivated artforms?
It became clear to me that the answer was yes.
There are two types. One type is the crops: those plants that have daily necessity for all people. They are often monocultures, often highly exploitative, but they are a daily part of existence.
In art terms, this is pop culture and mass media: popular music, movies, tv shows.
The other type would be the ornamentals: those that are cultivated because they are perceived to have intrinsic value or beauty. These are the poems, paintings, sculptures, the arts that are seen as more intellectually important and more restricted in who has daily access.
Well, I thought then, are there "wild" artforms? And I thought that the answer once again had to be yes: that's textile arts, woodworking, pottery, basket making, arts that are often considered according to their practical value and not given the same consideration as fine arts. They are often romanticized and thought of as artifacts of the past to be preserved, and sometimes they are brought into cultivation (appreciation as fine arts), but they can lose their context and everyday usefulness. They are considered as threatened by economic incentives and efforts to protect them are perceived as wasteful.
Graffiti and fanfiction are weedy artforms. Are there others?
In addition to the qualities of weediness I listed up above, there is another quality: They get some of what they are from their antagonistic relationship with the mainstream view of what has value. They emerge in a space that is "owned" by another entity and thrive because there is no economical way to destroy them all faster than they can emerge. Likewise, Weeds are inherently (by some definitions) disrupting the intent of a space: they exist in defiance of what that space is "supposed to" be.
Fanfiction could be compared to weeds in an agricultural crop field: they spring up in the monoculture of popular media franchises and become more powerful and compelling than the environment that created them, even though many people will overlook their value.
Graffiti could be considered like lawn weeds: its presence has intense connotations of class, and the extermination campaigns are intense, but lawns that are neglected long enough (just like the walls of an abandoned building) can become places of diversity and thriving.
Weedy art could also be any art you create for yourself without special skill or economic incentive to do so, purely through intrinsic motivation. Many people kill these weeds before they grow into flowers, thinking that a common weed without any cultivation could never produce a beautiful flower, but if you let them grow you are often surprised. Doodles, drawings, anything you create could be weedy art.
Weeds are invincible on the evolutionary timescale, impossible to fully eradicate. They are our friends and have sustained us in many ways throughout human history. I read in a paper once a theory that true monoculture is only an idea in the human mind, never able to be truly realized, because weeds will always emerge and disrupt this false idea of perfection.
Certainly, our ecosystems are held together and sustained with life within this gap between how we imagine the world should be (clean, perfect, without weeds) and how the world really is (weeds! weeds! WEEDS!). Without weeds, the biodiversity in the world around us would crash dramatically.
Is this also true of weedy arts? Is the art we value the least and often actively try to eradicate, necessary for sustaining us as creative human beings?
dandelions
yall.
YALL.
Hey I'm in this picture!
could an average, able-bodied person reasonably walk from where you live to a library, in good weather?
yes, because i live at a school/college etc with a library
yes, very easily
yes, there's a library in a reasonable walking distance
yes, but it'd take a while / terrain would suck to navigate
yes, but it'd take so long / be difficult enough to do that nobody would
no, there's no library in a reasonable walking distance
Totally. They built it just in the past couple of years.
It's 30 minutes' walk officially but you can pretty much halve that with some light trespassing
South Island, New Zealand
sonyays.jpg
Beautiful, but lupin is invasive and supports intensive farming instead of supporting native fauna and insects.
Hey, have you heard of the "plant me instead" booklets?? Someone's gone through and identified sustainable alternatives to those beautiful, tempting invasives so people who love Aotearoa and also love pretty things can have both ☺️ most of their recommendations are native plants, and all of them are non-invasive.
Here's what they reccomend instead of lupins. Cute and sweet!
Find all of the booklets here: https://www.weedbusters.org.nz/resources/plant-me-instead-booklet/
ITS APRIL 13 YOU KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS
FETCH ME NEIL
HAPPY BIG TWENTY NEIL
Neil!! It's my first time catching this in real time due to my time zone. Banging out the tunes for 20 years.
So I bashed my head into the ceiling fan light fixture in my bedroom and destroyed it (my head is unscathed) and have since replaced it. However. I've decided to turn the mangled remains of that light fixture into a disco solar system, so I'm painting up some disco balls. Mayhem is a VERY big fan of disco balls.
Oh! I forgot to post the fully finished version of this! Maybe eventually I'll get up early enough to catch it in the sun but it's honestly not in the best spot for sunlight. Which is what I get for making a big project with no idea where to put it.
Seeing this post and immediately closing tumblr to find out where I can buy a bunch of disco balls for my cat
life seriously got in the way (badly) and i havent been doing well mentally and because of that so far this year ive only read a few fanfics and one book that doesnt fit in any of these squares (tress of the emerald sea). is it still possible for me to start or is it too late?? idk if i even have the capacity to read something challenging but i want to try
it's never too late until you're dead dude it's barely even april
How to fix a ripped plushie (clear and easy to follow) by 浪浪山陈三丫头手缝师傅
ok thank god there's so many fucking videos showing you how to do a ladder stitch like it's some kind of magic trick but here's the actual use case for it: closing a seam you can't reach the inside of. in all other cases, if you're fixing a ripped seam on pants, or on a tshirt, the ladder stitch is a messy, glorified running stitch.
Essential plush making technique, this one! Very good video, a lot of tutorials are kinda hard to parse for me.