Pipster

joined 1 year ago
[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 1 week ago

We have just gorged on boxing day cheese. Im full of cheese and content.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 10 points 1 week ago

Nah, we love those creamy liqueurs. We were never a big alcohol household, i dont think i ever saw them drink anything neat.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 12 points 1 week ago (6 children)

Also uk but it was baileys and a mince pie as neither of my parents liked sherry

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Ashens. Released a video the other day about microwavable burgers that I couldn't immediately tell whether it was brand new or 10 years old.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 3 weeks ago

I had a controlled parking bay painted around my car years ago... Thankfully the council saw sense...

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 10 points 1 month ago

We had some growing near my front gate in my childhood home and I would frequently rub a leaf and smell it on my way out of the house in the morning. When my mother moved I tried to take a cutting but it ended up dying. Its such a nostalgic and amazing smell to me but never tried it as a tea before.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 month ago

I used to live with a system more like that. There was a food waste bin, a glass recycling caddy thing and some other stuff. I'd love to know if the more complicated categorisations results in more or fewer people recycling and sorting things correctly vs the all in one bin approach. Not having a provided wheelie bin is utterly wild to me though.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 1 month ago (3 children)

My council (in the UK the rules vary between coincils) just has two bins. We have a black lidded wheelie bin for general household rubbish that is collected every week and a red lidded bin for most recycleables (glass, plastic, paper cardboard) collected every two weeks but it has restrictions on things like plastic film. If you are found to break the rules (open lids, wrong items in bin) they may refuse collection and leave a note saying why it won't be collected. For example the black lidded general waste bin stipulates that all your rubbish must be inside refuse sacks, if you just have loose rubbish they won't collect it.

You just make sure the bin is accessible/near the road on collection day and it gets picked up. Bins get lifted and tipped into the bin lorry then they put the bins back.

You can also leave a plastic bag on the floor next to the bin for disposal of 'small electricals' (chargers, dead electronics etc.).

Bins are provided by the council and collection is paid by your council tax. Both bins are 140 litres but you can ask for a 240l if you have a bigger family producing more waste.

You can pay an extra charge (I think about £80 per year) for a 'green bin' and associated collection which is for disposal of plant waste (i.e. if you have a decent sized garden and maintain it).

And finally if you have too much rubbish or items that can't be easily disposed of (oil, large electronic items, diy waste) you can fill your car and take it to the local 'tip' (normally named something like waste management centres etc.) where you can get rid of it all.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 month ago

Very location specific but I enjoy dinlo

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Do they sell Smarties where you are? The most similar thing to M&Ms I can think of, just slightly larger. Problem is that its European but Nestlé...

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 2 months ago

Fair enough, more of a misuse as the word has kind evolved away from its original meaning.

[–] Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Red car and black car having a race

 

This was a fun and simple little project. It was my friend's birthday the other day and I hadn't got her a present yet. She is a rather accomplished palaeobotanist/artist and ginkgos are her favourite thing. So I actually downloaded one of her own pictures of some leaves, scaled them correctly to life size and printed them out. I then traced them onto leather, finished them a little and made a quick leather thong to string them onto (the clip and split ring are just there to give her options).

Really quick and fun little project and I'm rather pleased how it came out.

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/32715516

 

This was a fun and simple little project. It was my friend's birthday the other day and I hadn't got her a present yet. She is a rather accomplished palaeobotanist/artist and ginkgos are her favourite thing. So I actually downloaded one of her own pictures of some leaves, scaled them correctly to life size and printed them out. I then traced them onto leather, finished them a little and made a quick leather thong to string them onto (the clip and split ring are just there to give her options).

Really quick and fun little project and I'm rather pleased how it came out.

73
Simple wallet (files.catbox.moe)
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone to c/leathercraft@lemmy.ca
 

So this is a project I've been putting off for a while because I'm still bad at skiving and reducing the thickness of the t-pockets is kind of needed so it doesn't become super chonky.

I kind of like it? I made a bunch of mistakes, one side "pulled" a little after gluing and when I make my holes it was no longer properly aligned and ended up going through in such a way that it cut through the edge of the top layer meaning the stitching went a bit odd. I also didn't think through the assembly fully and made life harder for myself in a few ways putting it together.

Whilst I really like the look of the leather, I'm not sure how good a decision it was for this project - I feel that the natural unevenness of it looks great on a large panel but on something as small as a wallet the top edges where it is just a single layer look a bit rough and wonky.

This was also my first project using a new type of thread, I used a round waxed ramie thread rather than the normal flat waxed polyester thread I normally use. A real pain to thread onto the needle but it gives a really nice look I feel. I'd like to try a groover one day to make it possible to sink the thread into the surface a bit more.

So yeah, I'm relatively pleased, the pattern I made works even if I made mistakes in construction. If I was being fancier I could add an extra card slot or an extra wide pocket, a coin pouch or make it so that there is a pocket behind each card holder.

139
submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone to c/imadethis@lemmy.zip
 

A remarkably quick and easy project I wanted to get done in a short amount of time. I got to use a piece of purple leather I had been saving. Inside is a single card slot and a bigger space behind it.

Very similar to a wristlet bag I made recently but tiny, I really just wanted to focus on polish and execution for this one rather than trying anything crazy.

Happy with how this one turned out, I love the colours and, whilst I thought the leather I picked was too thick, it is pleasingly chunky and sturdy.

Also gave me an excuse to do my favourite little design accent which is to stitch a different piece of leather on, edge to edge, with that satisfying joining, crisscrossing, stitch (if anyone knows the technical name please let me know, I just made it for a different project, it seems to work and I love the look of it).

 

A remarkably quick and easy project I wanted to get done in a short amount of time. I got to use a piece of purple leather I had been saving. Inside is a single card slot and a bigger space behind it.

Very similar to the wristlet bag I made recently but tiny, I really just wanted to focus on polish and execution for this one rather than trying anything crazy.

Happy with how this one turned out, I love the colours and, whilst I thought the leather I picked was too thick, it is pleasingly chunky and sturdy.

Also gave me an exuse to do my favourite little design accent which is to stitch a different piece of leather on, edge to edge, with that satisfying joining, crisscrossing, stitch (if anyone knows the technical name please let me know, I just made it for a different project, it seems to work and I love the look of it).

25
Coin pouch/card holder (files.catbox.moe)
submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone to c/leathercraft@lemmy.ca
 

This was a smaller project after my last one, I wanted to make something relatively simple that could have a pouch with some ability to expand. I ended up reworking how I would make the expanding gussets a bunch of times, settled on attaching them to the front section by gluing then turning them in on themselves and stitching the fold, which has kind of worked but not my favourite technique there by a long shot.

I need to get some more, thinner, leather, I'm struggling with the thickness of some of the pieces I have at the moment, this one ended up rather on the chonky side because of it.

As ever, plenty of mistakes but overall still pretty happy with how it came out.

21
Wristlet/Clutch bag (files.catbox.moe)
submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone to c/leathercraft@lemmy.ca
 

I've had a bit of a hiatus in my leathercrafting recently. I designed this bag back at the end of May and quickly cut out the pieces, attached lining leather etc. then I just stalled for over a month. I got rather disallusioned with my design and the thickness of the leather (especially once lined) and was thinking it just wasn't going to go together properly and wouldn't work. I have a fairly limited number of larger leather panels so I was a bit depressed I had just wasted some.

And so it sat there, cut out but not in any way assembled for over a month. Until the weekend where I finally got some motivation. I had cut my dry spell short the week before by making some little trinkets for a gift (a simple passport cover and a little bookmark) and thought this was the time to get back on this horse too.

Some of my original fears did come to light, I had real issues skiving some of the leather at the join (the front and rear are separare pieces), I need a better skiving tool really and the lining and glue didn't help matters (I should have left a portion unlined). The leather also didn't shape to the gusset I made quite right either, I definitely need to learn how to properly measure for a gusset.

Desipite all those issues I'm actually quite happy with it. The overall shape and design is quite pleasing, the colours worked far better than I thought they would and I like not only the colour contrast but there is a texture difference between the red and blue leathers.

So yeah, really happy I finished this project, it was by far the most longest and most laborious project I've done so far and I've learnt a lot of stuff to apply to future designs.

 

So I've just become an aunt for the first time and I want to get something for the little man that is something meaningful to actually keep.

Normal presents are covered, I've got them a little keepsake box, practical every day stuff sorted etc. This is something which doesn't have to be now - think of it more like a christening gift but for a child that won't actually be christened.

Now obviously I can think of buying something or commissioning something (handmade blankets etc.) but it seems somewhat a waste to have a skill (or at least be learning one) and not putting it to good use for this kind of occasion.

Is there an item anyone can think of that would make a good gift? Doesn't need to be "useful" necessarily, just something that could be appreciated down the line. My mother thought I could make a something like a passport holder? Open to ideas!

126
submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone to c/foxes@lemmy.world
 

More pics:

 

So this was the product of a mistake. I had already taken my previous project (https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/24039237), measured it and replicated it in LibreCAD for a reproducible pattern and this was my attempt to use that pattern. Problem is that the full length of the strap is longer than a piece of A4 paper so the pattern was split over two pages. Plan was to scratch each half onto my leather and cut it out in one go.

However I got a bit too enthusiastic and accidentally traced and cut the entire thicker section of it out... So rather than abandon it I made the best of the situation and found a contrasting but similar thickness leather and tried my first join! A bit of glue, some accurate stitching chisel placement and they were attached! I was genuinely shocked as to how well it worked, I thought much more material would be needed for that to work that easily, or that I would end up with it looking a mess seeing as the strap holds a lot of tension in it when worn. I'm aware this isn't necessarily the right way of doing the join, I was in a bit of a hurry and just kind of skimmed the instructions (and not very well), I want to try a better, stronger and more decorative stitch next time.

Either way, this is my second iteration of the same design, its fascinating how just changing the material and colour a little changes the vibe of the entire thing. I'm going to keep iterating on the same design, get some snaps in rather than the SB closure, skive down the edges of those retaining bands to reduce the profile of the edge, get some edge bevelling or edge paint involved, try to do some lining etc.

16
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by Pipster@lemmy.blahaj.zone to c/leathercraft@lemmy.ca
 

For most of my detailed cutting I've been using generic #11 craft knife blades and it seems the "wear curve" on them is rather aggressive to start with then kind of goes flat.

Like, a new blade goes through leather like butter but that lasts for maybe 4-5 decently sized cuts before it starts needing multiple swipes and then at some point it almost feels like the leather is bumpy or grainy where the blade isn't cutting through denser sections.

I don't want to be too wasteful nor do I want to be forever changing blades - how long do you tend to go between changes?

 

I had a lot of fun with this one, just made it on the fly. Was originally planning to just make a relatively simple one that I could use to try lining an item but it seemed a waste as the suede side was so soft. Ended up creating this, its a really simple shape and not too difficult to make. Once I start doing some skiving to reduce the thickness where the retaining bands attach and some other embellishments I think this could look really good. I want to make this exact one again but this time in a much darker leather and with a really heavily contrasting thread.

I also made this keyring the other day, lets just say it was a learning exercise... The rivet was my first one and it went wonky, cutting a tiny slot with a knife through two layers was not a fun thing and I made a bit of a pigs ear of the stitching placement. I did however enjoy making a little geometric design with my awl.

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