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  1. SOCKS, , more info

    The Permanence of Form from Vernacular to Rationalism: Giuseppe Pagano’s “Architettura Rurale Italiana” at Milan Triennale (1936)
    Giuseppe Pagano was a central figure in Italian architecture of the first part of the 20th century. Along with his practice as a rationalist architect and his political engagement, which led him to leave the Fascist Party, join the Resistance, and later be deported to Mauthausen, he devoted part of his life to documenting Italian rural architecture through the lens of his Rolleiflex. In 1936, together with Guarniero Daniel, he …
    By Mariabruna Fabrizi, 468 words
  2. Stitches on the Run, , more info

    Recommended tools for drawing your own sashiko patterns
    I've been using these kind of tools for more than 10 years and I love them. Lots. But if you don't want to invest into sashiko supplies yet, you really don't have to. When people started doing sashiko, there were no heat-erasable pens, no cutting mats, no washi tape. These are just some recommendations for things that I cherish. Feel free to choose.Stitches on the Run is reader-supported. When you …
    By Janette Haruguchi, 322 words
  3. The Female Gaze | an AWFJ blog, , more info

    Payal Kapadia, first Indian to win the Grand Prix at Cannes – Interview by Mythily Ramachandran (Exclusive)
    At the recently concluded Cannes Film Festival, Indian director Payal Kapadia etched her name for eternity in the annals of cinema history by winning the 'Grand Prix.’ Kapadia's debut feature All We Imagine As Light, was singled out among 22 entries. Her contenders included the likes of Andrea Arnold, Francis Ford Coppola, Jia Zhange-Ke, Paolo Sorrentino, Sean Baker, and Ali Abbasi. Kapadia is the first Indian woman filmmaker to win …
    By awfj-admin, 137 words
  4. Radiator Design Blog, , more info

    "What's on your bookshelf" at Rock Paper Shotgun
    Just a brief update here -- I recently had the honor of participating in Rock Paper Shotgun's "what's on your bookshelf" interview series.It's one of my favorite gaming journalism things happening at the moment, full of interesting book recs and observations from smart people like Alice Bell, Josh Sawyer, and Xalavier Nelson Jr. Check out the full series listing here.The implication is that I too am also a Smart One. …
    By Robert Yang, 212 words
  5. Hellbox · Type : Writing, , more info

    On Ligatures
    Typographic glyphs have their moments. The @ symbol was barely used before it became indispensable for email and social media. The creation of the single European currency saw thousands of fonts being reissued to include € at the turn of the century. It’s likely that some crypto-boosters are hoping this will happen again, and the […]
    By Benjamin Campbell, 58 words
  6. Zampanò — Write.as, , more info

    We Are the Law
    This is going to be somewhat rant-y. I’ll hopefully get something longer written about this at some point, but for now a brief post will have to do. I struggle a lot with finding satisfaction in...things. I have to be careful, because at least some of this is biochemical, and it’s easy to find something that would make sense as a cause and assume that it’s actually the cause (as …
    925 words
  7. peterme.com, , more info

    An opinionated take on travel in Japan
    My family just returned from 2 weeks in Japan, broken up as such: Tokyo (4 full days, plus the evening of the day we landed) Japanese Alps Matsumoto (1 day) Takayama (2 days) Kyoto (3.5 days) Osaka (2.5 days) This is very much a first-timer’s trip, hitting the main three cities. We added the Alps to get away from dense urban spaces for a bit, and also for the historic …
    By peterme, 1,390 words
  8. Clagnut by Richard Rutter, , more info

    Use of ch unit considered inappropriate (in certain circumstances)
    When did we start using the ch unit to specify the maximum length for a line of text in CSS? To do so makes assumptions that don't necessarily hold up, and there are more appropriate units to use. Also: was it my fault? Read more.
    54 words
  9. The Chronicles of a Girl Worried AF, , more info

    Confidence
    I took a little break from sharing to get used to my new normal. A week ago I had to have some blood work done and for the first time in my memory I engaged in the process. Usually I would be sick from nervousness for days before. I would avoid and postpone. I would get to the blood draw place and start to panic. When it came time for …
    By Call Me Alice, 801 words
  10. Coding with Jesse, , more info

    Does your web server scale down?
    Are you paying for servers sitting idle in the middle of the night? When we talk about scaling a web server, we often focus on scaling up. Can your server handle a spike in traffic? As your business grows, can your database handle the growth? There's less focus on scaling down. It makes sense, because most businesses are focused on growth. Not too many are looking to shrink. But if …
    337 words
  11. Amy Goodchild — Blog, , more info

    Chaos in the medium: watercolour plotting
    Over the past few weeks, I've been experimenting with painting in watercolours using my AxiDraw plotter. Watercolour is a medium I enjoy painting in (by hand) as a personal hobby, kind of separate from my public art making, so it’s been interesting to combine it with code. I’ve thought about trying this for a while but I was finally spurred on to do it after I visited Licia He’s studio …
    By Amy Goodchild, 1,655 words
  12. joisig gone awol | Posts, , more info

    GitHub and Sentry have perfect invoice filenames
    CrankWheel uses Maxio (née Chargify) for subscription management. It’s OK but I’ve never been super duper happy with it (mostly because I chose it for its flat fee structure, then later they switch to charging a flat fee plus percentage… and the switching costs are high). Today, I present another small gripe with it: The filename of invoices sent by Chargify looks something like _541780067.pdf, and this can’t be configured. …
    By Jói Sigurdsson, 290 words
  13. Both Sides of the Table, , more info

    Why the Future of Space Starts in LA
    Credit: ApexToday, Apex announced their Series B funding round, led by XYZ Ventures and CRV, with participation from Upfront. And if you spend much time in LA, you’ll quickly realize that we’re in a groundswell of space and defense startups.Is it because of the rich engineering talent coming out of Caltech, UCLA, USC, Harvey Mudd, and all the other universities?Is it because of the long history in the region of …
    By Mark Suster, 292 words
  14. Dr Alun Withey, , more info

    Should I Stay or Should I go?: Encouraging travel in the early modern period.
    Travel today is often portrayed as a healthy activity, good for body, mind…and what’s left of the spirit! A good holiday is generally viewed as a tonic, and holiday company advertisements extol the virtues of ‘getting away’, encountering new places, people and cultures and (if you want to ‘live life to the full’) experiences. As one travel website rather cheesily puts it, “jobs fill your pockets, but adventures fill your …
    By Dr Alun Withey, 927 words
  15. Outside the World dot com, , more info

    Dear Mom
    I guess this is goodbye. I thought we still had a little time. Even though I said it was okay to go, I held onto a spark of hope that I could squeeze your hand one last time on earth. Oh, how I wish the flight had been a little earlier.The past few months have been heart-achingly gut-wrenching. I'm so sorry I took you out of your house. I'm sorry …
    By RyanDavid, 709 words