I did something today I'm not proud of. I listed my copy of Final Fantasy 7 on an eBay auction. I threw in a controller-less PSone, because I once had a controller, but probably broke it in a teenage rage. Back in 2003, I used the cash money from my first summer job to purchase said PSone and Final Fantasy 7, and proceeded to play the dick (technical term) out of the game for each successive summer. Oh, PSone and FF7, we had some good times. FF8 had nothing on you, and although FF9 was quite fun, it lacked some of your hilarious translation-affected dialogue.
Here's to all the late nights spent playing awesome video games, back before we all just made fun of the graphics.
:(
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
bad pictures to accompany bad analogies
Let's take a minute to look at Project Libby. If you don't know how to knit, this won't seem too monumental to you. So let me put it in terms anyone from the 1950s would understand. Normally, knitting is a little like a typewriter. You type a row across in one direction, then slide the platen back to start, and type another row. (You and I both just learned something new about typewriters; congratulations, us!) The same is true of knitting, so that your work generally grows in a vertical direction.
So, now that you totally understand all the basic concepts of knitting, here's something new to throw into the mix. Project Libby requires a border, and this is where it gets weird.
What may not be clear from this picture is that I am knitting perpendicular to the scarf. So let's imagine rotating that piece of paper 90 degrees and resuming typing in the margins. That's kind of like what this is but way cooler, particularly because it doesn't involve any sewing.
I drew a really bad MS Paint diagram to help illustrate my point, but I think it fails at that. (I should really do my blogging from a computer with fancy drawing programs.)
In conclusion: this is pretty rad. If you're into this knitting stuff, the pattern is available here, and is very clear and easy to follow.
So, now that you totally understand all the basic concepts of knitting, here's something new to throw into the mix. Project Libby requires a border, and this is where it gets weird.
What may not be clear from this picture is that I am knitting perpendicular to the scarf. So let's imagine rotating that piece of paper 90 degrees and resuming typing in the margins. That's kind of like what this is but way cooler, particularly because it doesn't involve any sewing.
I drew a really bad MS Paint diagram to help illustrate my point, but I think it fails at that. (I should really do my blogging from a computer with fancy drawing programs.)
In conclusion: this is pretty rad. If you're into this knitting stuff, the pattern is available here, and is very clear and easy to follow.
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