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Mended dog harness
  • Dog tax! Here is the unrepentant culprit.

  • Mended dog harness

    My dog chewed her harness. Here's the mending job. Mended with embroidery floss by hand.

    2
    This is Eggplant. Eggplant is not a smart cat.

    Eggplant is one of my MIL's rescue cats. On my trip to see her, he has:

    • gotten into my car (luckily I noticed him before driving away)
    • attempted to nurse on a nonlactating dog
    • stuck his head into a pen holding the dog who tried to chase him
    4
    The other inflation issue
  • This meme is art

  • Does anyone put a foot on its side while sitting?
  • No, but I cross my legs while standing so that my feet are close to perpendicular. It's comfy.

  • A wiki for repairing anything
  • Bookmarking this!

  • Spooky Halloween shirt complete!
  • Holy shit this is awesome

  • Neurodivergent Math
  • Exactly! It's called planning ahead, get with it NT folks

  • SV: 7kg lost
  • Congrats

  • How do FOSS enthusiasts sew? What hardware do they buy?
  • Singer is one of the most popular brands so will be easiest to find parts for. Husqvarna and Brother are slightly less popular but still pretty popular. I've never heard of any other the other brands you listed. Some parts, like needles, are standardized. Others aren't.

    You can't sew with two needles at once, but there is such thing as a double needle that's used for special cases. More than likely you won't need one. The second spool holder is most likely for 1) use with a double needle, 2) quickly swapping out thread colors or 3) actually a bobbin/spool winder and not actually for holding a spool you're using.

    As for stitch pattern symbols, each symbol is supposed to look like the stitch it creates. I would recommend trying to find a video showing all the stitches for whatever machine you pick. If you can't find such a video, you can experiment with some scrap fabric.

  • Second darned sock
  • Nope, but YMMV

  • How do FOSS enthusiasts sew? What hardware do they buy?
  • So...the first thing you need to understand is that there are different types of sewing machines, as someone commented on your original post. There are:

    1. "Regular" sewing machines, which can be either mechanical or computerized. These are the type of machines virtually all hobbyists use and can handle a huge range of projects, from linen napkins to ballgowns. It's important to note that either the computer or the mechanical system determines stitch length and width.

    2. Serging machines, which cut the fabric while sewing it, and make a single specialized stitch.

    3. Embroidery machines. These are similar to "regular" sewing machines, but with a wider table and extra parts for stretching out the area you're embroidering. They also have a computer to track/calculate the stitches in a given embroidered image.

    As far as I'm aware, software is only available for embroidery machines. The computers in anything less than the most expensive of home sewing machines are pretty simple, and I'm not even sure how you would access them. They don't connect to wifi, and there are no ports in the machines except for power and the foot pedal.

    For the use cases you listed, I recommend a basic "regular" sewing machine such as this one. Any regular sewing machine built in the past several decades will be able to use a variety of stitches out of the box.

    For repairing socks specifically, I agree with the other poster who talked about zigzag and stretch stitches.

  • Second darned sock

    I've recently started darning my worn-out socks (shoutout to that one poster who posted a tutorial) and so it's going really well! My socks are still comfy, and the woven patches do the job.

    5
    SV: lost the weight I gained over vacation

    I had a week-long staycation while relatives visited recently, and weate out several times. I gained a couple of pounds. As of this morning, I have officially lost it all and am down to 152lbs.

    1
    Sewing a rip in my backpack
  • Do you have access to a sewing machine?

  • Check-in (of sorts)
  • I've been struggling to stay on the wagon for more than two days for the past several weeks. Weighed in this morning at 153.

  • [Vote] Which banner do you prefer?
  • noooo it's horrifying

  • How old were you when you were diagnosed (self or otherwise)? What was your journey to diagnosis?
  • My autistic dad frequently said that I was on the spectrum (always that exact phrase) but refused to have me diagnosed. I grew up just assuming that I had a high-functioning (as I need relatively few accommodations; my apologies if this is an outdated term) form of autism.

    Now as an adult, I still don't have the resources to get a professional diagnosis. I feel very much at home in groups like this; I have many of the symptoms of autism though not all; I got 136 on the RAADS-R test. That test was the tipping point that pushed me mentally from "strongly suspecting I'm autistic" to "self-diagnosed autistic".

  • How often do you brush your teeth?
  • I floss and brush religiously every night, have for many years. I had a cavity when I was young and the whole experience was terrible.

    I still ended up with multiple cavities as an adult.

  • How does this instance feel about this growing pact against federating with Meta?
  • Great article, very enlightening for those of us who are too young to remember the early internet.

  • What are the main excuses from people who don't care about digital privacy?
  • Not an excuse, but an explanation: ignorance.

    Most people don't know how ads or data collection works beyond the obvious uptick in a product after you search for it. They don't know what impact it might have.

    Full disclosure: I'm mostly in this camp. I only recently started using firefox over chrome, for example. I know that big tech collects obscene amounts of data, and monetizes it by targeted advertisements, but...beyond that, I don't know what FAANG can do with the data collected on me. I only have a vague idea of what's being collected.

  • SV: 7 lbs down since mid-May

    I started CICO, once again, mid-May at 160 pounds. Now at the end of June, I'm down to 153 lbs.

    0
    [vent] does anyone else get frustrated at larger folks who want to lose weight?

    I'm a short person. I'm also sedentary and classified as overweight but not obese. As such, my TDEE is around 1600-1700 calories. So, to lose weight at the pace I'd like, I have to restrict myself to 1200 calories a day.

    My partner is taller, fatter and has more muscle mass than me. He's talked about wanting to lose weight to get healthier, but when it comes down to it he won't do anything. Which is baffling to me, because his TDEE is high enough that he could eat waaay more than me and still lose weight.

    Ugh. It's frustrating.

    1
    Is learning programming worth it? Outside of a career, what can I do with programming?

    I learned a little bit of python back in college with the hope that it would give me a competitive edge in the field I hoped to enter. Lo and behold, I got a job in a different industry entirely and any knowledge of coding I once had became irrelevant.

    Would it be worth it to pick up my python textbook again and self-teach in my free time if I don't want to make a career of coding? What exactly can python be used to create?

    17
    Progress, not perfection (or, why I'll consider it a win if I'm still tracking calories at the end of this month)

    So I'm currently on my fifth or sixth attempt to lose weight. Historically, I've tracked my calorie intake for a few weeks or a few months, lost a few pounds, fallen off the wagon and gained it all back.

    There are a number of things going on this month that I'm choosing to participate in that are going to have to be cheat days or cheat meals. Without disclosing too many details, my workplace is holding an event where there's going to be a lot of free food. Another one is that I'll be traveling for work for a few days and I'll be eating out since I won't have access to a kitchen.

    Progress, not perfection is the mantra I've been repeating. I'm gonna want to stop counting calories on the work trip - a work trip was the hurdle that made me give on my last weight loss attempt. I'm trying to give myself some grace - it's okay if I gain some weight, because I can lose it again if I keep tracking my intake. Even if I don't limit what I eat at all on the trip and the other events, if I get back on the weight loss wagon that's still progress.

    1
    pedantichedgehog pedantichedgehog @sh.itjust.works

    Reddit refugee #2643.

    Posts 8
    Comments 26