soemand: (Default)
soemand ([personal profile] soemand) wrote2025-12-29 12:32 pm
Entry tags:

A Brief Memory of City of Truro

Another blogger’s photo of a related locomotive pulled me straight back to a long‑ago visit to the train museum in York, where I first stood in front of 3717 City of Truro.

I remember the cool air of the hall, the not-faint smell of oil, and the quiet hum of people moving around the exhibits. City of Truro had a presence that stopped me mid‑stride — elegant lines, polished brass, and that unmistakable Great Western green. Even without nostalgia to lean on, it was impossible not to feel its significance.

Seeing that sibling locomotive in [personal profile] loganberrybunny post brought the moment back with surprising clarity. Amazing how a single image can reopen a memory you didn’t realize had settled so deeply.

City of Truro Steam Engine
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Capy ([personal profile] paperghost) wrote2025-12-29 08:23 am

(no subject)

TODO:
- SPAG check / edit remaining four pages
- Upload new graphics
- Draft emails
- Draft [redacted] message (I need to retool it, but it works.)
- Edit new index
- Double check old pages
- Find and replace old usernames
- Change URL
- Upload new stuff (??? I don't know what I meant by this)
- Squat old username and upload new splash

skygiants: Sokka from Avatar: the Last Airbender peers through an eyeglass (*peers*)
skygiants ([personal profile] skygiants) wrote2025-12-29 08:11 am
Entry tags:

(no subject)

The Queen's Embroiderer: A True Story of Paris, Lovers, Swindlers, and the First Stock Market Crisis did quite a good job of giving me historical context around the lives of artisans and upwardly mobile bourgeois in 17th and early 18th century France and only a mediocre job IMO of convincing me of its central argument, but I was reading it for the former and not the latter so I can't say I was disappointed per se ...

As the author, historian Joan DeJean, introduces her narrative, she was browsing the National Archives when she came across two documents: the first, appointing Jean Magoulet as official embroiderer to Queen Marie-Thérèse of France; the second, decreeing that Magoulet's daughter Marie Louise should be put in prison and deported to New Orleans on charges of prostitution. DeJean immediately dropped what she was doing to Get To The Bottom Of This and went on a deep dive into the entire Magoulet family as well as the family of Louis Chevrot, the young man whose involvement with Marie-Louise resulted in the charges above.

In order to write this family saga, Joan DeJean has pulled out every relevant family document -- marriage licenses, birth certificates, guardianship statements, criminal charges, recorded purchases, etc. etc. -- and she does a clear and interesting job of explaining what we can learn from them, what these kinds of documents normally look like and what their context is, what the specific features of these family documents imply, and letting you follow her logic with your own brain. I appreciate this very much! I had no idea, for example, that it was standard in 17th-century France for the court to appoint a guardian for any child who lost a parent, even if they still had the other parent living, to ensure that their financial interests were protected, something that came up often in this narrative where a lot of kids were losing parents in situations where their financial interests were not particularly protected. It's a really good example of historical detective work, how you can draw a picture of a family through time through the bureaucratic litter they leave behind, and I appreciated it very much.

On the other hand, Joan DeJean also occasionally slips into writing like this --

In the course of their attempts both to get rich quick and to save their skin when they got into bad straits, the Queen's Embroiderers became imposters, tricksters, con artists nonpareil. They lied about everything and to everyone: to the police, to notaries, to their in-laws. They lied about their ages and those of their children, about their professional accomplishments and their net worth. They caroused; they philandered; they made a mockery of the laws of church and state. The only truly authentic thing about them was their extraordinary talent and their ability to weave gold and silver thread into the kind of garments that seemed the stuff of dreams. In their lives and on an almost daily basis, haute couture crossed paths with high crime.

Savage beauty indeed.


-- which made me laugh out loud every time it happened. So, bug, feature? who could say ....

Anyway, Joan DeJean makes a pretty good argument for most of the family gossip she pulls out about the Magoulets and the Chevrots, but the center of her argument about the Great Tragic Romance between Marie-Louise Magoulet and Louis Chevrot rests on a really elaborate switcheroo that I simply do not buy. In drawing out her family saga, DeJean has become obsessed with the fact that there seem to have been two Marie-Louise Magoulets, one being more than a decade older than the other, and, crucially, also more than a decade older than Louis Chevrot; I guess this is technically spoilers for a three hundred year old scandal )

But a.) context about material culture and craftsmanship is what I was here for and context is what I got, in spades, and b.) if you're going to invent a historical conspiracy theory, make it as niche as possible, is what I say, so despite the fact that I don't BELIEVE DeJean I still spiritually support her. Has she perhaps connected a few more dots than actually exist? Perhaps. But I still certainly got my money's worth [none; library] out of the book!
moxie_man: (Default)
moxie_man ([personal profile] moxie_man) wrote2025-12-29 07:36 am
Entry tags:

Yes, I'm still alive

I just don't post much as I have little to say at times.

I wound-up with a mini-vacation for Christmas. We get the holiday itself off. They gave us the day after. So, automatic 4 day weekend. I planned on taking half of Christmas Eve off. Except, thanks to the weather, we closed down at noon on Tuesday, 12/23. So I took my laptop home to work remotely Wed. morning. Why go in for a couple hours, turn around and go home? Well, that storm lingered just long enough for work to call off on Wed. So, a 4 day weekend became 5.5.

Guess what? Snow to sleet to ice to rain storm overnight. As a result, delayed start this morning. So, nearly a 6 day break from work.

Alas, as I'm the point-of-contact in my state for the certification program (one step below a license) for the adult mental health workforce, despite the holiday, I'm dreading to see how many emails and voice messages I'll need to return when I do go in for 10am local.

EDIT: And soon after I posted this originally, they decided to call off for the day.
stonepicnicking_okapi: letters (letters)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote in [community profile] 1word1day2025-12-29 06:57 am

Monday Word: Maquette

maquette [ma-ket, muh-]

noun
a small model or study in three dimensions for either a sculptural or an architectural project.

examples
1. we make midnight a maquette of the year: "on new year's eve" by Evie Shockley
2. This hand-painted cold-cast porcelain maquette of Owlman is based on art from the highly anticipated Warner Home Video made-for-DVD animated original movie, Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths! DC Comics for February 2010 | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News 2009

origin
1900–05; < French < Italian macchietta, diminutive of macchia a sketch, complex of lines < Latin macula mesh, spot

Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's maquette for the fountain he donated to Valenciennes
maquette
conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-12-28 03:47 am

Soooooooooooooooo, people at /r/EnglishLearning will at least once a week

ask a detailed question about phonology, such as "Do you really pronounce 'tr' as 'chr'?" (Yes, yes we do. We all do. It's almost impossible not to due to the physiology of those phonemes.)

And this will generate a burst of absolutely, frustratingly useless nonsense, because people just do not know how they talk. They don't know how they talk, they can't analyze their phonetics on the fly, and they are staggeringly unaware of these facts.

I keep telling these people to go to /r/linguistics instead, but thus far, nobody has taken my advice. Which is a pity, because I do give excellent advice, especially in this case.

But seriously - nobody knows how they talk. It's like trying to explain the biomechanics of walking. Sure, you've been doing it since you were a toddler (probably?), but that doesn't mean you have any understanding at all of what the hell you're doing as you propel yourself from place to place. I bet you can't even explain how you adjust for your varying center of balance!
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joeb ([personal profile] joebanks) wrote2025-12-29 02:07 am

(no subject)

We are under two (three, if you count the gale warning on the lake) weather warnings at the moment. A wind warning with sustained winds of 30 mph with possible gusts of 50 to 60. And a winter storm warning, where after the temperatures drop nearly 40 degrees by morning, we could have driving snow and whatever else.
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote in [site community profile] dw_community_promo2025-12-29 01:00 am
Entry tags:

Birdfeeding

[community profile] birdfeeding is a community started on January 1, 2023. It's all about birdfeeding, birdwatching, and other topics relating to birds. It also touches on nature in general, and observations that may effect bird activity such as local weather. Both text and image posts are welcome. Now is a great time to join as hungry birds are easy to attract with a feeder.

Community resources include posts about birding events, nurseries that sell seeds or plants attractive to birds, bird identification apps, the benefits of birdwatching, and other useful materials. Check out the anchor posts from Three Weeks for Dreamwidth.


Recent posts:

Photos: House Yard

Christmas Bird Count

Birds
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catherineldf ([personal profile] catherineldf) wrote2025-12-28 04:50 pm

Year in Review, Part the First: The Personal Stuff

Okay, so apart from the horrors at the national and international level, my 2025 was defined by the following events:
  • My wife and partner of 29 years, bookbinder and conservator Jana Pullman, died in February after a 5 year struggle with dementia (the same week as my mom's birthday, which will be super fun this year).
  • My boy kitty, Shu, got diagnosed with feline diabetes requiring multiple insulin injections per day at the ripe old age of 15 in early March.
  • I was awarded a 2025 Alice B. Readers Award in March. This is an anonymous juried award for an author's body of work in sapphic fiction, nonfiction, poetry and/or drama. Previous winners have included such "lightweights" as Joanna Russ, Dorothy Allison and this year, Emma Donoghue. I was floored and thrilled and floored again. It is a lovely thing and it made my year much better.
  • In June, my friend Anne Shaw died unexpectedly (I didn't find out about it until several weeks later, for reasons I won't go into now) and I miss her a lot. Other folks who passed in 2025 who were friends/colleagues to one degree or another: bi activist and organizer Lou Hoffman; poet and WisCon/organizer.volunteer Terry Garey; and Tiptree Award/WisCon/lots of other things artist Freddie Baer.
  • In July, my IT contract ended (this was expected). But in the ensuing months of unemployment, it has become clear that between my age, the fact that I have to work remotely due to kitty care needs and changes in the job market, I am probably involuntarily retired from IT after 25 years. I have some mixed feels, but acknowledge that I was completely and utterly burned out and that, money aside, it is time for a change.
  • Over the summer, Jana was awarded the first posthumous Laura Young Award for Service to the Guild of Bookworkers. I wasn't able to swing going to Iowa City for it due the job situation and the need to pay for cat sitting, so other folks were kind enough to deliver my speech on her behalf and bring back the award. Thanks to Parry, Madelyn and Chris!
  • I started writing fiction again! And nonfiction! I had a new story up at Heather Rose Jones's LHMPodcast, "An Encounter with a Lady" and an short nonfiction piece at New Edge Sword & Sorcery Magazine, "Joanna Russ: Sword & Sorcery Pioneer?" I will have a second nonfiction piece out in New Edge in 2026, "Thula the Maid and Her Creator," date TBD. Thanks to embracing the writing sprint model, I currently have 2 short stories, a novella and the next werewolf novel in progress.
  • I am knuckling down on making Queen of Swords Press profitable enough to pay me on a considerably more regular basis, to which end, I have enrolled in the State of Minnesota's CLIMB Program for entrepreneurs and Hennepin County's Elevate program, which does small business mentoring. I am also attending a crap ton of  classes and such and am trying to spin up an editing business (hire me!). You can also check out my Ko-fi store for sundry workshops, coaching, downloadable things to read, boxes by Jana, etc. 
  • I set myself a goal of doing one new thing and one thing that I hadn't done since before lockdown in 2020 each month. This included some travel adventures: a weekend in Red Wing, MN, at a historic hotel by myself; going to Seattle Worldcon and coming back by sleeper car with friends on the train; and flying first class for the first time in my life to Readercon in Boston. I've also been visiting new to me places around the Twin Cities, like Raspberry Island for the Alebrijes show this summer, and places I keep meaning to check out again, like the new location of the Somali Museum of Minnesota and the Landmark Center in St. Paul. Lately, I've been working on making some new friends as well as connecting with my old ones.
  • I continued with my weekly online movement and isolation dance/exercise class with local Middle Eastern Dance maven, Cassandra Shore (apparently, I can now "Shimmy Like Your Sister Kate" at a very basic level). I found a massage therapist I really like. Apart from ongoing pain issues and the occasional migraine, I'm pretty healthy.
  • I started a 3 part series of classes at the University of Minnesota to get a certification in Data Analytics in October. I aced the first one so here's hoping I can do as well on the next two classes!
  • I'm ending this year with some hopeful financial news, which is lovely. So overall, a very mixed bag of year from devastating to stupendous and back again.
Finally, many thanks to the friends who've helped me get through this year. A lot of people helped in a lot of different ways and I want you to know that I greatly appreciate it!Next up, publishing news!

inchoatewords: Miss Piggy from the Muppets, dressed like a librarian with hair swept back, a long-sleeved white blouse, and a purple skirt. She is holding a book and is reaching up with her other hand to a case full of books. Above her head is the word book and a heart (books)
inchoatewords ([personal profile] inchoatewords) wrote2025-12-28 06:39 pm
Entry tags:

Media Post

Movies: I watched about half of The Sound of Music while visiting the in-laws. Also watched The Family Man, the early-00s movie with Nicolas Cage. I know that it's supposed to be a send-up of movies like It's a Wonderful Life and A Christmas Carol, but this movie annoyed me so much.

If you've never seen it, Cage's character plays a workaholic named Jack, who years prior to the movie, chose career over his girlfriend (Tea Leoni). An intervention on Christmas Eve at a convenience store holdup leads the gunman (an angel, presumably, played by Don Cheadle) to show Jack a "glimpse" of life for the man who has everything he wants (this is what he says to the angel when Jack is asked this).

Jack goes to sleep in his New York apartment and wakes up the next morning as a suburban dad, living in New Jersey with wife and two kids. The wife is Leoni's character; in this "glimpse," Cage never left her and instead of a high-powered executive, he's a car tire salesman for his father-in-law's business. Of course, he has trouble navigating this new life, but then he learns to love it in time.

And once he does, he goes to sleep again and wakes up in his old life.

So, I hate this movie because this "glimpse" is really torture . . . both ways. A "glimpse" of the life that wasn't would be a one night thing, like Scrooge sees when he is visited by the ghosts. In this movie, the vision of what might have been takes WEEKS of real life time. He can't get anyone to understand what's going on with me, which, admittedly, would be unbelievable.

But then he does come to love his wife and kids, and by happenstance, he meets the CEO of the company he worked for in his old life, and due to his prior knowledge, he's able to talk himself into a job. Things are looking up for him, and then, he sees the angel again and BOOM, he's back in his old life - no wife, no kids, just loneliness and a bachelor apartment.

This is incredibly cruel! The movie does end on a hopeful note, but I still did not like this at all. I don't understand why people like this movie. Or why you would want to watch it more than once!

Television/Streaming:
We finished season 2 of Farscape and Buffy before we left for the holiday. Aeryn's dead, Crichton has completely lost his mind, and after the chip gets excised, he can't speak - and a cliffhanger here, too. Buffy's mom finding out that she's a vampire slayer, having to team up with Spike, and then Buffy's mom telling her not to come back. Oof. I don't like Joyce very much right now at all. You can't say something like that to kids and not have them take it literally.

Books:
I chose Lord of the Butterflies by Andrea Gibson for the last book to read for DEI book club this year, as it's the holidays and I thought a book of poetry would be an easier choice. Everyone agreed. Which is not to say these poems are light; they're about gender and politics and fraught familial relationships, but I found some ideas in them quite relatable. It's a shame I was not familiar with Gibson until this year, after they died from cancer earlier this year.

I also finished The Dark is Rising by Susan Cooper, which I have now read three times. My online book club chose to read it as an optional read over the holidays, as that is when the events in the book take place. This is a fantasy series, but it can be read as a standalone. On my third read this time, I think I enjoyed the family and celebrations bits more than the fantasy bits, but still quite good overall.
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
David Gillon ([personal profile] davidgillon) wrote2025-12-28 03:45 pm
Entry tags:

All that festive stuff

Well Christmas dinner could have been a disaster, but for the fact that my sister decided to cook the turkey joint on Christmas Eve, not Christmas Day. We popped the turkey into a hot oven after cooking pizza for ourselves and then settled down to watch Red One, which was almost so bad it was good. At the end of the film my sister went to check on the turkey, which was now mildly defrosted, as opposed to piping hot. The oven was just as cold, no matter what the controls said. Cue panic.

Fortunately the oven started heating up again as soon as we started fiddling with knobs, and it was just 10PM, so there was just time to cook it for another 2 hours, this time with frequent checks, and still be in bed before Santa started on his rounds.

Christmas morning we went down to see my mother for a couple of hours, cut slightly shorter than expected because the care home was starting dinner at 12:30 rather than the normal 1PM, but hadn't actually mentioned that to any of the relatives. Mind you we passed the hot food trolleys on the way out and it smelled gorgeous.

So we didn't even start cooking veg etc until after 1PM - I say 'we', but in truth it was almost all my sister, I just helped around the edges. And we finally sat down to eat at 3:30ish, much later than we have in the past. Amazingly the turkey had come through its ordeal of four hours in the oven without drying out.

When we finally got around to presents it was quickly apparent Poppy the dog had more than the rest of the family together - though now my sister has to persuade her that a reindeer soft toy almost as long as she is just isn't appropriate for taking on a walk!
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
luzula ([personal profile] luzula) wrote2025-12-28 08:43 pm
Entry tags:

Write every day: Day 28

Day 28: Alibi sentence. Still lots of family time, now at my parents' place, so no farm news. How about you?

Tally:
Read more... )
Day 27: [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] chestnut_pod

Day 28: [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] china_shop
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2025-12-28 10:35 pm
Entry tags:

vital functions

Reading. Me, a few days ago:

... I picked up the bad and naughty book I'm not supposed to read after 8pm because it's too annoying It was annoying

So that's how The Story of Pain (Joanna Bourke) is going. Read more... )

I have also made a tiny bit more progress on Index, A History of the (Dennis Duncan), read one and a half magazines sent to me by Organisations Various that I feel bad recycling unread but which have a tendency to Accumulate in that state, and some of a Libby sample of Cloistered (Catherine Coldstream) based on one of you mentioning it mid-November, which I have just about got up to on my reading page. Also, I am up to mid-November on my reading page.

Added to the queue are Vespertine (Margaret Rogerson; courtesy of someone mentioning it a while back, probably [personal profile] skygiants, and my library Acquiring A New Copy), The Long Journey of English (Peter Trudgill; a present from my mother, in her capacity as a linguist), and Terry Pratchett: A Life With Footnotes (Rob Wilkins; a loan from my father). For the sake of my spreadsheet of books (with the increasingly inaccurate filename books-2011.ods) I am probably going to be trying to finish rather than start things for the rest of the calendar year (not the Bourke) but we'll see how that goes.

Listening. ... an episode of Elementary that a relative was watching...

Playing. Scrabble! Monument Valley 3. Inkulinati (having another go at beating my head against a run at Master difficulty).

Cooking. Another batch of the quince and squash stew. Two days' worth of minestrone (with bulgur wheat because we are apparently out of tiny pasta, but not that), which worked well as Some Lunches. I think little else of note.

Eating. So much of my mother's cooking various, including a few last tomatoes from her greenhouse (!!!). Also my father's mince pies.

Exploring. Several stonks around Cambridge, including visits to some little free libraries and to various likely locations for snowdrops (mainly the grounds of Churchill, up at the chapel end, where they do indeed exist). Brief trip to Anglesey Abbey, which also has snowdrops coming out and one very enthusiastic daffodil; winter garden remains lovely.

Growing. The pineapple leafs are taller than the (remaining, trimmed) originals, as of... two weeks ago? Ten days? But I think I hadn't yet mentioned and it's still making me smile.

There is one (1) curry leaf cutting that is Not Yet Dead.

greghousesgf: (pic#17098438)
greghousesgf ([personal profile] greghousesgf) wrote2025-12-28 01:22 pm

(no subject)

Had a great time with my friends last night. Earlier today I went to this great French bakery in my neighborhood to pick up a few goodies, also petted some friendly doggos and had an interesting conversation with a young guy who works in my neighborhood mom and pop grocery store about music (he liked my Velvet Underground tote bag).
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soemand ([personal profile] soemand) wrote2025-12-28 04:55 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

The house feels whole again tonight. Everyone’s finally back under one roof. The noise, the clutter, the familiar rhythm—it’s all here, and it’s exactly what I didn’t realize I was missing. Nothing extravagant, just the quiet relief of togetherness. Tonight, that’s enough.
cmk418: (Oz)
cmk418 ([personal profile] cmk418) wrote in [community profile] sweetandshort2025-12-28 02:22 pm

10 out of 20 - OZ (HBO) - Martin Querns, Tim McManus, Sean Murphy - Rehearsals on the Road

Title: Rehearsals on the Road
Fandom: OZ (HBO)
Characters: Martin Querns, Tim McManus, Sean Murphy
Rating: Teen
Word Count: 300
Prompt: Mistletoe
Summary: When Querns' car is in the shop, he has to ride with some of his staff. It may be a decision he comes to regret.

Rehearsals on the Road )
stonepicnicking_okapi: coffee (coffee)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote in [community profile] sweetandshort2025-12-28 02:48 pm

{10 out of 20]: Poirot: Gen

Title: That cup
Fandom: Poirot
Rating: Gen
Length: 300
Prompt: singing Christmas carols
Summary: Poirot is aggrieved by Hastings' cup.

Read more... )
stonepicnicking_okapi: namjin (namjin)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote in [community profile] sweetandshort2025-12-28 01:43 pm

[10 out of 20] BTS: gen

Title: Ugh
Fandom: BTS
Characters: RM & Jin
Prompt: snowstorm
Rating: Gen
Also for: [community profile] adventdrabbles day 28 prompt: wizarding nutcracker
Summary: Namjoon is miserable. Hyung helps.

Read more... )