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  1. Aeon | a world of ideas, , more info

    Main character syndrome
    Why romanticising your own life is philosophically dubious, setting up toxic narratives and an inability to truly love - by Anna Gotlib Read at Aeon
    By Anna Gotlib, 28 words
  2. Strong Towns, , more info

    A Focus on Helmets Clouds Our Vision of What Makes Kids Safe
    This article was originally published, in slightly different form, on Strong Towns member Will Gardner’s Substack, StrongHaven. It is shared here with permission. All in-line images were provided by the author. This raised crosswalk and the separated path on the right are examples of infrastructure that keeps walkers and bikers safe. With the fall routine comes the launch of the bike bus here in my hometown of Fairhaven, Massachusetts. Last …
    By Will Gardner, 965 words
  3. Open Culture, , more info

    How Kodak Invented the Snapshot in the 1800s, Making It Possible for Everyone to Be a Photographer
    We still occasionally speak of “Kodak moments,” making conscious or unconscious reference to the slogan of the Eastman Kodak Company in the nineteen-eighties. Even by that time, Kodak had already been a going concern for nearly a century, furnishing photographers around the world with the film they needed to capture images. Its very first slogan, unveiled in 1888, was “You Press the Button, We Do the Rest,” and it heralded …
    By Colin Marshall, 568 words
  4. Drawing Matter, , more info

    2024 Architecture Summer School: Translations between drawings and models
    Photo: Anna-Rose McChesney Drawing is the act of translating a thought to a mark on the page—where the hand is in conversation with the mind. This conversation is marked by an unbridgeable gap between the idea and the output—sometimes betraying and exposing the thought, and other times surprising you with an unintended vigour and clarity. Miles Davis once said that ‘what makes a wrong note right is the note you …
    By Matthew Page, 584 words
  5. Electric Literature - Home, , more info

    Our 15 Most-Read Posts Of All Time
    Fifteen years ago, Electric Literature started as a print and digital quarterly journal during the glory days of the print magazine era. Our very first issue surpassed 10,000 copies in sales, we were stocked in newsstands and bookstores, and as an e-book. We were one of the first to publish literary fiction using an online platform, winning the 2011 National Book Foundation Prize for Innovations in Reading. In that decade …
    By Marina Leigh, 1,580 words
  6. It's Psychedelic Baby Magazine, , more info

    ‘Rock in the Swing’ by Don Aaron Mixon | New Album, ‘The Welcome Mat’
    Exclusive video premiere of ‘Rock in the Swing’ by Don Aaron Mixon, taken from the latest album, ‘The Welcome Mat.’ Don Aaron Mixon invites you to swing into his world with the premiere of ‘Rock in the Swing,’ a heartfelt track from his new double album, ‘The Welcome Mat.’ Born in Wheeling, West Virginia, and raised in a trailer park in Pensacola, Mixon’s music is a raw, autobiographical exploration of …
    By Klemen Breznikar, 317 words
  7. Beneath the Stains of Time, , more info

    His Burial Too (1973) by Catherine Aird
    Kinn Hamilton McIntosh is a British mystery novelist, known as "Catherine Aird," who started her writing career in the sixties with The Religious Body (1966) and published her most recent novel, Constable Country (2023), when she was 93 – bringing the tally to twenty-nine published novels and short story collections. All except the non-series, standalone novel A Most Contagious Game (1967) featured her series-characters, Inspector C.D. Sloan and Detective Constable …
    By TomCat, 1,272 words
  8. Rachel the Gardener, , more info

    Lavender: cutting back into dead wood
    You know how “all the books say” not to cut Lavender back too hard, as it won't grow back.... well, a fortnight ago, I was doing the annual clip of a low Lavender hedge, and I spotted this: Uh-oh... is that a bare brown patch coming up?Hahaha! I'm teasing you, this was not a case of it having been cut back too hard, it's a case of two of the …
    By Rachel the Gardener, 105 words
  9. The Squire Presents, , more info

    The Beatles – Everest
    Just because I have been looking at lots of music from the Britpop era this year doesn’t mean there isn’t room for one of the bands that were an inspiration for good number of the musicians during that era. That band is The Beatles and today is also the 55th anniversary of ‘Abbey Road’. This post could easily have been title ‘The Beatles in 1969’. As it is, this this …
    By The Squire, 1,282 words
  10. Architecture News & Buildings | The Architects' Journal, , more info

    AJ Architecture Awards 2024 shortlists revealed for workplace, mixed-use and leisure
    The Architects’ Journal AJ Architecture Awards 2024 shortlists revealed for workplace, mixed-use and leisure The AJ is delighted to announce its fourth set of finalists of this year’s AJ Architecture Awards. Revealed today are Leisure, Mixed-use and Workplace The post AJ Architecture Awards 2024 shortlists revealed for workplace, mixed-use and leisure appeared first on The Architects’ Journal Fran Williams
    By Fran Williams, 70 words
  11. MUBI | Notebook, , more info

    Movie Poster of the Week | The Posters of the 12th New York Film Festival
    Above: Official poster by Yves Tinguely for the 12th New York Film Festival in 1974.The twelfth edition of the New York Film Festival, which took place 50 years ago this week, in September 1974, could have been convincingly called the New York European Film Festival. Out of the seventeen new feature films playing, all but two were European: seven French, three German, two Italian, two Swiss, and one British. Though …
    By Adrian Curry, 876 words
  12. The Beer Nut, , more info

    To the sea
    The final segment of my Bulgarian adventure brought us to Nessebar, a cutesy and well-preserved mini city on the Black Sea coast. It's well preserved by the strictures of UNESCO, though increasingly encroached upon by the towering holiday apartments of the neighbouring resorts.It's a small place, and opportunities to drink interesting beer are very thin on the ground. There's only really one outlet: the beer shop which I think is …
    By The Beer Nut, 2,020 words
  13. Nancy's Baby Names – Blog, , more info

    What popularized the baby name Lugene in the 1950s?
    Lugene Sanders in “The Life of Riley“ After re-emerging in the U.S. baby name data in 1953, the dual-gender name Lugene saw its highest usage (as a girl name) in the mid-1950s: 1958: 26 baby girls named Lugene 1957: 42 baby girls named Lugene 1956: 73 baby girls named Lugene [peak usage] 1955: 66 baby girls named Lugene 1954: 62 baby girls named Lugene 1953: 30 baby girls named Lugene …
    By Nancy Man, 291 words
  14. Based On A True Story..., , more info

    Be HAPPY!!!
    By Stan B., 2 words
  15. The Vivienne Files, , more info

    September 2024 Start with a Bracelet – Fierce Abundance Bracelets by Fierce Lynx Designs
    September 27, 2024 Perfect for autumn: bracelets – Fierce Lynx Designs She can take some time off this fall – what a luxury! A little photography, perhaps? Her packing will have her blending into the forest! bracelets – Fierce Lynx Designs It’s not her usual style, but she couldn’t resist the cardigan… Cardigan – Cider; maple leaf earrings – Patricia Nash; laurel wreath tee – GAP; Fierce Abundance bracelets – …
    By Janice, 281 words