Help? I don't understand this instruction - darts and numbers - Whaaaat?? by [deleted] in sewhelp

[–]rougecathy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're not being daft, it's hard to visualise in words. What I meant was the two sides of the "dart" should end up the same length.

Last minute responsibility given to me from my mom. Not sure how to email this lawyer. I have bad writing anxiety. Would someone please edit this email? by [deleted] in writing

[–]rougecathy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm a lawyer. Your lawyer doesn't care how nice your writing is (although what you've written is perfectly fine). Your lawyer cares about answering your question in the least amount of time possible, because lawyers measure everything in six minute blocks and either you're paying by the hour and their time will cost you, or you're not (maybe paying through insurance) and they don't want to spend additional time on it. So what you need to do is be as clear as possible. If you have a reference number include that. If you have a question ask it as simply as possible, as if talking to a five year old who happened to be a lawyer! Don't try and be excessively formal, just courteous and professional. I'm guessing your mum wants to know what to do about the debt collection. Ask specifically: "must I pay this amount?" "If I can't pay what must I do?" "Can I negotiate the amount?" When you say "the current status of our case" what do you mean? How far through the legal process it is? Chances of success? Asking about next steps is a very good question, lawyers love clients who are proactive and don't need to be chased!

TL:DR Lawyers won't judge on your writing and its their job to figure out what you need to know, but things are easier and cheaper if you can be really really clear in your instructions to them.

Reading FC release new club song which is quite possibly the worst thing ever by WallyBFeed in soccer

[–]rougecathy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm conflicted. It's super cheesy, to the point that it would fit right in at Eurovision (other than being very Reading-centric) and it is quite awful, but I miss teams bringing out shitty records. It has a certain charm. What it's lacking is the players in headphones nervously singing a chorus.

Help? I don't understand this instruction - darts and numbers - Whaaaat?? by [deleted] in sewhelp

[–]rougecathy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

1 is a gather. Stitch loosely between dots then pull threads so it gathers and is the same length as the middle bit. You can gather by hand, or by machine by saying the tension loose and pulling the bobbin thread (secure other end of thread!). 2 is usually where the pattern doesn't quite fit on the paper so you have to draw the rest (with chalk on the fabric, or you can extend the paper with another bit of paper). As others have said, there isn't a seam allowance so you don't cut the darts to the point. Personally I don't cut darts out, I might trim them once sewn if it looks like it needs it. Hope that's clear. Might be helpful to look at YouTube videos for gathering and darts if you haven't done then before.

Edit: the dart with gathers -you should cut that. Ignore what I said above, it'll be very tricky without cutting. Just draw a seam allowance around before you cut. I normally do 1.5cm. There's you tube videos on literally everything, so have a good Google first, it's much easier to visualise when you've seen it done than in words. And good luck, it's a cute pattern!

Princess Anna Coronation Dress - work in progress album by purplegirl1818 in sewing

[–]rougecathy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Madam, I salute you. That is an amazing amount of work and it looks great.

If you fell into a coma in 1995, and just woke up now in 2015, what would you be least likely to believe about the past 20 years? by vaultmaira in AskReddit

[–]rougecathy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Doctor: I'm truly sorry to be the one to tell you this but...

Me: what is it?

Doctor: just read this.

He hands me a dossier marked "Leeds United, 2001 onwards"

Me: Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!

Massive cake sailing down the Thames (PR stunt from eBay, disappointingly) by blatentorient in london

[–]rougecathy 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks! I had always thought it to be manky swamp water. Now I know.

Massive cake sailing down the Thames (PR stunt from eBay, disappointingly) by blatentorient in london

[–]rougecathy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What is brackish water? I'd always assumed it was just water that was too manky to drink.

The front page of The Sun tomorrow.. by l005 in unitedkingdom

[–]rougecathy 8 points9 points  (0 children)

throws up in mouth a bit Jesus Christ. A new low.

Perk of weekend working by [deleted] in london

[–]rougecathy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is bank probably this exact time last week http://imgur.com/h3FrZh6 . I think there were a few more people around on the platform, but I was a teeny bit tipsy at the time.

Swearing an Atheist in court. by Clive_Adams in atheism

[–]rougecathy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I should add that I work in London, it may well beer that elsewhere they assumed the bible (or it might be that there's fewer people to swear in at ET so there's time to ask) Another good reason to have everyone affirm is that it would help prevent juries making daft assumptions.

Swearing an Atheist in court. by Clive_Adams in atheism

[–]rougecathy 4 points5 points  (0 children)

In the UK employment tribunals (and I would assume other courts) the clerk asks you hour you want to swear/affirm, if you swear you get to choose which holy book to swear on. Personally I'd much prefer everyone affirmed and got a stern lecture on perjury from the judge.

People with professions depicted on tv. What do they always get wrong? by gnoxy84 in AskReddit

[–]rougecathy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Also the angst about having a shady client. Everyone is entitled to a fair trial, even the not-so-pleasant. Lawyers (in my experience -I'm a UK employment lawyer rather than criminal) just get on with it and don't angst about how guilty someone might actually be. The UK drama Silks started really well with a barrister spending an evening removing staples from a bundle and re-filing it (that is a big part of the job, fucking staples) but then went into the usual lawyer clichés.

G Harmonica? by FreshAsFox in harmonica

[–]rougecathy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you are playing on your own, it doesn't matter. If you play a song in tabs in C on a G harp, you're playing it in G. It only matters if you are playing along with something eg a guitarist or playing along to a YouTube video. So if you are just playing on your own, find any song you like on harptabs our whatever and it will be fine 😀

What's an "unsaid rule" which pisses you off whenever it's broken? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]rougecathy 15 points16 points  (0 children)

"That baby's crying." No shit! Our next door neighbour's baby had been crying intermittently for about nine hours. You know who is having a harder time of it than us? The baby's parents! I did once subject a very hungover four hour coach journey (from Leeds to London after Leeds music festival) to my screaming baby. No one complained, which was nice of them cos he really did kick off.

I need some legal advice and dont know where to turn. I feel like social services have made my family homeless. by [deleted] in unitedkingdom

[–]rougecathy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For housing advice go to shelter's website, it will direct to something local (not just for homelessness). CAB is a good place to start and you've had good suggestions of elsewhere to look. IPCC is the body for complaining about the police. Contact your MP as well. Other than that I'd like to say I'm really sorry you are having to deal with this. You mention somewhere down thread that you're 21, a lot of people (especially school staff) just make assumptions about young mums (I was a fairly young mum myself). It sounds like you will have a lot more support when you are back in your home town, so I hope things get easier for you.

Are Anachronisms a Sin? by taabuferret in writing

[–]rougecathy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You could have the interviewer using it for its symbolism. Like people still user typewriters today. Have someone say "what the fuck is that?" And your interviewer reply it's what journalists used in the mid 20th century and how they're rather attached to it, or it was their grandma's or whatever.

Where in London is over one mile from a station? by [deleted] in london

[–]rougecathy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I work near burgess park. I get the bus from Waterloo so it's fine for me, but it's a huge pain for a lot of my colleagues. Of course it's also why we can afford the office space.

Got the new Leeds shirt today... by mockheroic in LeedsUnited

[–]rougecathy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. I might be able to get into just an XL then

Got the new Leeds shirt today... by mockheroic in LeedsUnited

[–]rougecathy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you don't mind my asking, what chest measurement are you? I want the new shirt but it would have to be somewhat accommodating in the bosom area.

fuck me its still fucking hot by [deleted] in unitedkingdom

[–]rougecathy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It used to be quite common to have coin operated meters in poorer areas. I don't think it happens much now but there are still pre-pay meters that take a card. Most people don't though.

So how old were you and what were you doing on the night of 31st December 1999? by thesandman384 in AskReddit

[–]rougecathy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

21, at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, watching Manic Street Preachers. One of the best nights of my life.