#[spins them in a salad spinner]
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ping-ski · 2 months ago
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Ding dong! 🔔
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Trick or treat!! :3
Sun (as Sebastian solace) and Moon (as a vampire) enters your door!
(Also hey ping!! How ya doing? :3)
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uhh how about a treat in the form of fanart because i love this au
(vill hihi!! i'm doin' alright and chilling at home while i still can :3 i hope life is treating you well <3)
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delucadarling · 6 months ago
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baby's first feed 💕
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not that she remembers it c:
(Kira belongs to @crownleys)
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keeps-ache · 7 months ago
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chit chat :>
[Tarrit belongs to @euclid-dragon !]
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thegreatindoors · 2 years ago
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Late night doodle of my boys <3 I like to think that when they were alive, Sammy and Jack took their days off on the same days so they could sit together and rekindle their love for their work without the stress of work looming over them, improvising new music and lyrics on the fly like they used to. Maybe they don't have jobs in the cycle anymore, but they still get together every once in a while.
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exculis · 9 months ago
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and i believe i have found my salad spinner
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drawbudd · 2 years ago
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transfemme hunter truthers i am so sorry i ever doubted you i see it now
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the-elevator-twins · 3 months ago
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oh wowzerz!! Since you saw Brud, here’s Wenda!1!1
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(i) > Another one shows up on the TV screen as you flipped back to the previous channel. There's a small white creature giving the same look. It almost looks like a cat... Maybe?
> "Awww, innit the silliest little fella?"
> "It looks like a Muppet."
> "Neil! That's not a nice thing to say!"
(i) > Your brother seems to think otherwise. Simply shrugging it off. You roll your eyes as you give a small wave.
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junespriince · 4 months ago
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BONK BONK
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Quick Stop!
little birdflash sketch :P
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catinflight · 1 month ago
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just wanted to let u know that i followed for the mmfc and am staying for the inheritance cycle... it has been YEARS since i even thought about those books and suddenly im itching to reread i miss them so so bad, your art is peak.. murtagh needs to be put in a salad spinner ❤️
AUAUAGHZHXHHHG THANK YOUUU‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️💥💥💥💥
HEHEhehhag I'm gonna do SO MANY BACKFLIPS‼️‼️‼️🙏🙏🙏🗣🗣🗣
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And now there's THREE OF THEM..........................
But oh mi gorsh thank you so much for stickin around🧚‍♂️🧚‍♂️🧚‍♂️🧚‍♂️🧚‍♂️🧚‍♂️🐲🐲🐲🐲
And I AGREE, the stinker should be put in the SPIN CYCLE‼️‼️ RAAAAH‼️‼️🐲🐲🐲
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chaszie-zenmal · 6 months ago
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im putting ur shapes in a salad spinner and spinning them around really fast
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Their fine!!! I think??
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friend-crow · 2 years ago
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Alright, since this is apparently going to be a week of harvesting (and planting) herbs, I'll give you a quick rundown on how I do it.
Cut the herbs. Depending on the herbs you may want to be more or less strategic in where you cut them. Mint and sage you can kind of just hack away at, but do a little research on the herb in question so you know what you're doing.
Wash the herbs. I don't have a lot of pollution going on in my garden, but there's insects and spider webs and such that are best dealt with at this point.
Dry the herbs (part 1) -- this stage is about drying the water you washed them in. I use a salad spinner to get most of it off, then I let them sit in the basket part of the spinner, which I set on my dish drainer until they're dry to the touch.
Tie in bundles to hang.
Put paper bags over them -- ideally the thinner type like a lunch sack, for air flow. This keeps spiders from spinning new webs on your nice clean herbs. Also good for keeping dust from settling, if you're like me and liable to forget about your herbs for a few weeks.
Dry the herbs (part 2) -- this stage is about drying out the water content from inside the herbs for long term storage. Hang your bundles in a cool dry place.
This looks like a lot but it's really pretty simple and easy, especially once you've done it once or twice.
If you're making infusions and such, it's always a good idea to dry your herbs first, as the water content can cause them to go bad faster.
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vacantgodling · 21 days ago
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see the thing is—i think it���d be interesting to do? but i’m also like. when i tried to make a discord server many moons ago i ran out of shit to say cuz i know some people don’t want spoilers or whatever and the idea of making a community just to have it be only about one wip won’t work bc my brain is BRRRR
is anyone planning on using the new communities thing?
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crow-crafting · 7 months ago
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Hello! I have so many questions. Okay. 1) I want to make a bunch of cotton kitchen towels both for practice and also because I need kitchen towels. This feels like a reasonable beginner project, is that correct? 2) I keep reading that you can do multiple towels on one warp but I’m not seeing how you’re supposed to separate the towels. Is it just cut the thread, roll more, start a new towel? But then how do you start the new towel? 3) when wet finishing something off the loom, the order is definitely sew the ends and then wash right? I don’t see how you could wash before seaming the ends…
Thank you so much for your time! And if you have links to beginner resources I’d really appreciate them!
I am so excited for your weaving journey!
I feel like towels are a great beginner's project. With a rigid heddle, it is mostly sticking with plain weave (also called tabby weave), so you can play a lot with colors and textures with the yarns themself.
I am currently warping up 6 yards to make 5 towels in one warp. The best way that I have found to make multiple projects in one warp is to...
Leave a gap between the projects!
Once you have gotten to the end of your first towel, hem stitch the edge to finish it off. Then, leave a couple inch gap on your warp and start weaving again!
If you like, you can use a waste yarn here to give you a solid edge to beat against.
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Screenshot taken from the video Suzie Liles' Fastest Hem Stitch from the channel Eugene Textile Center.
It shows a good idea on the spacing to leave, as well as a good hemstitch to keep the edges all in place before you are done.
The video is below:
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For towels especially, I like starting and finishing the last inch or so with a thinner weft (if you have one that coordinates), so you can sew the edges.
Also, it's a good idea to know how long your project it, so you know when to stop! This is doubly true if you are looking to make projects of the same size. Some people use a flexible tape measure and sewing clips, but I use a method with a ribbon and sewing pins. Try a few different ways and see what you like best!
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This is an example of my measuring ribbon! I got a few spools from my local big box store (Michael's in this case) for a couple dollars, and they have been a great way to ensure I have consistent items. Any color works, the person I learned this from uses white ribbon. I just have red here because it makes it easy for me to find when it gets buried in my art room.
You are very right in needing to finish your edges before wet finishing.
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Most towels, be they commercial or handmade, are hemmed. It gives them a little most structure and longevity. I would consider sewing the raw edge (not the selvage, your woven edge) if you have a way to do so. Even if you don't have a good way to do so, fringes are very cute on towels!
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If you do choose to hem, I usually go for .5" hem size. The picture above shows how I usually fold it, so the raw edge is tucked away and less prone to wearing.
With wet finishing for weaving, I am usually a bit mean to my pieces. I use HOT water, dish soap, and agitate the heck out of it. I do my wet finishing in a five gallon bucket, then spin the excess water out with a salad spinner, then hang it over a clothes drying rack.
I am going to work on pulling together a good list of resources I have been using and probably reblog onto this with it.
In the meantime! A good tip for you, that I didn't learn until I was at least 8 projects in, is to use some kind of layer between your yarns in your warp. It helps so much with tension and keeps your yarns from wanting to snarl up with the layer beneath it.
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Screenshot taken from the video Rigid Heddle Part 3 - Threading holes and Tying on the Warp from the channel Margery Erickson.
Like this! The weaver here is using cardboard, and gives a very good demonstration on winding on in the video below. The actual winding starts around the 10:30 mark.
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I will be back with more information...
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monsoon-of-art · 10 months ago
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Hi! Unfortunately I have no coherent thoughts to bring today, however I just wanted to say that I really love your OCs! They're all really creative, and I find myself spinning them in my brain like a salad spinner with alarming frequency. Thank you for sharing these funky little guys <3
I completely understand, and I am there with you. I am serving you the salad and they are rotating in my brain.
also thank you ;w;
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oobbbear · 1 year ago
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I LOVE THE SILLY POSTMAN GUYS YOU MADE!!!
they look so silly I want to know more you have INTERESTED ME!!!
I’m going to READ THE HECK out of that comic once it’s made!!!
I want to put them in a salad spinner and aggressively spin them!!! /pos
KIDNDIAHAJANJEBDDN AAAAA THANK U!!! ///••//💍
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Here’s the lil guy into the salad spinner, he looks like a broccoli so he probably belongs there anyway
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dollsonmain · 6 months ago
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Anyway, if you're not familiar with Spin Mop, which is viral and annoying and apparently not that great because the mop head can move in a way that you end up scratching your floors if you're not careful, it's a mop and bucket set with a pedal-powered salad spinner on one end of the bucket.
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The mop head spins freely, so when you put it into the spinner and push the pedal, that spins the basket and the head and centrifugal force slings the water in the mop head out into the bucket. It's very handy for making sure you're not flooding your floors which is important if you have a modern flooring type like luxury vinyl plank or are mopping hardwoods. It's best not to get those TOO wet. AND DON'T USE BOILING HOT WATER ON THEM EITHER.
PRETEND SPIN MOP because if I don't get it out of my system I'll be stewing about it forever.
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What I'm seeing all over Facetokstagram is people doing this:
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They say this separates your dirty and clean mop water.
This does nothing. You're still using one bucket of water both to wet and rinse your mop, and that bucket of water is going to get dirty. The only things being separated are the soon-to-be dirty water and whatever is spun out of the mop head.
This is stupid and it annoys me how much I see it online.
A 2-bucket system requires two, separate buckets.
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The rinse water would go in the Spin Mop bucket, and the clean cleanser water would go in the other bucket.
dip mop head into the clean cleanser bucket
spin off in the other/rinse/dirty bucket
rub on floor
dip and swish in the rinse/dirty bucket to rinse the mop
spin off
dip into the clean cleanser bucket
spin off
rub on floor
repeat
That's how it works. That's a 2-bucket system.
When it's time to rinse you dump out all the water from both buckets, rinse out both buckets, and refill both with clean water. Then you dip into the clean water bucket, spin off in the other one, etc. same as before just with no cleanser.
A proper 2-bucket method isn't perfect. I just finished scrubbing my kitchen floor by hand with The Walmart Brush (which doesn't require much water and that is why my buckets have so little in them) and here's how my buckets looked when I was done.
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Rinse/dirty bucket is blue, clean cleanser bucket is teal. It's not perfectly clean, the brush did carry some grime into the teal bucket after rinsing in the blue one, but this does demonstrate the why of a 2-bucket system pretty well. You're never dipping into a bucket of filthy cleanser water and then spreading THAT back on your floors if you use a 2-bucket system [correctly].
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