Monthly Archives: April 2008

How To Make WhipsCool Tools

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I got really into making whips back in 1998. Although this book arrived later in my whip hobby, in a short period of time, it really allowed my skills to skyrocket. It leaves no detail, big or small to the imagination. Mr. Edwards is a gifted craftsman, and his illustrations are only displaced when you see the real deal. He breaks down the various kinds of leather and their advantages and disadvantages for whipmaking, which saved me money and helped me choose the correct leather, sizes, and use up the best parts for the different pieces which make a whip. I even remember going as an 18 year-old to the tannery, and old men would be amazed at the way I chose the leather and knew what I wanted! The book teaches you pretty much every single term on whipmaking, which, in a way, also initiates you into the secrets of whipmaking.

It begins small (easy), and ends up big (complex). In this way, you grow little by little and a step at a time, growing in experience, knowledge and quality. There’s some insight into the lives of a few well known whipmakers, which makes you feel at home and part of the trade. The book’s versatile, too in that it not only focuses on a certain type of whip, but goes into many of the most popular. The book was clearly conceived in order to make you independent: you learn how to make your own tools, how to prepare your workplace, etc. This gives you a sense of responsibility, respect and control in this craft. And even once you’ve learned the craft of whips, this book can still serve as a great reference guide for future projects, since it contains a good amount of plaiting patterns and designs. I no longer make whips, which is truly a pity, but I’m now trying to get back into many of the crafts I did when I was younger, because they really fulfill me.

The only other books I’d recommend would be David Morgan’s Whips & Whipmaking. It teaches you about whips and history. Though there is a section on making a whip, at the time I went deep into the hobby, the edition available had a lack of images which made the book a bit difficult to use for practical purposes. A few years ago, a new edition came out with much more material, but I have not seen it yet. I should add that Mr. Morgan was always kind to lend me his advice and feedback every time I asked by email. Also, I believe it was actually Mr. Morgan who brought Bushcraft 9 to the U.S. after I told him I was working with it (mine was flown straight from Australia). From my own experience, I learned whipmaking takes perseverance… lots of it.

– Aldo Zamudio

How To Make Whips
Ron Edwards
1999, 166 pages
$17
Available from Amazon

Sample Excerpts:

Choosing the Leather

When choosing a side, it is best to avoid thick leather — try and get it around 2.5 to 3mm thick, and also make sure that it is not soft and spongy. Leather that is cut from the belly part of the hide is often very weak and will break easily when cut into strands.

On the other hand, thick leather is hard to plait well, and needs to be skived down. so, the aim is to go for leather that can be plaited nicely and that remains strong even in the thinnest sections.

Cut a narrow strip from the leather you are thinking about using, taper it down to a thin point, and then see how easily it breaks. If the break has a loose, hairy look about it, then the leather at that part of the hide is not good enough for whipmaking.

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The section nearest the backbone is the best part of the hide, but sometimes this is a bit thick and may be better used for reins and similar jobs. The tanner divides the hide along the backbone before tanning, and the result is called a side. Leather is bought by the side.

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Styles of Whip

There is no such thing as one correct length, width, or shape for a 4-strand whip. Some people want long thick whips, others want shorter, lighter whips. Both styles are equally correct and neither is better than the other; it is just a question of the intended use for the whip.

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Related items previously reviewed in Cool Tools:

Leather Therapy

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The Art of the Stonemason

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The Complete Metalsmith

AjaxControlToolkit TabContainer Theme GalleryMatt Berseth

I created a new theme for the AjaxControlToolkit’s TabContainer  control and I was going to write a post discussing how I did it.  But as I was creating the post I realized that I have really written about all of the details before (see my TabContainer Archive page).  So instead of repeating myself, I decided I would instead put together a post that catalogs the Tab themes I have created so far and pull of them together into a single demo site that showcases each of these themes.  I plan on adding to the gallery as well as this post as new themes are added.  If I like how it works I might create similar pages for some of my favorite ListView and GridView themes as well.  

Live Demo (IE6, IE7, FF and Opera) | Download

 

Google Analytics Theme

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Opera Theme

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LinkedIn Blue Theme

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LinkedIn Gray Theme

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Gray Theme

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YUI Theme

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Soft-Green Theme

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Fancy-Blue Theme

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Fancy-Green Theme

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Fancy-Orange Theme

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Fancy-Purple Theme

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Fancy-Red Theme

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RegToy Tweaks Your PC Every Which Way [Featured Windows Download]Lifehacker

Windows only: Free PC tweaking utility RegToy exposes all sorts of Windows settings that you’d normally have to dig into the registry to get to. Change the way Windows looks and behaves with RegToy, which is similar to the TweakUI PowerToy. It offers dozens of system-wide to user-specific settings—most of which will only matter to the most anal of Windows tweakers. After the jump, get a look-see at some of RegToy's many panes, tabs, checkboxes, and other settings areas.Adjust advanced System settings:

Startup and shutdown options:

Desktop and icon customizations:

Context menus:

Logon options:

These are just a few of the many screens ripe for digging through in RegToy. RegToy is a free download for Windows only, and XP users will need the free .NET 2.0 framework to run it.

RegToy [Ky Nam via Download Squad]




Free Desktop sharing software

Try this out. This is pretty good and is free.

Ease the Transition to Ubuntu with a Cheat Sheet [Linux]Lifehacker

ubucheatsheet_scaled.jpgThe open-source-friendly folks at the FOSSwire blog have posted a PDF “Ubuntu Cheat Sheet,” covering the basic terminal commands one might have to use and, just as importantly, naming important programs and packages so you don’t end up deleting or messing with something that’ll cause headaches down the line. WIth the release of Hardy Heron one day away, adventurous newcomers might want to keep FOSSwire’s printed and handy for reference.




Complete Shop Dust Collection System – Perfect! (Clinton, NJ) $75craigslist | tools in central NJ

This wood shop dust collection system works perfectly and comes complete with some 4″ flex tube, spare accessories, two 4″ blast gates and two 2″ blast gates. The Reliant system is 120VAC and works on a 15 amp service. This system has absolutely nothing wrong with it and does a tremendous job keeping your shop clean. I am selling as I no longer have the tools that this was hooked up to. Please call Andy at 908-735-7390 with any questions.

Auto Context Saves Time with Your Right-Click [Featured Firefox Extension]Lifehacker

auto-context1.pngFirefox only (Windows/Mac/Linux): The Auto Context Firefox extension automatically shows your right-click context menu as soon as you select text on a web page, taking a step out of your workflow if the right-click menu is your go-to toolbox. Once installed, Auto Context also provides extensive options for tweaking your right-click menu to your heart's content. Since I can only think of two reasons you'd select text with your mouse—either you want to copy it or you want to perform a right-click action on the text—I'd heartily recommend that you either install this extension or the previously mentioned AutoCopy extension, which automatically places selected text to your clipboard. Auto Context is a free download, works wherever Firefox does.

Auto Context [Firefox Add-ons via CyberNet]




Fingertips Controls Outlook and More from the Keyboard [Featured Windows Download]Lifehacker


Windows only: Keyboard shortcut application Fingertips is a cross between Launchy and Texter—with some (but not all) features of each. Invoke Fingertips with a keystroke to add tasks to your Outlook to-do list, navigate to web site URLs, open folders and launch applications. Additionally, you can set up short text snippets in Fingerprints, which will automatically expand them to fuller versions (like email form letters.) Fingertips looks especially useful to folks who use Outlook: for example, it has shortcuts for adding to your Outlook task list (without starting Outlook!) built in, for quick, behind-the-scenes capture, plus you can add your own custom commands and actions. Screenshots after the jump.

Here's what the application launcher setup looks like. You can create any number of custom commands—Fingertips comes with the ones pictured. Unlike Launchy or Quicksilver, Fingertips does not automatically index your computer's documents, so you can't search-as-you-type application or document names.

The text expansion feature is called Fingertype, and it associates a short text snippet (like ssig) which automatically expands to something longer, like your email signature. Unlike Texter and TextExpander for Mac, Fingertips does not support variables (like %clipboard or %|.)

Fingertips is in beta, but it’s a free download for Windows.




LAMINATE FLOOR (EAST BRUNSWICK)craigslist | tools in central NJ

WHOLESALE COMPANY NOW OPEN FOR PUBLIK

LAMINATE FLOOR STARTS FROM $0.65

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How to debug Windows Service startup.NET Tip of The Day.org

Actually you can use this trick every time when:

  1. You want to debug a process startup.
  2. You can't run the process by hitting Ctrl+F5 in Visual Studio (like Windows Service).

So the problem is that you can't simply attach the Visual Studio debugger to the process as there isn't one to attach to until after you start the process. However, once you start the process if you have a bug such as an exception in the process's initialization you won't get the debugger attached to the process before it's too late.

Calling Debugger.Launch() or Debugger.Break() in your code allow you to debug such problems. This methods pops up the following screen asking you which instance of the debugger it should use to debug the application.

JIT Debugger

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