Its body was a wooden staff roughly 90 cm to 150 cm (3 to 5 feet) long
Checks out. It’s a combination of a club and spear. I’d imagine the shorter version is more on the club side, while the longer one is more on the stabby side.
Its body was a wooden staff roughly 90 cm to 150 cm (3 to 5 feet) long
Checks out. It’s a combination of a club and spear. I’d imagine the shorter version is more on the club side, while the longer one is more on the stabby side.
The german language has two words for “owl”: “Eule” and “Kauz”. I’m a native speaker, but I had to look up what the difference is (Wikipedia/Deepl):
“Eule” means “owl”.
“Kauz” also means owl, but specifically the small, fat and grumpy looking kind:
Various bird genera and species from the family of true owls (Strigidae) are referred to as [Kauz]. The differentiation between the terms “Eule” and “Kauz” is a peculiarity of the German language and has no equivalent in terms of zoological systematics. [Eule] are generally rather elongated, slender bird species, whereas [Kauz] have a stocky, large-headed shape
[Eule] are considered thoughtful and wise, whereas [Kauz] are considered clumsy, eccentric and reclusive.
That’s literally it, it has nothing to do with biology. So the correct translation would be “grumpy-looking goshawk owl”. 😉
It’s called displacement aggression The sportsball fan identifies with his team to the point that it feels like he lost the game himself. Since he can’t express his frustration and subsequent aggression towards the opposing team (since he is in front of his TV several 100km away), he expresses it towards the next best thing that is weaker and accessible, e.g. furniture, walls, wife and kids…
One point I want to add: Throughout most of human history, it was economically beneficial to have lots of children. They were your retirement plan (and cheap labor).
In most developed countries, this is no longer the case. People who want children get one or two, just to scratch the itch, but that’s not enough to sustain the population (without migration).
Yes, and even the bridge is amaranth!
I just used standard alcohol-based varnish. Tbh I when I started this build, I didn’t even realise it would do that. 😅
Those are standard (albeit fancy) “french eye” tuning pegs from Thomann Germany. The endpin is in the same style. Maybe for the next instrument I will try to make them myself.
I wish. Lutes are an entirely different beast. Definitely on my bucket list, though.
Have you adjusted the speed settings according to what the manufacturer says? LW-PLA can only be printed at a very low speed or else it clogs. It also needs constant speed. For example for colorfabb LW-PLA, I had to set all speeds to 40mm/s.
So far I just use a baroque bow. I work on a cherry bow from time to time, but it’s quite difficult.
And here is a Quick vocaroo where I play a few notes on each string.
That’s probably because they’re closely related. Every region in Europe has their own variation of a small, pear-shaped, three-stringed instrument. There’s the Russian gudok, Bulgarian gadulka, Spanish rabel, and so on…
I think the masked-off area is easy to spot:
The body got an alcohol-varnish and the fingerboard is oiled. Worked pretty well.
I posted the full build here: https://lemmy.world/post/19796054
Some more pictures:
The green paint looks like it’s arsenic-flavoured.
I’ve got the first one, too, and I got exempt from the subscription fee. I thought that was the case for all first gen owners?
This one is tempting. Not only color, but also one of the few eink devices with >10" screen. Also, Remarkable doesn’t put the screen behind a thick glass like Boox does, so there is no pen parallax.
I’ve never looked into the subscription thing Remarkable does. Afaik it’s only for the cloud storage - is it mandatory now?
AI generated Spam.
I’m now doing the hide glue method. I did a test piece and oil doesn’t seem to penetrate the hide glue at all.
Reminds me of the TI-92. I also love the fact that it has eInk. The perfect replacement for the old reflective LCDs!
Is this owl using eyeliner?! ; )
That’s still incredibly cheap compared to european gas prices. Here in Germany it’s (converted to Freedom Units) around US$8/Gallon.