Drawing paper with white lines offer a better view.

Most drawing papers or writing papers has supporting lines. These lines can be black, gray or sometimes light blue. The most common is probably paper with gray lines. The blue pattern was meant for the reproduction cameras of old, where one could easily filter out the blue and get a perfect copy. This kind of paper should work just fine even today if you have a scanner that allows you to filter out selected colors. If you are stuck with an ordinary copier, though, you’re likely to transfer the supporting lines onto your copy unless you can adjust the brightness correctly. Swedish inventor Olof Hansson was faced with the same problem, and he solved it in an entirely different way. He reversed the colors of the paper, and created a light gray paper with white supporting lines. The invention, called Whitelines, is today sold in eight countries, and the company are working on adding more, including the US.brbr

The needle that opens wide.

We’re not sure wether this is a concept or if this needle can be ordered from somewhere. Of it’s a concept we’d like someone to start manufacture as soon as possible. If it’s an existing product we’d like to order a few. The last time we were re-fastening a loose shirt button, finding the eye of the needle with the end of the thread made us break out in a sweat. And it’s not going to get any easier as time goes by, is it? The Big Eye Needle, as it is called, is supposed to be an ordinary sewing needle, except that is is made from some new metal alloy allows the eye-part to expand to the size of a button hole with a slight pressure. There’s no information regarding cost, but our source says the inventor’s name is Woo Moon-Hyung. Those clever Koreans…br
PS. With this post we wish all our lovely readers a pleasant holiday. We’ll be back after Christmas Day with a new and hopefully interesting invention or idea. Until then;br
MERRY CHRISTMAS from the Smart Stuff crew! /Ed.brbr

Kinsey in Europe

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This is one of Kinsey’s latest, grabbed from a photo article he wrote for Fecal Face. It documents his most recent visit to Europe and his involvement with the FAME festival. You can check out the article here, or the Kinsey site here.

Creatures of Comfort

 … would you like to see and read some more about the things that inspire me and I really love ….

EZ

thanks Ez for the lovely invitation! I will be back tomorrow with some final Holiday Decoration posts just before Christmas … irene xx

Orange lola

Orangelola

Some last minute Christmas ideas to give to your loved ones from Orange Lola … like this beautiful piece of art by Julia Riordan from her Wild Things collection … the colors are absolutely fantastic … 

Orangelola_matta
.. or some great handmade handbags by Ingrid Zuleyha from the ‘matta’ collection … I love the print and the bag iteself is made from sturdy printed canvas and did you see the gorgeous metallic leather handles … fits absolutely everything you need. super delicate and pretty!  At Orange Lola you can easily find more super fun and unique presents!

Dazzle Camouflage

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Ever heard of Dazzle Camoflauge? In WW1 and WW2 it was meant to make ships more difficult to hit by making the ship’s course difficult to discern. Apparently It didn’t work all that well.

349 – The Slaw of the Land: West Virginia Hot Dog Map

slawmap

“The shootings, the knifings, the beatings… old ladies being bashed in the head for their social security checks… Nah, that doesn’t bother me. But you know what does bother me? You know what makes me really sick to my stomach? It’s watching you stuff your face with those hot dogs. Nobody… I mean nobody puts ketchup on a hot dog.”

– Harry Callahan (Clint Eastwood) in ‘Sudden Impact’.

Got that, punk? Hot dogs are serious business, and conflicts regarding what constitutes a ‘real’ hot dog may turn nasty (or even deadly, when it’s Dirty Harry you’re disagreeing with).

The elemental, essential parts of the hot dog are not in dispute – a frankfurter sausage (or ‘frank’) and an equally long, sliced bun to place it in. It’s what goes on the dog that causes all the trouble and discord. The garnishings and condiments that top up hot dogs vary greatly according to personal style and regional tradition. Among those regional varieties are, according to the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council (yes, there is at least one of everything in America):

  • New York: hot dogs topped with steamed onions and a pale, deli-style mustard;
  • Chicago: smothered in yellow mustard, dark green relish, chopped raw onion and tomato slices, sprinkled with celery salt;
  • Kansas City: topped with sauerkraut and melted cheese;

The NHDaSC also cites a Southern preference for coleslaw as a hot dog topping (imaginatively dubbed ‘dragged through the garden’). This also happens to be an essential ingredient of the West Virginia Hot Dog (WVHD), as described by wvhotdogs.com: “A true WVHD is a heavenly creation that begins with a wiener on a bun. Add mustard, a chili-like sauce and top it off with coleslaw and chopped onions (…) Different parts of West Virginia have variations on the theme but the common elements are sweet, creamy coleslaw and chili. Anything else is just not a true WVHD!”

Wvhotdogs.com is dedicated to “honoring and expanding awareness of this culinary delight”, by reviewing Hot Dog Joints (HDJs) in the state, and by providing this map. It details in which West Virginia counties coleslaw, that essential part of a WVHD, is habitually standard, optional or nonexistent as a topping. Interestingly, it is in both of West Virginia’s panhandles that coleslaw is least used.

If slaw dogs are a typically West Virginian phenomenon, it would indeed be understandable that they are less prevalent in the state’s most outlying areas. No HDJs in the Eastern Panhandle’s two easternmost counties (Jefferson and Berkeley) offer coleslaw topping, and it is ”usually not offered” in Morgan County, the westernmost one of the Eastern Panhandle’s three. Coleslaw is similarly inubiquitous is the Northern Panhandle’s two most (Hancock, Brooke) and least (Ohio, Marshall) extremitous counties. 

In West Virginia’s ‘mainland’, only Marion County mirrors the panhandles’ unfamiliarity with coleslaw. Strangely, nearby Barbour County is exactly the opposite: and island of hot dog orthodoxy in a sea of coleslaw renegades, where the topping is merely “optional” or “usually available”. In Barbour, as in the rest of the state (except the renegade north and northeast, and Cabell and Mercer Counties in the southwest), coleslaw topping is “standard”. As wvhotdogs.com states: “If you have to ask for slaw on a hot dog, it’s not a true WVHD.”

It would be interesting to know if this coleslaw deficiency in the state’s north and northwest corresponds to any broader cultural differences in the state. As for the origin and spread of coleslaw as a hot dog topping in West Virginia (and beyond), wvhotdogs.com has the following theory:

“Legend has it that slaw was first served as a hot dog topping at The Stopette Drive In on Route 21 near Charleston, West Virginia. This was during the Great Depression when weenies and cabbage were two of the most plentiful and affordable food items. The Stopette sold hot dogs with slaw for only a few years before every eatery in the area copied them. Within a few years restaurants all over southern and central West Virginia were including slaw as a standard ingredient. As many West Virginians left the state looking for work in the southern United States they took their taste for slaw on hot dogs with them. Slaw Dogs are now found in many areas of the south where West Virginia natives settled.”

And finally, it has this to say about ketchup on hot dogs: “There are many reasons why one shouldn’t eat ketchup on a hot dog any hot dog.First, the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council’s Hot Dog Etiquette rules dictate that no one over 18 should ever eat ketchup on a hot dog. Ketchup is destructive of all that is right and just about a properly assembled hot dog since its sweetness and acidic taste overpowers food and disguises its true flavor.”

Many thanks to Rich Rostrom for sending in a link to this map.

      

Fiat Premier Padmini


Fiat Premier Padmini

The Premier Padmini

Apple + “O” wax seal


Apple + "O"

Posttitle_HolidayGuest


Alice‘s DIY handmade origami Christmas decorations …

AliceOrigami wreaths are very easy to make and involve nothing more than some scissors and scraps of paper. I re-used some magazines, catalogues, old maps, and old wrapping paper. A nice little task to do when watching all those Christmas movies!

I got my instructions from the excellent step by step tutorial here :: There are also a lot more designs; I found a useful page here:

Alice_origami



To summarise this is the method that I used:


1. Cut out eight rectangular pieces of paper that are half as wide as
they are long. So in this instance I used paper 4cm by 8cm.


2. Fold each piece once in half along the length.


3. With the folded edges uppermost fold the top left and right corners down at right angles.


4. Then fold the piece in half across the width so that the flaps of the folded corners are inside.


5. Now you are left with a square end and a pointed end. The top of the
square end has two pockets. Take each piece and poke the pointed ends
into the pockets of another.


When you have linked all eight together you will have your wreath.

Alice_origami_2

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