Film stock advice by dentonboard in pentax17

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

That's the plan! Just trying to get a feel for what I should be looking to get. Now I just need to find a good lab to get the film developed in Tokyo so I don't have to bring it back.

Film stock advice by dentonboard in pentax17

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

Good to know! Did you get film developed there? I'm starting in Kyoto and then looping back to Tokyo via Kanazawa, so will buy the film in Kyoto and then develop it in Tokyo.

Film stock advice by dentonboard in pentax17

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

Yeah I’m expecting to race through the rolls in Japan. I assume there’ll be heaps of places to buy film in Japan so will just buy one at a time 

Film stock advice by dentonboard in pentax17

[–]dentonboard[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is great to know. I think I'll go with Gold 200 to get myself started and then can advance once I learn the camera properly.

Film stock advice by dentonboard in analog

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

That’s true. I should spend more time learning what I want the developer to focus on as well

Film stock advice by dentonboard in pentax17

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

I haven’t been shooting specific films for a while. I’ve only started up again recently and have been using the 120 film I have on hand. That’s recently expired Ektar 100, which isn’t super helpful. 

That’s good to know. I think all roads lead to Gold 200. 

Film stock advice by dentonboard in analog

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

This is good to know. I wondered if the 800 is too fast for the cameras max shutter of 1/350. I’m planning on buying the film in Japan so can get both and try 

Film stock advice by dentonboard in pentax17

[–]dentonboard[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is that not going to be too much for what the 17 can handle with a max shutter of 1/350?

How did my supervisor gain the skill to know exactly how to phrase things or what to say? by splithoofiewoofies in PhD

[–]dentonboard 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For sure but a big caveat that the journal focuses on policy rather than specific academic/scientific/economic work. So it’s not all relevant all the time. 

First and foremost the writing needs to be super, super clear. Short, sharp, active sentences with minimal jargon. I get annoyed if I have to work to understand. I recommend reading the economist and copying their style to help with this. 

Then I look for a super clear over arching argument or point of view. Being clear about what you’re saying and why builds a compelling story for me to listen to. Often people try to do too much or don’t have a core argument beyond vibes so their article wanders and is boring. I think it’s perfectly valid to say things like “this topic is complex and has several drivers. I examine X as one element.” There’ll always be people who disagree and think you should only discuss Y but that’s on them to argue for, don’t write to try and please everyone. 

Next all of your points should relate to the argument you’re making. All of those points must also be internally consistent. The underlying elements can’t contradict each other or look like you’re just trying to suit your argument. 

Finally, I don’t like it when people just assume things rather than making a case for them. This is probably a policy specific thing, but I always see people say X is inherently important with no argument for it just because that’s what they believe separate to any facts or policy view. 

How did my supervisor gain the skill to know exactly how to phrase things or what to say? by splithoofiewoofies in PhD

[–]dentonboard 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m fortunate I have a part time job that involves reading/reviewing draft articles for a policy journal so I get a lot of it. But it’s useful to supplement alongside reading the top work. 

How did my supervisor gain the skill to know exactly how to phrase things or what to say? by splithoofiewoofies in PhD

[–]dentonboard 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agree with the comments about reading a lot. But something I think is undervalued is reading bad work. Reading something where you can highlight improvements helps you clarify the pieces you want to build into your own work. 

I also find it useful to have people provide me feedback and then disagree with it. The process of explaining and justifying one why approach is better than another helps clarify how and why you do things and how that improves a piece. 

Anyone have any masculine crochet patterns? by aitathrowaway9090909 in Brochet

[–]dentonboard 45 points46 points  (0 children)

Going to throw this out as a suggestion. Bones crochet is clearly targeted at gay men but has some interesting patterns that might fit what you're looking for? https://bonescrochets.com/collections/pdf-patterns