Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Working-with-your-hands Wednesday

 



4 comments:

  1. It's all a matter of perspective ... ...

    I learned perspective drawing in college, in my drafting course; I was a "BC" student, "BC" meaning "before computers", so no computer assisted drawing software.

    (The BC is not strictly true, but IBM punch cards don't lend themselves to CAD at all.)

    I never was very good at it, but I mastered the basics. I still have my drafting kit, which looks like this:

    https://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41HvXklclHL.jpg

    Complete with templates, pencils, triangles, compass, scales, etc. I once brought it to a group project session, and one youngsters commented that the contents looked a lot like the toys his smaller siblings played with.

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  2. Same here Jeff. I did a few years of Technical Drawing in the last few years of highschool. I was terrible at it and the rest of the class had been doing it for the prior 3 years. One thing I remember though was the teacher telling me the light was formed by the dark. Very philosophic fpr a 16 year old.

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    Replies
    1. I know I had some very elementary exposure to draftsmanship somewhere in my schooling, but can't remember what the class was. Shop, maybe? I was terrible at shop, incidentally. I recall one time, I was supposed to cut the first letter of my first name out of a piece of wood. After an excruciating hour of fouling up, I finally gave the shop teacher a piece of wood that looked like an 'l', and told him that I actually went by my middle name, Larry (my middle name's not really Larry). He asked why I used a lower case, and I believe I simply mumbled something unintelligible and then the bell rang and I withdrew in not particularly good order.

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  3. We can be grateful that the illusionist hasn't taken an interest in forged currency. Even after I'd watched the entire process, the illusion was real to me.

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