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Hobbies

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Off Key - General Discussion
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  • ShiroKuroS Offline
    ShiroKuroS Offline
    ShiroKuro
    wrote last edited by
    #23

    By the way, i I checked the photos I have but I couldn’t find a photo of my grandma’s basement kitchen. I’m going to ask my aunt. If nothing else I’d like to confirm my memory of it.

    1 Reply Last reply
    • S Steve Miller

      Not familiar with either of those brands. Mark knows a lot more than I do and maybe he’ll chime in. I will say that I prefer analog components because digital stuff can be impossible to repair if it breaks.

      What do you want to do with your new system? Is SW short wave?

      A Offline
      A Offline
      AndyD
      wrote last edited by
      #24

      @Steve-Miller said:

      Not familiar with either of those brands. Mark knows a lot more than I do and maybe he’ll chime in. I will say that I prefer analog components because digital stuff can be impossible to repair if it breaks.

      What do you want to do with your new system? Is SW short wave?

      The set needs to be mobile with in-built speakers, used in the sitting room & bedroom (stop me putting on the TV so much!).
      Yes SW is short wave.

      I want to brush up my dismal Spanish by listening to spanish speaking radio, as well as UK stations. Though I think SW stations may now be available on the Internet e.g. on a laptop,
      there's a lot of pleasure to be had wheeling through shortwave static to find some remote radio station.

      Ventosa viri restabit

      ShiroKuroS 1 Reply Last reply
      • A AndyD

        @Steve-Miller said:

        Not familiar with either of those brands. Mark knows a lot more than I do and maybe he’ll chime in. I will say that I prefer analog components because digital stuff can be impossible to repair if it breaks.

        What do you want to do with your new system? Is SW short wave?

        The set needs to be mobile with in-built speakers, used in the sitting room & bedroom (stop me putting on the TV so much!).
        Yes SW is short wave.

        I want to brush up my dismal Spanish by listening to spanish speaking radio, as well as UK stations. Though I think SW stations may now be available on the Internet e.g. on a laptop,
        there's a lot of pleasure to be had wheeling through shortwave static to find some remote radio station.

        ShiroKuroS Offline
        ShiroKuroS Offline
        ShiroKuro
        wrote last edited by ShiroKuro
        #25

        @AndyD said:.
        there's a lot of pleasure to be had wheeling through shortwave static to find some remote radio station.

        Radio! Radio (back in the day) was magical wasn’t it. I still listen to Internet radio (if that’s even what it’s called anymore, Pandora, Spotify). But it’s not the same. For one thing, there’s no DJ and you can skip a song if you don’t like it.

        I can remember listening to the radio in the car with my mom… or going to stay at my grandma’s house when I was in JH and HS, I slept in a room on the second floor and she had a radio in there. At night, I would listen to different stations. Because it was a completely different state, I always had to search around on the dial before I found a station I liked, and even then it seemed like the music and the person talking were quite different from home. It was both a little bit exciting and a little bit disconcerting.

        Sorry @steve-miller this thread somehow keeps making me feel very nostalgic! 😄

        1 Reply Last reply
        • dolmansaxlilD Offline
          dolmansaxlilD Offline
          dolmansaxlil
          wrote last edited by
          #26

          The radio station of my teen years, 89x, was reformatted as a country station when I lived in Toronto. But last year they reformatted (re-reformatted?) it to be the alternative station of my youth - with an afternoon DJ who is my age. I actually listen to it sometimes when I drive, after not listening to radio for twenty years!

          1 Reply Last reply
          👍
          • D Offline
            D Offline
            Daniel
            wrote last edited by Daniel
            #27

            I went through a brief audiophile stage after college. I did a lot of research. I bought beautiful tube amplifiers (you needed two for the type of system I was building). I didn't get to the preamp, the source, or the speakers. I sold the amplifiers. They were work of art.

            This would have been my second stereo. I had one in college. Solid state.

            My next one will be sold state. Life's too short.

            I learned some important information about speakers in the intervening years.

            This system will sound much better than my first one. This one will be produce a precision sound stage, not be about volume, and definitely not be about over-emphasis on bass frequencies.

            'But as they said in one of the later Rocky movies, "Time...it's undefeated.".-- Mik

            1 Reply Last reply
            • B Online
              B Online
              Bernard
              wrote last edited by Bernard
              #28

              Hobbies. But first, I love the Moth Radio Hour on NPR. Don't catch it as often as I'd like, but thoroughly enjoy it when I do.

              My hobbies fall into 2 categories: Fiber (especially wool) arts, and late nineteenth century mechanical homewares (sewing machine, music makers, etc.)

              Two Saturdays ago, I took a day long workshop on great wheel spinning at the Newbury School of Weaving, 27 miles northwest of here, just across the VT border. Although I've made yarn at the great wheel before (learning from videos and books), taking the class was a real boost. It answered questions and filled in gaps. I want to take a week long weaving class there, but that will have to wait until Cielo is a less dependent on me.

              I'm currently spending my evenings picking wool, a Wenslydale fleece I bought last year. Some is scoured and picked, ready for carding, some is not yet scoured, and some is scoured but not picked. I put something on YouTube and pick away. I will be spinning it on the great wheel. Left to right: picked, scoured and unpicked, raw (unscoured) in the plastic bag.
              681.JPG

              Other fiber related projects in the works are a hooked rug I'm completing, a wool applique quilt I made 2 years ago that needs quilting, some Shetland wool I'm spinning for a shawl.

              At the moment, I'm rebuilding the bellows on the Roller Organ I bought last year. It's all on the dining room table!

              The industrial revolution cheapened everything.

              AdagioMA 1 Reply Last reply
              👍
              • M Offline
                M Offline
                Mary Anna
                wrote last edited by
                #29

                I've been crocheting a lot lately.

                This was a graduation gift for Muffin's Sister's firstborn. I'm now starting one for Muffin's brother's firstborn. I have three years to finish it, which should be doable, but the next three graduations are four, five, and six years from now, so I'll be crocheting graduation afghans for the foreseeable future. If Muffin reproduces, I'll be crocheting until the end of my days.

                0cf09919-db6c-4461-b801-dbfb8e918125-image.jpeg

                B ShiroKuroS 2 Replies Last reply
                ♥
                • B Bernard

                  Hobbies. But first, I love the Moth Radio Hour on NPR. Don't catch it as often as I'd like, but thoroughly enjoy it when I do.

                  My hobbies fall into 2 categories: Fiber (especially wool) arts, and late nineteenth century mechanical homewares (sewing machine, music makers, etc.)

                  Two Saturdays ago, I took a day long workshop on great wheel spinning at the Newbury School of Weaving, 27 miles northwest of here, just across the VT border. Although I've made yarn at the great wheel before (learning from videos and books), taking the class was a real boost. It answered questions and filled in gaps. I want to take a week long weaving class there, but that will have to wait until Cielo is a less dependent on me.

                  I'm currently spending my evenings picking wool, a Wenslydale fleece I bought last year. Some is scoured and picked, ready for carding, some is not yet scoured, and some is scoured but not picked. I put something on YouTube and pick away. I will be spinning it on the great wheel. Left to right: picked, scoured and unpicked, raw (unscoured) in the plastic bag.
                  681.JPG

                  Other fiber related projects in the works are a hooked rug I'm completing, a wool applique quilt I made 2 years ago that needs quilting, some Shetland wool I'm spinning for a shawl.

                  At the moment, I'm rebuilding the bellows on the Roller Organ I bought last year. It's all on the dining room table!

                  AdagioMA Offline
                  AdagioMA Offline
                  AdagioM
                  wrote last edited by
                  #30

                  @Bernard I saw your blog post about your class, and it sounds like stepping back in time! So wonderful.

                  I am suddenly working a LOT (knitting), with new designs and editing and herding test knits. I got a wild hair and had to go follow all the things! They’re wrapping up now, and I hope to just knit a sweater that someone else designed and not think for a while…

                  When hobbies become work, it’s fun but not as much fun as it was before.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  ♥
                  • M Mary Anna

                    I've been crocheting a lot lately.

                    This was a graduation gift for Muffin's Sister's firstborn. I'm now starting one for Muffin's brother's firstborn. I have three years to finish it, which should be doable, but the next three graduations are four, five, and six years from now, so I'll be crocheting graduation afghans for the foreseeable future. If Muffin reproduces, I'll be crocheting until the end of my days.

                    0cf09919-db6c-4461-b801-dbfb8e918125-image.jpeg

                    B Online
                    B Online
                    Bernard
                    wrote last edited by
                    #31

                    @Mary-Anna I love crocheted afghans. I crocheted quite a bit as a teenager. Made one huge granny square; just kept going around and around using up whatever tidbits of yarn I could find. (Lot's of acrylic in those days, from Woolworth. Ironic.)

                    Yours, above, is beautiful. It looks much appreciated.

                    The industrial revolution cheapened everything.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • M Mary Anna

                      I've been crocheting a lot lately.

                      This was a graduation gift for Muffin's Sister's firstborn. I'm now starting one for Muffin's brother's firstborn. I have three years to finish it, which should be doable, but the next three graduations are four, five, and six years from now, so I'll be crocheting graduation afghans for the foreseeable future. If Muffin reproduces, I'll be crocheting until the end of my days.

                      0cf09919-db6c-4461-b801-dbfb8e918125-image.jpeg

                      ShiroKuroS Offline
                      ShiroKuroS Offline
                      ShiroKuro
                      wrote last edited by
                      #32

                      @Mary-Anna beautiful!

                      I have an afghan my grandma made and one made by a great aunt, and my mother has a few more of her aunts.

                      I love them all!!

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • R Online
                        R Online
                        RealPlayer
                        wrote last edited by
                        #33

                        Re audio, I “inherited” my brother-in-law’s stereo system when he went into assisted living. It’s an old quadraphonic system and the receiver is a total beast weighing about 40 pounds. I’ve no need for 4 channels so just use 2. It’s glitchy, probably because it needs cleaning, but I don’t know how to do that. And my hearing is so bad now that I can’t appreciate the quality that much anyway.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        • M Online
                          M Online
                          Mark
                          wrote last edited by
                          #34

                          I rejoined the audio/stereo universe with gusto in 2017, and it hasn't stopped. Back then I had 1 vinyl LP which was Mike Oldfield's Airborne. Now I have well over 500 LPs and about 30 Reel to Reel tapes and even more cassette tapes that I never tossed.

                          My system is more than I ever imagined it would be including a pair of 650 watt SimAudio 400M Solid State mono block amplifiers, a pair of Decware 6 watt Tube Mono blocks for when I am feeling like some tube goodness, a matching SimAudio Pre-Amp, a couple of Reel to Reel decks, a Marantz 3 head, 2 speed Cassette Deck a Roon Streamer and separate PS Audio DAC, a super crazy German Turntable and PS Audio phono pre-amp, and some crazy sexy Sonus Faber Il Cremonese, Italian speakers. It sounds so good, I will never want for something "better".

                          Ugh, we desperately need new window treatments. And don't mind the messy listening space.

                          Stereo2026.jpg

                          1 Reply Last reply

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