stonepicnicking_okapi: journal (journal)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-27 03:00 pm
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smallhobbit: (Tenby bandstand)
smallhobbit ([personal profile] smallhobbit) wrote2025-06-27 03:44 pm
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Crafts - June 2025

I've been spending quite a lot of time on crafting this month.

IJune crafts )
stonepicnicking_okapi: otherwords (otherwords)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-26 11:24 am

My poem: stupid motel fridge by okapi

stupid motel fridge by okapi

I hear it. Doubt. Wait. Know. My refuge
Is anything but. It has found me.
The monster I have been running from
Is right here. In the room. With me. Now.
I listen. I hone in, creeping nearer,
Like one of those dull, topless slasher girls
Ineffably drawn to her doom.
The door resists at first, then rips
Like silver duct tape torn from the mouth
Of a hostage. Confirmed, justified,
fear and dread. T/here. Water where water should not be.
Falling. In drops. In wet rhythm.
Drip. Drip. Drip. Drip. Drip. Drip. Drip. Drip. Drip.

I can’t find a plug to yank.
I won’t invite a stranger
Into this. I know better. The dial
Clicks to clacks. Coolest. Off. Wait. Watch. Count.
Like Kabir’s moon and sun.
Then I am rolling terry cloth
To mop up the flood suspended on glass
And deaden the sound. Dead.en.sound.
I go back to bed. I get up
Again. Check. Go back. Listen
For noise I’ve made sure I won’t hear
Like the last girl standing before the credits roll.
smallhobbit: (Default)
smallhobbit ([personal profile] smallhobbit) wrote2025-06-26 12:04 pm
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25 Things in 2025 - Thing #10

Obtain refund on our Oyster cards

Not yet completed, but I have done what I can to this point. Transport for London issue Oyster cards, so, I followed the instructions on their website, since our cards are too old to apply that way, and phoned the number quoted.  A very pleasant told me to email and gave me the email address.  I emailed and got an acknowledgement, followed by a response requesting further details so they could identify me.  I replied with the details two weeks ago, and have heard nothing since.  I've now sent a further email asking for details and offering to send the cards to them.

I'm counting this as completion of 'Apply for refund on our Oyster cards'!
stonepicnicking_okapi: books (books)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-25 10:37 pm
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Book Bingo: June 2025 (#2)

My thought is 3 books make a post.

This bingo card was created by [personal profile] kingstoken. More about the challenge here: https://kingstoken.dreamwidth.org/109837.html




Recommended: The Seamstress [also titled The Time In Between] by María Dueñas is one that [personal profile] smallhobbit recommended as one of her favourites. It is the story of a young Spanish girl with a talent for dressmaking. Her loves, betrayals, breakdowns, and triumphs set against the Spanish Civil War and the beginning of World War II. She flees to Morocco and there is a lot about life there. She ends up being a spy. Very engaging, compelling. It's long. 600+ pages but I definitely got sucked in. [I am also trying to do as many squares as I can of [personal profile] garonne's 2025 Book Bingo here: https://garonne.dreamwidth.org/58219.html so I think this qualifies as G-G-1: Not set in UK/US/France/Germany.]

YA/Children's: Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson. This was on the list of books for 4th graders and Minisculus and I read it. It was about a young boy living in a poor rural American setting who wants to be a fast runner. He also loves to draw but hides his enthusiasm due to stigma. He makes friends with the new girl over the summer, and they invent a make-believe land in a secret hideout near their homes. Very tragic ending.

Sci-fi/Fantasy: Death Note vol. 1. by Tsugumi Ohba and illustrated by Takeshi Obata. This is a Japanese manga (which Minisculus much prefers to the reading list!). I wasn't sure if it fit this category but simple wikipedia calls it a 'supernatural thriller fantasy manga. It is the story of a Japanese high schooler who comes into possession of a mystical notebook and he finds he has the power to kill anybody whose name he enters in it. I enjoyed it even though reading right to left and back to front was a bit awkward. I wouldn't mind knowing what happens next but I don't think I'll seek another one out. [G-N-1: Book from a genre I typically avoid]
stonepicnicking_okapi: letters (letters)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-25 10:30 pm
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Word: Camphoric

Wednesday's word is...

...camphoric.

1. pertaining to or derived from camphor.

That's not helpful because I don't know that I know and/or remember what camphor is like. This was one of my prompts in my last Yahtzee roll. I was mainly interested in how it's used. And I discovered it is mainly perfume descriptions:

As soon as I sprayed it on I felt the presence of the original, in the heavy, bitter almond opening standing in for that famous camphoric tuberose-anise-incense blast.

Facing Down the Beast: Dior Hypnotic Poison, Marina Geigert, 2009

Narcissus is here, but it's the earthy, almost camphoric kind, not the sweeter type.

Perfume-Smellin' Things Perfume Blog, 2010
stonepicnicking_okapi: butterflycard (butterflycard)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-25 02:47 pm

Yahtzee Roll #6: Fill 5: Clearing the air

Title: Clearing the air
Fandom: BBC Sherlock
Pairing: Stella Hopkins/Sally Donovan
Rating: Gen
Length: 400
Prompt: camphoric
Summary: A riddle turns into a case.

Read more... )
stonepicnicking_okapi: butterflycard (butterflycard)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-25 02:43 pm

Yahtzee Roll #6: Fill 4: Too many clocks, not enough time

Title: Too many clocks, not enough time
Fandom: BBC Sherlock
Pairing: Stella Hopkins/Sally Donovan
Rating: Gen
Length: 400
Prompt:
Summary: A death at a nursing home leaves Sally with more questions than answers.

Read more... )
stonepicnicking_okapi: butterflycard (butterflycard)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-25 02:36 pm

Yahtzee Roll #6: Fill 3: A night in

Title: A night in
Fandom: BBC Sherlock
Pairing: Stella Hopkins/Sally Donovan
Rating: Gen
Length: 400
Prompt: extrovert
Summary: Sally suggests a night in.
Read more... )
stonepicnicking_okapi: butterflycard (butterflycard)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-25 02:32 pm

Yahtzee Roll #6: Fill 2: Secondhand spice

Title: Secondhand spice
Fandom: BBC Sherlock
Pairing: Stella Hopkins/Sally Donovan
Rating: Gen
Length: 400
Prompt: tangy
Summary: Stella and Sally have dinner and discuss a case.

Read more... )
stonepicnicking_okapi: butterflycard (butterflycard)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-25 02:28 pm

Yahtzee Roll #6: Fill 1: Fancy meeting you here

Title: Fancy meeting you here
Fandom: BBC Sherlock
Pairing: Stella Hopkins/Sally Donovan
Rating: Gen
Length: 400
Prompt:
Summary: Stella and Sally cross paths and have coffee.

Read more... )
stonepicnicking_okapi: ChopSuey (chopsuey)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-24 10:41 pm

News & Views: fry an egg edition

1. Heat index got up to 111 F here. Yee!

2. The best thing is that I drafted my casefic exchange fic and it's off to beta. Huzzah!

3. Minisculus started swimming lessons. Today I had a zoom parents' meeting with his soccer team for the fall and ordered his new uniform. Minor and his father are planning a trip to Jacksonville, Florida for a track meet in 2 weeks. He has a local meet on Saturday. We all went to the YMCA this morning together.

I took this from [personal profile] malinaldarose who took it from [personal profile] alexcat. There are many questions. I'll start with the first five.

1. What curse word do you use the most?
This will require some observation. Damn. Maybe? I think 'shitty' is the only adjective appropriate for some things. Likewise, with 'jackass.' My Southern accent definitely comes out stronger with curse words.

2. Do you own an iPod?
No.

3. What person on your flist do you talk to the most?
if you mean 'communicate with': [personal profile] smallhobbit, [personal profile] debriswoman, [personal profile] bethctg but I have a lot more penpals with whom I exchange and/or receive postcards: [personal profile] sweettartheart, [personal profile] dine, [personal profile] falkner, [personal profile] kingstoken [personal profile] dr_zook, [personal profile] spiralicious, [personal profile] sixbeforelunch

4. What time is your alarm clock set to?
6:40 pm on Tuesdays and 12:40 pm on Sundays for meditation circle

5. Do you still remember the first person you kissed?
Yes. Time, place, circumstance. I was 15. We were only 'going together' (that was the phrase) for about 3 months. I think I saw him once in a mall the year he went to university (he was a year older) but it was a brief sighting. I have tried googling him a couple of times over the years, but he either changed his name or died or is off the grid. No clue what happened to him.

How about Ancient Roman Bath Ambiance for a change?

regshoe: Cheyenne from Étoile, making a silly face and holding her hands up above her head in imitation of a dolphin (Dolphin)
regshoe ([personal profile] regshoe) wrote2025-06-24 04:55 pm
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Scattered thoughts on Étoile

There is podfic! I highly recommend both this and the original story :D

[Podfic] Folie à deux (29 words) by DevilWithABirdDress
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Étoile (TV)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Tobias Bell & Cheyenne Toussaint
Characters: Cheyenne Toussaint, Tobias Bell, Jack McMillan
Additional Tags: two geniuses equals more ulcers for jack, he doesn't deserve this but it IS funny, if i don't get more cheyenne and tobias interacting in season 2 i am going to be so sad, Podfic, Podfic Length: 10-20 Minutes, Audio Format: MP3, Audio Format: Streaming
Summary:

Who decided that letting Cheyenne and Tobias in the same room was a good idea?

Podfic of Folie à deux by Lirazel.



I'm seven-eighths of the way through rewatching, and I've been thinking about important things like the timeline and how to pronounce people's names:

Various thoughts )
stonepicnicking_okapi: record player (recordplayer)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-23 11:40 am
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Music Monday: Heat Wave by Martha & the Vandellas

There's a heat warning that the heat index might get up to 110 F (43.3 C) today and tomorrow.

smallhobbit: (Default)
smallhobbit ([personal profile] smallhobbit) wrote2025-06-23 04:12 pm
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25 Things in 2025 - Thing #13

Frame Cross Stitch

I finally got around to buying some picture frames.  And since it wasn't just my cross stitch projects that needed framing, but my two latest production posters from New Adventures dance performances, I did those two:

   

And here are Klimt's Sunflowers and Klimt's The Kiss

   


smallhobbit: (Gloucestershire Peregrine)
smallhobbit ([personal profile] smallhobbit) wrote2025-06-22 03:05 pm
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30 Days Wild - Week Three

Week Three had Learning About Wildlife as its theme.  I wasn't attracted to any of the possibilities, but the BTO website has lots of information I've been dipping into. I did get out and about a bit - less than I'd hoped, but it was HOT so not ideal for anyone.

However, I spotted a blackbird on two separate occasions (one male, one female), so I was able to submit my observations.

And yesterday, although not actually in the garden, I saw the house martins flying around, catching flies.  And also the house roofs at one point had a whole row of starlings, shouting about something - probably the threat of rain.  This is the tree they flew off to.



And my Week 3 badge:




holmesticemods: (Default)
holmesticemods ([personal profile] holmesticemods) wrote in [community profile] holmestice2025-06-21 03:16 pm

Summer 2025 Master List!

Sorted by category and fandom, all the amazing fanworks created by this round's participants, for your perusal and entertainment and with names attached! Now comments can be answered and works reposted all over the web, and pimping shall commence far and wide! If you haven't added your fanwork to the AO3 collection, and you want to, you can add it here: Holmestice Exchange - Summer2025. If your work has been on AO3 all along and is in a fast-moving tag ("Sherlock (TV)" or "Sherlock Holmes/John Watson", for example), you might choose to update its publication date to today, so that your work has its turn at the top of the tag.

Please come back and join us for our autumn/winter round! Sign-ups will open in September. You can follow us at [twitter.com profile] holmestice (twitter), [tumblr.com profile] holmestice (tumblr), or [community profile] holmestice (dreamwidth) for updates!

And now, without further ado, the Grand Reveal!

Art )
Fiction )
Podfic, Fanmixes, and Vids )
stonepicnicking_okapi: okapi (Default)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-21 07:50 am
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Yahtzee Roll

I don't know if this one's going to happen. I'll have to crank out 5 fills in 4 days. But it makes me think of BBC Sherlock's Sally and Stella.

https://getyourwordsout.dreamwidth.org/856782.html?thread=10808526#cmt10808526

regshoe: (Reading 1)
regshoe ([personal profile] regshoe) wrote2025-06-21 10:33 am
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Recent reading

I have not been brilliantly attentive to my last few books due to the whole 'new obsession' situation, but here they are anyway:

Bagthorpes v. the World by Helen Cresswell (1979). Picked up from a box of random free stuff left outside someone's house to be got rid of. The Bagthorpe saga (this is the fourth of ten books; I correctly guessed it wouldn't be sufficiently continuity-heavy to need reading in order) seems to be basically a wacky 70s sitcom in book form, featuring the adventures of a variously eccentric middle-class English family. In this book financial worries lead them to attempt to become self-sufficient, while they also have to manoeuvre for an inheritance from the eccentric great-aunt and deal with the five-year-old cousin's dedication to her 'death and funerals' phase. It's funny but not brilliant; it made decent enough reading during stressful travelling, which is what I did, but I won't seek out the rest of the series.

King Lear by William Shakespeare (c. 1606). Whenever I watch or read a Shakespeare play I enjoy the brilliant intricacies of language while probably missing about 90% of them, and then decide I'll have to think about it for a bit before forming proper opinions. Perhaps I should have watched a performance before reading; my mother has recommended the film with Laurence Olivier, and I will watch it at some point but see above re. I can only watch one thing at the moment. As it is, I thought the tragic ending was beautiful ('And my poor fool is hanged. No, no, no life!/Why should a dog, a horse, a rat have life/And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more/Never, never, never, never, never.'— ;__; ), and I was interested to read in R. A. Foakes's introduction to the Arden edition that a) while, as usual with Shakespeare's plays, the story of King Lear was a previously existing one which he adapted, his ending is different from that of the previous versions and b) between the late seventeenth and mid-nineteenth centuries virtually all productions used a rewritten/bowdlerised version of the play which replaced Shakespeare's ending with a happier one. Clearly the ending is an important matter! I was also puzzled by a passage where Shakespeare uses the word 'choughs' and Foakes says in a footnote that it means 'jackdaws': the scene is set on the cliffs of Dover so I thought it seemed likely that Shakespeare did mean choughs (Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax), but Wikipedia, citing Mark Cocker and Richard Mabey who are probably reliable sources for this sort of thing, agrees that 'chough' formerly meant 'jackdaw' (Coloeus monedula). But that's also puzzling because I have heard both birds and it seems to me obvious that 'chough' is better onomatopoeia for P. pyrrhocorax and 'jack' for C. monedula. Hmmm.

Metal from Heaven by August Clarke (2024). Set in a world undergoing a fantasy Industrial Revolution based on ichorite, a mysterious substance which causes a mysterious disease in the children of people who work with it; our narrator Marney Honeycutt (which rather inappropriately reminded me of Lucy Honeychurch) is one of the first to be afflicted, and also her entire family were massacred when the owner of the factory where they worked decided to put down a strike the really thorough way when Marney was twelve. She escapes and ends up being adopted by a gang of bandits who've made themselves an amazing socialist bandit paradise by murdering a local aristocratic ruler, pretending to all the other aristocrats that he's just really reclusive and taking over his house and land; meanwhile Marney plots how she's going to get revenge on that factory owner. Also, almost everyone is a lesbian. I thought various parts of the plot probably wouldn't stand up to thorough scrutiny, and there were some seriously questionable decisions made (e.g., if your entire plan for the future of your bandit paradise depends on the continued survival of one person, I think you can not let her go out on highly dangerous bandit raids, actually); I found the language often careless and sometimes jarringly modern for the fantasy Industrial Revolution; most of the sex scenes made no emotional sense to me (I don't want to overstate this as a flaw, I'm sure it was important and meaningful for the author and for the right kind of readers, but I was not one of them). However, I did like the book on the whole, and I think it's very good, largely for two reasons: 1) the worldbuilding is thoughtful and really interesting, especially in portraying a range of different religions, views of the world, naming systems and concepts of sexuality and gender, and in how these things vary by class; and in the eventual discovery of what ichorite really is; and 2) it is absolutely committed to being exactly what Clarke wants it to be, no holding back at all, and I respect them for that. Also the way it's narrated, with Marney speaking in first person to a specific other character, is great and used to good effect, and the ending is weird and amazing. I did guess the first big twist as soon as we found out the relevant backstory fact about the character in question, but I had no idea what was coming next.

I've just collected a 600 page book on the history of ballet from the library, so that's something more relevant to read next.