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My Fun Fandom

@cuillere / cuillere.tumblr.com

A little combination of stuff I fankid about :D Hope it makes you smile! Witchy stuff on sideblog @witchycuillere . Header photo by Philippe Donn
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I just discovered foodtimeline.org, which is exactly what it sounds like: centuries worth of information about FOOD.  If you are writing something historical and you want a starting point for figuring out what people should be eating, this might be a good place?

CHRISTMAS CAME EARLY

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badmadwolf

this is awesome but the original link just turned into a redirect loop for me, here it is again (x)

OH HELLO

No more potatoes in medieval novels!

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Seriously if you need fanfiction to teach you what healthy and normal relationships are like, you don’t need fanfiction you need resources geared towards teaching you what healthy and non-abusive relationships are like. Please go to scarleteen. Please watch MamaDoctorJones’ episode about consent. Please go to people who are actively, explicitly, and specifically trying to teach you about healthy relationships and consent, and crucially, people who have the qualifications to teach you these topics. A fanfic writer might be: secretly a thirteen year old, someone who’s just gotten out of or is still in an abusive relationship and has internalized hurtful messages about relationships because of their abuse, someone who’s bad at writing, someone from an abstinence-only sex education background, someone who has no relationship experience, someone who has different boundaries around sex than their reader, or someone who assumes their readers are all adults who understand what abuse is and the fact that it’s bad and you shouldn’t do it in real life. None of these hypothetical writers deserve to be banned from writing. None of these hypothetical writers deserve to receive abuse for what they’ve written. None of these hypothetical writers should be taken as educational resources about important topics like consent, sexuality, sexual health, or sex education. There ARE resources out there that are created with the express aim of teaching people, especially young people, what a healthy relationship is supposed to look like. For the most part, though, random fanfiction writers aren’t those people, and that’s okay! They shouldn’t have to be. Fanfiction is entertainment, and it doesn’t have to beat the reader over the head with a moralistic message. Fanfiction writers assume, and should be able to assume, that their readers understand the purpose of fiction and aren’t using fiction as a replacement for actual educational material about sexual health and domestic violence.

In fact, it’s actually fucked up and mega super dangerous to actual real people, particularly children, to act like fanfiction is a replacement for education about domestic violence and sexual abuse. Real sexual health and domestic violence support groups and organizations spend lots of time and money trying to get the public educated about consent and healthy relationships, and we should listen to those people instead of acting like consent is a topic that should or can be learned from osmosis through reading fanfiction or watching media.

Especially considering, you know, how much our culture plays fast and loose with the concept of consent, blames victims of abuse, and generally portrays myths around sex, abuse, and relationships.

Normalize regularly reading and rereading nonfiction guides to healthy relationships. Normalize regularly practicing nonsexual consent, checking in with people if they seem uncomfortable or before starting a conversation about heavy topics, taking “no” for an answer, respecting boundaries (yours and other peoples’) without demanding in-depth explanations of why they exist, making others feel safe setting boundaries around you, etc. Normalize reading multiple sources, examining sources, and asking yourself “Who wrote this? Why did they write it? What credibility do they have? Should I listen to them?” instead of just taking absolutely everything you read at face value. Here’s some starting links:

Fanfiction can’t and shouldn’t be used as an exclusive resource to teach you the things the above sites can teach you. It would be cool if people realized that and stopped expecting random fanfic writers to start every fictional work they write with the express purpose of teaching their audience how sex and relationships are supposed to work. Instead of abusing fanfic writers who explore taboo topics, read and share resources that can actually help people learn about consent and healthy relationships. Because as someone who used to exclusively read fluff, a lot of fluffy fic writers don’t know SHIT about consent and teaching kids and teens that they should look to random strangers as examples of healthy relationships is fucked up.

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river9noble

Thisssssssss …… fiction is FICTIONAL for a reason. It is not meant to be your moral compass. It’s meant to be entertaining.

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wordsnstuff

Resources For Describing Physical Things

Setting

Weather

Color, Texture, & Shape

Color

Texture

Shape

Support Wordsnstuff!

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niennanir

Listen to your elders

So last week I posted abut the importance of downloading your fic. And then three days later AO3 went down for 24 hours. No one was more weirded out by this than I was. But while y’all were acting like the library at Alexandria was on fire I was reading my download fic and editing chapter eight of Buck, Rogers, and the 21st Century. And also thinking about what I could do to be helpful when the crisis was actually over.

So first off, I’m going to repeat that if you’re going to bookmark a fic, you really need to also download the fic and back it up in a safe place. I just do it automatically now and it’s a good habit to get into.

But let’s talk about some other scenarios. Last October I lost power for over a week after hurricane Ian. Apart from not having internet or A/C I did find plenty to do, I collect books so I had plenty to read, but maybe, unlike me, your favorite comfort reads aren’t sitting on a bookshelf. So let’s do something about that, shall we?

In olden times many long years ago around 1995 we printed off a lot of fic. It was mostly SOP to print a fic you planned to reread and stick it in a three ring binder. And that’s totally valid today too, but you can also make a very nice paperback with a minimum amount of skill and materials.

Let’s start with the download; Go to Ao3 and select your fic, we’ll be working with one of mine. This method works best with one shots, long fic tends to need a more complicated approach. Get yourself an HTML download

Open up the HTML download and select all then copy paste into any word processor. Set the page to landscape and two columns, then change the font to something you find easy to read, this is your book, no judgement. This is all you have to do for layout but I like to play a little bit. I move all the meta, summary, notes to the end and pick out a fun font for the title: 

No time like the present to do a quick proofread. Congratulations, you’ve just created your first typeset. On to the fun part.

Now you’re going to need some materials:  8.5x11in paper ruler one sheet of 12x12 medium card stock (60-80lb) scissors pencil pen or fine tip marker sheet of wax paper white glue two binder clips 2 heavy books or 1 brick butter knife

You’ll also need a printer, if you’re in the US there is almost a 100% chance your local library has a printer you can use if you don’t have your own. None of these materials are expensive and you can literally use cheap copy paper and Elmers glue.

Print your text block, one page per side. Fold the first page in half so that the blank side is inside and the printed side out:

use the butter knife to crease the edge. Repeat on all the sheets. When you’ve finished, stack them up with the raw edge on the left and the folded edge on the right. I used standard copy paper, because you’re only printing on one side there’s no bleed to worry about. Take the text block and line everything up. Use the binder clips to hold the raw edge in place.

Wrap the text block in the wax paper so that the raw edge and binder clips are facing out. I’m going to use my home built book press but you don’t need one, a brick or a couple of books or anything else heavy will work fine.

Once the text block is anchored down, take off he binder clips and get out the glue.

You can use a brush but you don’t need one, smear some glue on that raw edge.

Go make a margarita, watch The Mandalorian, call your mother. Don’t come back for at least an hour

In an hour smear some more glue on there and shift your brick forward so that the whole book is covered. This keeps the paper from warping. While glue part 2 is drying we’ll do the cover. Get out your 12x12 cardstock

Mark the cardstock off at 8.5 inches and cut it. Measure in 5.5 inches from the left and put in a score line with the butter knife (the back edge not the sharp edge)

Carefully fold the score line, this is your front cover. You have some options for the cover title, you can use a cutting machine like a cricut if you have one, you can print out a title on the computer and use carbon paper to transfer the text to the cardstock. I was in a mood so I just freehanded that beoch. Pencil first then in pen.

Take your text block out from under your brick. Line it up against the score mark and mark the second score on the other side of the spine

Fold the score and glue the textblock into the cover at the spine. Once the glue dries up mark the back cover with the pencil and then trim the back cover to fit with your scissors.

Voila:

I’m going to put this baby on the shelf next to the Silmarillion.

The whole process, not counting drying time, took less than an hour.

If you want to make a book of a longer fic, I recommend Renegade Publishing, they have a ton of resources for fan-binders. 

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K so not to be dramatic or anything, but there's a free vintage French pattern book available on antiquepatternlibrary so if you like to crochet/weave/make pixel art/tie epic friendship bracelets don't walk- RUN.

It has scenes from aesop's fables! Cherubs doing things! Beheadings! Greek muses! Little farm people! Intricate floral pattern! Goth stained-glass window like patterns! Fun little corner pieces! Eeeeeeeeeeeeee

https://www.antiquepatternlibrary.org/html/warm/C-TT008-180.htm

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ATTENTION WRITERS!!!

THIS is a muscle tee! (compression/workout tee)

THIS is a muscle tank! (sleeveless tee)

THIS is a wifebeater! (long ribbed tank)

THIS is a t-shirt!

THIS is a fitted tee!

THIS is a polo shirt!

THIS is a henley! (y neck)

THIS is a flannel!

THIS is a button-up/button-down!

THIS is a dress shirt!

thank you and good day!!

Too confusing, I'm going to call them all a blouse.

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s-n-arly

Skip Google for Research

As Google has worked to overtake the internet, its search algorithm has not just gotten worse.  It has been designed to prioritize advertisers and popular pages often times excluding pages and content that better matches your search terms 

As a writer in need of information for my stories, I find this unacceptable.  As a proponent of availability of information so the populace can actually educate itself, it is unforgivable.

Below is a concise list of useful research sites compiled by Edward Clark over on Facebook. I was familiar with some, but not all of these.

Google is so powerful that it “hides” other search systems from us. We just don’t know the existence of most of them. Meanwhile, there are still a huge number of excellent searchers in the world who specialize in books, science, other smart information. Keep a list of sites you never heard of.

www.refseek.com - Academic Resource Search. More than a billion sources: encyclopedia, monographies, magazines.

www.worldcat.org - a search for the contents of 20 thousand worldwide libraries. Find out where lies the nearest rare book you need.

https://link.springer.com - access to more than 10 million scientific documents: books, articles, research protocols.

www.bioline.org.br is a library of scientific bioscience journals published in developing countries.

http://repec.org - volunteers from 102 countries have collected almost 4 million publications on economics and related science.

www.science.gov is an American state search engine on 2200+ scientific sites. More than 200 million articles are indexed.

www.pdfdrive.com is the largest website for free download of books in PDF format. Claiming over 225 million names.

www.base-search.net is one of the most powerful researches on academic studies texts. More than 100 million scientific documents, 70% of them are free

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guildenstern

https://libgen.li/ scholarly journal articles, academic and general-interest books, images, comics, audiobooks, and magazines you may otherwise lack access to

https://sci-hub.ru/ research papers and books you may otherwise lack access to

https://archive.org/ a very large collection of all sorts of media, notably out of print books. by using the wayback machine you can also access new articles which may be locked behind a paywall

all of these sources are free means of access, though some may be blocked by certain ISPs

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milkweedman
Anonymous asked:

Do you have advice on how to tell if yarn you're spinning is over/undertwisted? Thanks!

absolutely ! there's a few ways you can tell just by observing.

OVERTWISTED:

  1. can it lay flat without twisting up ? if you take a stretch of yarn and lay it on something flat and it immediately crumples up into a kinked mess, that's a sure sign it's overtwisted. there's a bit of variation in terms of whether you've already blocked the yarn or not, but a balanced (neither over nor under twisted) yarn that's been blocked will lay flat and straight. a balanced yarn that hasn't been blocked yet will probably twist up a little, depending on how much spin and ply twist you put into it, but it shouldn't twist up very much. when in doubt, take a little sample of the yarn you're testing (about an arm's width) and block it. if it still twists up after it's dry, you've overtwisted it.
  2. does the yarn feel hard or disproportionately rough compared to the fiber it's made of ? the more you overtwist a yarn the rougher it gets. if your fiber is soft and your yarn isn't, it's very likely that you overtwisted it.
  3. does it still have elasticity ? if you hold a length of yarn between each hand and pull, there should be some stretch. the amount of stretch varies wildly depending on what the fiber is, but if it feels like you're pulling on rope instead of yarn, that almost certainly means it's overtwisted. this method isn't really effective with anything other than wool, and some wools stretch more than others (short wools tend to be quite stretchy while long wools have very little stretch), but while learning about over and under twisting i'd recommend trying this on every wool yarn you spin, just to get a sense of how stretchy it should be and what it should feel like.
  4. is it smooth ? on a two ply yarn, if the silhouette looks smooth, it's overtwisted. a balanced two ply should not look smooth--it should have some curves in the profile. This is only applicable to two ply, though. 3+ plied yarns are typically smooth unless very underplied.

UNDERTWISTED:

  1. is there visible spaces between the plies ? if so, it's underplied. the plies of a balanced yarn should fit together without gaps.
  2. is it floppy and limp ? typically you want your yarns to have some body, so if your yarn just seems... lifeless and floppy, that often means it's been woefully underplied.
  3. does it look messy ? this is pretty subjective, of course, but if your yarn kind of just looks untidy and not very nice, the usual culprit (at least for me !) is that it's been underplied. all the gaps between yarns tend to make it look unfinished and not quite as nice as it should.
  4. does it split when you work with it ? your needle or hook shouldn't be able to split the yarn very easily, and if you find that your handspun yarns specifically are more splitty than commercial yarns, that almost always means that you're underplying everything. yarn needs twist to hold it together, so if it's not holding together, that means there's not enough twist.

It took me a while to learn how much twist to add (and i still miss the mark sometimes, lol), but some things that helped me figure it out were

  1. winding it into a skein and blocking it before making any judgements. yarn can change drastically after blocking it--a hard, kinked up yarn can block into a soft, mostly-balanced yarn. if you don't want to keep spinning before you know if you're adding the right amount of twist, you can always take a sample a few meters or yards long and block that, and see how it looks and behaves. blocking is very, very helpful.
  2. doing plyback tests often while spinning. this helps make sure you're adding consistent twist the whole time, as well as gives some indication of whether it's well twisted or not. you might find them very helpful or only kind of helpful, but it's good to at least give it a shot.
  3. holding the blocked hank in the air and seeing if it twists is also a pretty clear indicator--a balanced yarn will hang without twisting (or maybe turning a tiny bit to one side but not a full rotation). if it doesn't hang without twisting, then it's not a balanced yarn.

some last few things to remember: there are times when a balanced yarn ISN'T the best yarn for the job. adding a bit of extra twist to a sock or glove yarn is fairly normal, and if your fiber is really rough it might benefit from undertwisting just to stop it from getting even rougher. and also, some spinners just don't go for balanced yarns. so while it's important to learn to control how much twist you're adding, you do not by any means HAVE to spin balanced yarns.

and lastly some pages I thought were pretty helpful:

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bruciemilf

Did I daydream this, or was there a website for writers with like. A ridiculous quantity of descriptive aid. Like I remember clicking on " inside a cinema " or something like that. Then, BAM. Here's a list of smell and sounds. I can't remember it for the life of me, but if someone else can, help a bitch out <3

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dramono

This is going to save me so much trouble in the future.

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reblogged

There are so many ways to make moodboards, bookcovers, and icons without plagiarizing! As artists, authors, and other creatives, we need to be especially careful not to use someone else’s work and pass it off as our own. 

Please add on if you know any more resources for free images <3

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mikkeneko

PSA to fan creators who don't have a lot of regular contact with children: They are almost always bigger than you think. A 1-year-old baby may already be walking. A toddler is likely already hip-high. A 10-year-old may already be taller than at least one of their parents. A 14/15 year old may already have reached their adult height.

A post you'd think wouldn't be necessary given adults writing children and teenagers were, at some point, children and teenagers themselves, and yet...

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Gc2b Binders No Longer Reputable

I've been away, so y'all may already be very aware of this, but I want to make sure it's stated on this blog because it's been The Brand for yeeeaaars: the quality of gc2b binders has been going downhill the past few years. People who bought from them prior and recently can attest to how poor the quality has become. The binders are just not the same. The material isn't comfortable and, more importantly, the fit just isn't good. People who've tried recent gc2b binders, even those who've been binding for years, are suffering from back and muscle pain, stiff shoulders, soreness, etc. regardless of fit. The material just doesn't seem to be suitable for binding anymore. It is also degrading really quickly and binders are wearing out in a matter of months. It is no longer worth it to buy from gc2b.

If you want some sources on this, check out the reviews here on trustpilot with people talking about this.

You'll want to keep your eye on brands that are still doing good work: Spectrum Outfitters (UK), For Them (seems to be a hate it or love it company; I know some who swear by them and others who feel they dont' really sell actual binders - just sports bras/lighter compression tops), Shapeshifters (good custom work and larger sizing), and Underworks (best budget brand).

For people in or near Germany I can recommend Undrowear! they also sell other underwear (including tucking panties). Their sizes go up to 5XL

I don't know how well they fit bigger sizes (I'm a large) but for me the fit is great and I've had almost no discomfort wearing my binder, whereas with my old gc2b binder I had frequent aches in my ribs and back

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froggierboy

i am once again hyping amor binders. they're on the pricey side, but the quality is BONKERS good, and if you're in the larger end (i was a 36H before top surgery) they have a line specifically designed for larger chests, which offers elastic around the bottom to keep everything from slipping out (i always slipped out of my gc2bs even when they were good) and FULL RANGE OF MOTION IN THE SHOULDERS with a racerback that's still wide enough to be supportive.

they're australia-based so if you're stateside like me it takes a bit of time and money to ship but GENUINELY they're worth it

Thanks so much for these additions!!!

EDIT: Trans-Missie in the Netherlands was also suggested in the comments.

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systlin

If any of y’all didn’t know, there’s a free online library, aka

and I found like, twelve ebooks I’ve been wanting to read on there, and blasted through like three of them during the course of a boring-ass shift.

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skaldish

Guy there are books on magic on there.

There’s books on EVERYTHING there!

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eudevie

Wouldn’t this be bad for authors though? or is this like a normal library where they get /some/ money?

It’s like a normal library. Libraries can upload ebooks there and let people check them out through openlibrary if you have an openlibrary account, or it can point you to nearby libraries that have physical copies of the book for you to go and check out. If you check out books via openlibrary it counts towards the count of books checked out from the library that uploaded the ebook, and they can use it in their reporting and funding and stuff.

There’s like 150 libraries partnered with openlibrary so far.

They also have copies that you can check out if you are print-disabled.

You can also ‘sponsor a book’, which means you pay the cost of the ebook you want openlibrary to acquire, and then they can add it to their collection and let people check it out.

image

I sure did!

And click on a title even if it says ‘no ebook available’ and scroll down, ‘cause sometimes that just means “all of the copies of ebooks are checked out right now but you can get on the waitlist when it’s back in”

This is part of the Internet Archive! I’ve posted about this before. Please go, it’s amazing. 

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