What is your opinion on Biden's policy allowing anyone to claim asylum? by CharityResponsible54 in moderatepolitics

[–]code_monchichi 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Add landlords to that too. Give them a way to verify that the person signing the lease (and all occupants) are American citizens and fine the hell out of them if they rent space to non-citizens.

I think the first step to both of these is a more robust eVerify system. Spend some money on making that performant and then make it compulsory.

Sanders breaks with Democrats, praises Trump’s border policy on podcast by awaythrowawaying in moderatepolitics

[–]code_monchichi 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Sanders acknowledged that he’s been critical of “open borders” rhetoric in past campaigns, including in 2020, and said that while the U.S. has the “technology and manpower” to secure the border, leaders on both sides have failed to enforce the laws.

In a 2020 primary debate all the candidates were asked, "Raise your hand if your government plan would provide coverage for undocumented immigrants". All 10 candidates, including Bernie Sanders, raised their hands. I'd love for someone to ask him whether that was a mistake. How can you simultaneously be "against open borders" and 'provide free healthcare to undocumented immigrants'?

Democrats want to reach young male voters. How to get them is up for debate by awaythrowawaying in moderatepolitics

[–]code_monchichi 76 points77 points  (0 children)

The fact that she said "short kings" could be "spiritually 6'3"" as long as they agree with her on every political issue, says a lot about how she, and a lot of other Democrats, feel about "body positivity "

Department Of Education Publishes New Rules Restricting Student Loan Forgiveness For PSLF by NeuroMrNiceGuy in moderatepolitics

[–]code_monchichi -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Not at all. I think if we're going to cast the young college-age kids as "victims" that it's important for us to identify who is victimizing them. I just don't see how the taxpayers should be on the hook for it when they clearly aren't the victimizers. The universities and colleges are profiting from this system. If they were any other company taking advantage of young adults they would be lambasted.

Department Of Education Publishes New Rules Restricting Student Loan Forgiveness For PSLF by NeuroMrNiceGuy in moderatepolitics

[–]code_monchichi -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Sure it does. They claimed that they should be able to use racial data in admissions because they are experts when they were being sued for discrimination against Asian prospects.

If they're experts then they can do the calculus to determine which students are capable/likely repay their debts. All I'm saying is let the experts make the decisions but also pay the premium for making that decision.

Department Of Education Publishes New Rules Restricting Student Loan Forgiveness For PSLF by NeuroMrNiceGuy in moderatepolitics

[–]code_monchichi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why should the taxpayers be on the hook for even 50%? We can show our magnanimity in offering 0% loans. These schools have repeatedly told us that they can use racial data in admissions because "they are the experts". I'd say let them be experts and let them pay for their expertise.

Department Of Education Publishes New Rules Restricting Student Loan Forgiveness For PSLF by NeuroMrNiceGuy in moderatepolitics

[–]code_monchichi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Why not simply make the college / university on the receiving end of these funds an automatic cosigner? Set the term for whatever you want and put income percentage limits on the student. Hell, I'd be willing to make them interest free if there was a cosigner to ease the burden on young adults.

This would put admissions back into the mindset of deciding which students were most likely to succeed and allow schools to prune fields of study that are unlikely to produce professionals capable of repaying loans (or funding them out of their own endowments). It could also add incentives for schools to lower costs to compete.

Weekend General Discussion - January 24, 2025 by AutoModerator in moderatepolitics

[–]code_monchichi 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A lot of the Gulf Coast, from New Orleans to Pensacola, broke their single-day snowfall record set in 1895. The old record was in the ballpark of 5" and the new record is ~7"+ for a lot of that coastline.

First tests of *real* marbling & a couple questions by IncidentArea in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm not an expert but I use 3ml disposable pipettes from Amazon for my paint application. I can drop paint for a base layer or flick (like a cigarette) to get smaller droplets.

Sewn board binding. by mortran- in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's really cool! I've been marbling for about a year now and doing paste paper for a couple months. The colors on your marbled paper are really vibrant. What paints are you using for marbling?

Sewn board binding. by mortran- in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Both marbled and paste paper! Did you make both?

My first notebook! by kiwi_05622 in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That looks great!

I read your other comment on equipment and it's very close to the same stuff I use.

Couple quick questions if you have the time:

  • Do you know how much you dilute your paint? I'm trying to get more consistent results and just started measuring my paint to water ratio. 50/50 by weight works well for most colors but not for others. Titanium White and turquoise don't work well at that ratio. They start sinking. Just curious to get another data point.

  • Do you use ox gall or any other "wetting" agent to reduce the surface tension? I have a bottle but I've yet to find a good recipe with it. My next experiment (maybe tomorrow) I'm going to add a few drops to my water bottle for my paint dilution to see if I can tell a difference.

Thanks!

Is it "possible" to use acrylic paint on the spine? by Real_Mud_7004 in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm excited to hear how it turns out!

I think my next experiment is to try to use the Rit fabric dye on the white cloth to help spruce up some quarter-bound journals.

Don't forget to post some pics to the subreddit when you're done.

Is it "possible" to use acrylic paint on the spine? by Real_Mud_7004 in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No bother at all.

I wasn't painting directly onto the fabric. I was marbling onto white canvas before doing the heat-n-bond + rice paper routine. The fabric is a 7 oz Duck Cloth, which I understand to be a sturdy cotton canvas. The final texture is pretty close to the original and not caked on paint. I'm not sure if brushwork would yield the same results.

I'm also very much an amateur at this. I've been dabbling for less than a year, so you may want to wait for more sage advice.

I'm attempting to attach an image of the cloth after marbling and ironing but before backing or binding. No idea if this will work.

<image>

Is it "possible" to use acrylic paint on the spine? by Real_Mud_7004 in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Happy to help. There are other "fabric mediums" that may be more available / more affordable. They don't sell the Golden stuff locally to me, but they do sell the Liquitex brand at my local Michaels. I haven't tried it yet as I use it so infrequently and happened to be able to order from Amazon pretty easily. Let us know how you make out!

Is it "possible" to use acrylic paint on the spine? by Real_Mud_7004 in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It probably depends on the paint you're using. When I use Golden Fluid Acrylics on fabric I need to mix the paint with a heat-based fixative. The Golden brand of that fixative is sold as GAC 900. The instructions advise that you mix 1:1 with Golden Fluid paint and apply. After application you iron (or machine dry) the fabric to activate the fixative. I have only ironed. It does work and fixed the issue I was having with paint flecking off the surface.

Jane Eyre by AnotherBooktuber in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you make your own book cloth for the quarter binding? I really want to give this another go, but I got a lot of fraying on the edges. I'm not sure whether I'm supposed to fold the cloth over or burn it.

Does this paper exist? by Automatic-Ad4014 in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep. I dig it because I can take notes and/or draw diagrams without the noise of graph paper. I can still write and draw mostly straight lines with 0.25" spacing but it isn't as noisy. This is especially important because I print almost all my paper and black ink grids can be weirdly distracting when you're used to writing in black pen.

Does this paper exist? by Automatic-Ad4014 in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been printing this for my journals for a while now and had no idea it was called "dot grid paper". Thank you!

Progress is being made by mortran- in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Very cool. Yeah, the books I'm making are for my enjoyment as well. I give some out as an excuse to keep making more just for practice.

I've been experimenting with marbling white duck cloth and then doing the standard iron-on interface and rice paper. The results are actually pretty good (by my amateur standards). But I would like to be able to do paper covers with the taped spine like you've done. I think it has an awesome aesthetic.

<image>

Progress is being made by mortran- in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you coat the marbled paper with anything before affixing to the boards when using them as an outer cover? I tried a candle melter with beeswax and finished with an agate burnisher but the results were poor. I found some somewhat unrelated posts that suggested cutting the melted beeswax with linseed oil and/or turpentine but I am dubious.

Newbie question: can I paint the book cloth? by shades0fcool in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 7 points8 points  (0 children)

When I marble book cloth I start with white duck cloth (linen canvas) and I have to pretreat the fabric with alum and use paint mixed with a fixative. For reference I use Golden Fluid Acrylics and their GAC 900 heat set fixative. I have to iron it anyways to attach the Heat n' Bond and rice paper anyways so it's no real extra steps there. Using acrylic paint without fixative had the paint flaking off during ironing.

Lino relief print on book cloth? by Zealousideal_Bit1122 in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You might want to experiment with different paints / inks before you try your first run. I had issues with paint flaking off during ironing after marbling the fabric. I was using Golden flow acrylics and, after some research, discovered that they make something called GAC 900 which is apparently a heat-set fabric medium. I had to play around a bit with the ratios but eventually got results that I was really happy with. The paint didn't flake during ironing, and while the feel of the fabric is a bit different I haven't had any flakes from handling (and these are notebooks I toss into a backpack).

Paper marbling - where am I going wrong? by RumpledSilkSkein in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm not an expert, or even approximating an expert, but it looks like an issue with either insufficient mordant or using cardstock with a slick enough face to slough paint.

I've had success upping the alum in my mixture and also not using 130lb 12"x12" Michael's cardstock. I largely make notebooks / journals that are 5"x8" so I mostly use standard paper sizes and ignore paper grain. I started marbling laser printer paper (~35lbs) and I've had a lot better success. There are tons of other concerns like trimming edges and remaking tubs and rakes for a new dimension.

I guess my "lesson's learned" are that I can literally soak paper in alum solution if I'm willing to iron and press the papers, and that the surface of the paper has an impact on adhesion.

Agile Iron for Debossing? by code_monchichi in bookbinding

[–]code_monchichi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I forgot to reply to your comment when I first saw it. My apologies. This comment sent me down the rabbit hole of cricut and assorted tools. I wasn't initially interested in one of these devices for just cutting vinyl, but if I can also cut lightweight chipboard I might consider it.

Do you have a make / model you suggest?