I wound this #antique alarm clock and put it in my office next to the adding machines from a similar era. I can't tell whether the mechanical ticking in this otherwise quiet room will end up being endearing, ignorable, or infuriating.
I finished #weaving my overshot table runner! I had some extra warp at the end to play with so I experimented with a darker brown cloth weft and lime green pattern weft.
You can get a better sense of the pattern now that it's repeated a few times. This is called "Wandering Vine" (from Davison's famous #weaving pattern book) but is also known as "Cat Track" or "Snail Trail" which makes more sense once you can see more of the pattern.
I finally sat down and started #weaving the overshot table runner last night. The set up for this took quite a while, but I think the actual weaving will go pretty quickly.
This weekend I'm threading the warp for my next #weaving project, a table runner with a "Wandering Vine" overshot pattern. Threading 452 warp threads is a lot all at once so I'm splitting it into multiple 1-3 hour sessions.
So I made some progress with refurbishing the Comptometer this weekend. I freed up many stuck registers, but that revealed an issue with the carry mechanism on a few digits I will have to investigate further.
I'm speaking at LinuxFest Northwest this weekend on Saturday and Sunday:
https://lfnw.org/conferences/2022/program/proposals/652
https://lfnw.org/conferences/2022/program/proposals/653
It's being done virtually and I don't know if there will be video, but if so and you are wondering what all that stuff is in my background, here's a better picture.
Here you can see the yards of fabric as it wraps around the cloth beam. In between each napkin is two or more passes of another yarn so I can more easily separate them later.
Technical author, FOSS advocate, public speaker, Linux security & infrastructure geek, author of The Best of Hack and /: Linux Admin Crash Course, Linux Hardening in Hostile Networks and many other books, ex-Linux Journal columnist.