melbourne Melbourne Daily Discussion Thread: 🎵🎶Sat 13 Jan 2024
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 8 months ago • 100%

    Lemmy is trying to help stop me procrastinating and refusing to let me log in to my Aussie.zone account on the computer. I'm going to show it that my procrastination cannot be stopped so easily and clean out the cat litter tray. The things we do when we should be studying. 🤣

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  • melbourne Melbourne Daily Discussion Thread: Sun 03 Sep 2023
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I vote we officially name the spinny thing the Spinny Wheel of Deletion.

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  • melbourne Melbourne Daily Discussion Thread: Sun 03 Sep 2023
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    "> insert Spinny erasor comment here>"

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  • composting Composting Composting for Anarchists – Mother Earth News
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I'm not sure that "just" digging a trench and burying waste in a garden bed that you have conveniently lying around unused waiting for next year's vegetables is either easy, or practical for most people with limited garden sizes.

    The author tries to make it sound like some sort of free and easy method of just scattering waste without any rules, but in reality there are a lot of provisos. You have to have an area of ground you don't need to use to be able to spread everything out so you are not creating one stinking pile. You have to have opportunities to collect all of the material, and although it is glossed over in the article the inclusion of the paper plates, napkins, shredded documents etc. would be vital to this working - the "ratios" that are sneered at as if they are some sort of arbitrary rule you can gleefully ignore are the difference between composting and rot (too much green material) or mulch (a layer of dry brown material). Covering the material with mulch is not just about making it look better because you are fussy, it actually allows the right conditions of moisture & darkness to allow the organisms to break down the waste, if you don't do that you will mostly get dried up old food sitting on top of the ground.

    Hot composting, where the goal is maximum nutrients as quickly as possible, can be a complicated process and presenting that as the standard method does put a lot of people off. But presenting the alternative as "there are no rules" is misleading and likely to lead to failure for a lot of people too. Understanding a bit about how composting works, especially that there does need to be a balance of materials to feed the soil organisms that are doing the work for you, will lead to a much greater ability to create a system that works for each individual's circumstances.

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  • sewingrepairing Sewing, Repairing and Reducing Waste My method for darning socks - video link
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Thank you. I definitely need to keep the work more centred - even without subtitles I was moving out of frame a bit on a few occassions. It's unfortunate that the default subtitle locations don't seem to be changeable, but if you are on a computer (not on mobile) you can drag them to a different position.

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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Mashed fruits are a puree. From the USDA canning guide (which I think is available free online):

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  • fire FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) Moral considerations regarding FIRE
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    If society valued my contribution they would give me working conditions that were decent enough that I didn't desperately want to leave. "Society" is currently extracting way more than a fair share of what people like me (on an average wage) produce so that the rich can indulge in excessive consumption. I don't know how you get the idea that everyone who plans to retire early has a valuable skilled profession and high social power. For a lot of people the focus is on extreme frugility to try to scrape enough money together to have some freedom to spend time doing things you find valuable.

    Basically yes, I am of the mindset that I don't owe anything to society. I'm "lucky" to have an average wage and not minimum wage I suppose, especially given that the current argument in society is that minimum wage is not supposed to be high enough to support yourself independently. "Society" has been telling me for years that my essential job that they are so grateful to me for doing is also a drain on "taxpayer money" and that I don't deserve pay rises that keep pace with inflation, let alone average wages.

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  • melbourne Melbourne Victoria bans gas connections in new homes from 2024
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    How different stoves work for you partly depends on what types of things you cook, but there are also a lot of variations in how crappy standard electric stoves are.

    I've used old coil stoves that were not that bad, but my mother's new glass topped thing was so awful I learnt not to even try cooking some dishes. If you needed to brown anything you had to put the pan on for a 10-15 minute preheat to get anywhere near hot enough, then if you needed to reduce the heat to simmer it was best to just move to another burner if you could because it would take 5+ minutes to cool down. The top heat was just enough to brown something if you left it a long time and did not crowd the pan, but doing something like searing a steak or making a stir-fry just wasn't possible.

    But then I've also used gas stoves that are hard to work with and don't have much control over the temperature - even my current stove I tend to switch burners to accommodate different heat levels better. So I guess a lot comes down to having the right specific stove to meet your requirements, more than being just a gas vs. electric issue. Having previously believed I'd never want anything other than gas I have been pretty impressed by the portable induction cooker I've been trying out, and I'm sure a better quality model would suit me for pretty much everything.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Why don't more poor people join mutual aid groups instead of using charities?
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Oh, of course. Poor people just need to get enough money to own property and build everything required to create an autonomous society.

    You have a wildly different definition of poverty to me.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Why don't more poor people join mutual aid groups instead of using charities?
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 88%

    What you are proposing is that "poor people" should all band together and create a new separate society, which is basically communist. Like some sort of left-wing Sovereign Citizen movement.

    One big problem with this concept is that you cannot create a new separate economics whilst living in wider society. You still need to live somewhere, and you will need to pay the landlord with money. You will need to pay the electricity bill with money. You will still need to use joint facilities like roads, and the State is not going to happily provide all that to you for free, they will be looking at your new little economy and working out exactly how to value it to send you a tax bill.

    While you are dealing with all of these issues, you also have to deal with the people within the group. How are you running it and making sure it is fair? It takes a massive amount of work to manage something like this on even a small scale. So you will need some sort of tax on transactions so that the people putting the time in to running it can be covered. Who is actually going to join if everyone's time is valued equally - it will be a great deal for people whose skills are not valued on wider society, but a bad one for anyone with more valuable skills. So you won't end up with a wide skill set involved, and can't cover the requirements to do everything needed. So for example if you found a farmer who wanted to provide all their produce through this scheme, you could not provide the resources they need to produce and transport the produce. There is a massive difference between "making food" (ie, working at McDonalds) and actually creating food.

    Plus what happens when things go wrong? When the person you arranged to come over to help you with something falls and hurts themselves, or they do substandard work that damages your property? Is your mutual aid group providing some sort of insurance coverage? Do you have some sort of dispute resolution process to mediate problems?

    Having a strong community that supports members and shares resources can definitely be a good thing, and help to improve the lives of everyone involved. But "quit your shitty job and create a mutual aid network" is not at all a viable path to prosperity (or even to survival).

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  • agora The Agora [Vote] Which banner do you prefer?
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

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  • canning Canning & Food Preservation Used Canner - Advise Requested
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    You should be able to replace the valves with a weighted valve. Then you don't need to worry about the dial gauge accuracy as it is regulated by the weight.

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  • fire FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) What tools do you use to track your money?
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I use Excel. Apps generally seem to be focused on tracking spending, and are less useful for modeling future changes. If I want to look at my actual spending in more detail I can use the banks apps for that, the spreadsheet is more future focused.

    I have been working on the spreadsheet for years with gradual improvements all the time, and it is exactly customised to my needs. So I can calculate my pay (which is variable and based on a ludicrously complicated structure), allocate the money based on a mix of set and percentage figures, model the impact of future changes such as increases in power costs or getting another pet, and estimate at any time how much I have accrued for utility bills not yet received.

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  • sewingrepairing Sewing, Repairing and Reducing Waste Into sewing? Here's a giant map of secondhand fabric stores by city! (USA & Canada)
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I expect it varies depending on the store, but a place near me has things like remnants and ends of rolls, upholstery fabric sample books, offcuts of things like leather (the bits left around the edges after the pieces are cut out) and the ends of elastic and lace rolls that are too small for manufacturers to be bothered with but perfect for home use.

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  • sewingrepairing Sewing, Repairing and Reducing Waste Do you darn socks? What method do you use?
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I have put together a video showing how I do my darning, the post is here if you are interested.

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  • sewingrepairing
    My method for darning socks - video link https://youtu.be/c4lcC5oQOxY

    I have made a short video showing how I darn my socks, using a netting stitch rather than straight stitches. It's the first time I've ever made a video & the stitiching is not the finest or neatest I have ever done, but I hope it shows the process well enough to follow.

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    simpleliving Simple Living If you want to be a better person, find something to do outside of work
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I've been thinking a lot about what makes for a good group since I moved to Lemmy. Small and engaged is what I came up with, and authentic is definitely part of that. A lot of people's normal response is to look for the biggest group for everything, but I believe once a group passes a certain size it loses the ability to have good constructive discussions - at best you get a core group participating and a lot of people who just watch, but more often you lose the space for anything exept superficial conversations as everything that is not new gets lost in the volume.

    It's a pity Lemmy does not allow for subgroups, as that would be a good option for larger groups. The best options I have come up with so far are including weekly themed posts, and ongoing posts for specific topics linked from the sidebar so they can be kept visible. I think moderating a group well involves being part librarian, not just the rules enforcement most people focus on.

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  • simpleliving Simple Living If you want to be a better person, find something to do outside of work
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I agree completely with both those points.

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  • simpleliving Simple Living If you want to be a better person, find something to do outside of work
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    It is less important that our hobbies are something that we are "not obliged to do" than that we are actively engaged in them.

    Many people spend their free time in activities of passive consumption - watching TV, shopping and doing packaged, purchased "activities". The only active component is searching for the next thing to consume.

    An actively engaging hobby is very different, it involves growth and learning. Many hobbies can be engaged in either passively or actively - think of the difference between a photographer who goes out every weekend to take photos and improve their technique, compared to one who spends hours researching and purchasing equipment but rarely "finds" the time to actually take photos.

    The real difference between them is the mindset, and that can be applied to things you are obliged to do as well. My hobbies tend to be extensions of things that are necessary - cooking, gardening, sewing. All can be approached as necessary chores, but an approach of active engagement turns them into hobbies. Even scrolling the internet can be turned into a hobby - although I'm not sure if moderating a group and trying to learn enough javascript to automate things will make me a better person or lead to madness at this point!

    I guess my argument is that it is not doing things outside of what we are obliged to that is important, it is doing more than we are obliged to do. It does not matter whether that "more" is different things, or things we need to do done in a different way.

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  • sewingrepairing
    Re-covering a sewing stool

    This project is more stapling than sewing, but small upholstery projects are quite easy to do, and can be done with small amounts of fabric and padding. The padding for this project was mostly layers cut from an old quilt. When you pull apart things like this you often find old repairs and layers of previous fabrics. It can be quite interesting to see the way they have been put together.

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    simpleliving Simple Living Loitering Is Delightful
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    That was one thing that really struck me on my trips overseas (Peru & Vietnam). There was public space everyone could use to just sit, to meet up with friends etc. I spent a lot of time just sitting and watching how everyday life unfolded around me.

    At home (Australia) there are very few public spaces you are allowed to stay in without paying. Even public parks tend to be built on the assumption people will mostly just pass through, there are not many places to sit (and most of the seats are for parents around playgrounds) We meet up in coffee shops and restaurants where we are expected to buy things to pay for the privledge. Instead of visiting in each other's homes we go out and pay for meals and entertainment. If we do invite people to our house it is generally somewhat competitive - showing off how great our house is, how amazing the meal we provide is etc.

    I do manage to carve out some space for myself, although much of it is wandering the neighbourhood with the dog rather than loitering in one spot. But it is almost impossible to do the same with others. The type of relationships that are formed from long lazy conversations doing nothing much have been surplanted by the superficial conections of shared activities. The focus is not on each other any more, it is on the activities done and meals eaten. I really yearn for a few deeper connections, but what I am finding is just expensive meetups to compare notes on what everyone else has watched and eaten.

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  • sewingrepairing Sewing, Repairing and Reducing Waste Do you darn socks? What method do you use?
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I was worried about a lump too, but I was not able to feel anything. It might vary depending on where it is though - my socks wear in one spot at the end of the big toe.

    I think it is worth doing a netting stitch, and I have found it easier to do than straight once I worked it out. The wear spots happen where the sock is stretched, so I think that reducing the amount of stretch in that area would cause the darned area to wear out again more quickly.

    I am hoping to get the time soon to make a short video showing the method I use, as I made it up based on a snippet in a book I can't find again and have not seen anywhere else that does the same.

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  • sewingrepairing Sewing, Repairing and Reducing Waste Gift bag made from upholstery sample
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I'm not sure what type of jam, I made quite a few this year! Most likely a strawberry (maybe strawberry & apple) and a mix I did with plum, peach, apricot and grape.

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  • sewingrepairing Sewing, Repairing and Reducing Waste Would it be weird, if I put a patch on my leather jacket here?
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I’d probably try a heavy cotton underneath as a patch and glue to that. If you could find a decorative braid or something that looks ok in a complimentary colour you could glue that around the cuff where it has torn for further reinforcement.

    Possibly a strip of perforated leather or vinyl would work.

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  • fire FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) Daily Discussion: Friday 16 June 2023
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Thanks for responding. Unfortunately my programming experience is about 40 years out of date. I'm working on learning a bit more, but it is rather complicated figuring out where to start. At the moment I'm still at the stage of working out what applications I need to use, so every little bit helps🙂

    By the time I figure it all out the tools to do more easily it will probably be available, but a bit extra learning is never a bad thing.

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  • fire FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) Daily Discussion: Friday 16 June 2023
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Is there a way to automate posts here? I would really love to be able to do that for my group, would you be able to point me in the right direction to find out how?

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  • simpleliving Simple Living The Ennui Engine, or how chasing short-term gratification drains our emotional energy.
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Thanks for posting this, it was an interesting read.

    I have been thinking a lot about the question in the first post here, what is Simple Living? In the context of moving to Lemmy and thinking about how the sites are structured I have realised what I really value is the time to do things fully, and to be fully in the moment.

    Our society is built around consumerism, and constantly chasing the next new thing to aquire. Once we have it we just start looking for the next thing to reach for. The way we consume media is the same - a constant search for the new post, with the fastest replies get rewarded and by the time anyone has been able to craft an actual thoughtful response the conversation has moved on.

    I would like my life to have more depth, to focus on learning about things deeply and thoroughly, to be present in the moment more often and enjoy what I have around me. In moving to Lemmy I am hoping to be able to be able to find/develop some communities that foster that.

    I envisage the flow of information and communication as being like a river. There are fast-flowing rapids that can be fun and exciting, but most of the river is actually deep pools full of amazing and wonderful resources. Those fast flowing rapids have a place, but also have the potential to wash you away from all the important things underneath. The challenge of creating an online community is to be able to create a way to anchor people into deep and ongoing conversations, without the flow of new things constantly pulling them away.

    Reddit always felt to me like it was preventing those deeper conversations from really flourishing. I think the challenge for a moderator here is to find ways of balancing different types of conversations so they can all have a place - some topics can be talked about slowly and thoughtfully for weeks, months, even years. I believe to have a place in a simple living lifestyle the focus needs to be on encouraging those slow conversations. To create a place where you can drop in maybe once a week and not feeling that you are "out of the loop" because you have taken time to engage with the real world.

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  • simpleliving Simple Living A quick guide to simplifying Lemmy
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    That is the sort method I am using.

    I have also ended up with two different log-ons on different instances (due to not knowing how things worked at the start) and am finding that that is actually helpful for organising. One account has some local, faster-moving groups on it and being able to focus on the slower paced interest groups seperately is really helpful.

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  • sewingrepairing
    Do you darn socks? What method do you use?

    My feet are right at the top of most size ranges, which means I am constantly wearing holes in the toes. I have taken to darning the hole - or often sewing over the thinning patch to reinforce it before a hole wears through. Whenever I see instructions for how to darn they use straight stiches like shown in this article, but I don't feel that having a solid patch in a stretchy fabric works well, so use a netting style stitch instead so it has more give. (when I get some time I might do some pics/a tutorial to show you). Does anyone else darn their socks (or any other knitwear) and if so what type of stitch do you use?

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    melbourne Melbourne Daily Random Thread: Hump Day edition 14 June 2023
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    We have both here. I somewhat represent the dog contingent, but due to confusion over the new platform and ending up with multiple accounts I am mostly present in my Raven form🙂

    Breakfast is a bit sparse here so far, I have only been able to supply potatoes.

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  • betterment Betterment and Praxis one way to get involved in your community: the repair cafe movement
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    These are a great idea. We have one near us, I've never been myself but have referred a few other people to them.

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  • frugal Frugal *Permanently Deleted*
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Definitely this!! There are so many videos around where the sound quality makes them unwatchable. A decent microphone is not even that expensive. Just do a bit of research into what type you want for your setup - especially if you are outside (with wind noise) or there is background noise.

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  • frugal Frugal 3 not to skimp on
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I don't know about that, surely cutting out skydiving is moving into cheap territory, not frugal. I mean, cutting your kitchen sponge in half, saving up soap slivers and sewing clothes for your children from discarded chip packets are the sort of things worth doing, but you can't destroy everything that makes life worth living. It's really important to me for my mental health that I can jump out of planes whenever I feel the need, and when I do I want the best parachute money can buy.

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  • frugal Frugal 3 not to skimp on
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Parachutes should probably be included here. They don't completely separate you from the ground, but definitely slow how quickly you become reaquainted. Never cheap out on parachutes.

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  • melbourne Melbourne Daily Random thread: Shutdown edition. 12 Jun 23.
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Well, this is depressing. It's taken me hours to work out how to get onto this community from another instance, and now that I'm here there are no comments showing. I guess they are still bouncing around the internet somewhere and I'll be able to see them soon.

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  • composting Composting New York City Residents Will Soon Have to Compost Their Food Scraps
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    It seems like such a basic thing to do, but most places seem to be quite slow making changes, and it is rare to have it mandatory.

    Where I live (Australia) mandatory composting (the resident sorts, the actual composting is done by the city) is only just being introduced now. South Korea banned food waste being sent to landfill in 2005, but our government and community are talking about it like it is a groundbreaking new idea.

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy PSA: make an effort to comment in non-reddit stuff too
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I think there is a good chance at the moment that people will find you. Without much map of where to go I have been searching for community names that include my interests, and I suspect other people are doing the same given the community I started has been getting subscribers and I haven't told anyone about it!

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  • sewingrepairing Sewing, Repairing and Reducing Waste Gift bag made from upholstery sample
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    Thanks! I was really pleased with how it worked out.

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  • sewingrepairing
    Patching holes in jeans can prolong their life

    I often find holes wear in my jeans between the legs, so I patch them with fabric on the inside and lots of rows of zig-zag sewing. ![](https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/558f3254-0db4-438c-b1dc-b55f3789e202.jpeg) It's not a very visible spot so it does not have to be perfect, but it definitely increases the useable life of the jeans considerably.

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    diy Do It Yourself I tried mending on a whim and this is who I am now
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  • BrightFadedDog BrightFadedDog 1 year ago • 100%

    I have issues with the fabric itself wearing through more than the seams. I patch them on the inside with some fabric from another old pair of jeans, and sew over them with varigated thread so the fabric is reinforced but the repair is not very visible.

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  • sewingrepairing
    Gift bag made from upholstery sample

    This little bag is one of my recent projects. I was gifting a couple of jars of homemade jam, so used an upholstery sample piece to make a bag. The construction was quite simple, just sewing into a rectangle and then across the corners to make the shape. The stripes meant I didn't need to do any marking, just cut along the lines! The straps were folded and sewn with a wide zig-zag stitch down the middle, as it is easier than methods involving turning and/or neatly placed straight stitching.

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    sewingrepairing
    Welcome to Sewing, Repairing and Reducing Waste

    I have created this community to share projects and ideas with people who are interested in sewing and textile crafts made primarily from reclaimed and repurposed materials. That might be making bags from pillowcases, resewing a shirt into a child's dress, or repairing the hole in the knee of your jeans. Feel free to share any projects you have made, or ask for questions or ideas for future projects.

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