2/ in a very literal sense, I chalk this up to autism.
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3/ back in the 80s I was very very upset about some of the t-shirt designs that ... DIDN'T MEAN ANYTHING. To this day, I love wood turning where lots of choices are made in the form, but the form itself is useful/real, and the material shown is the underlying material (wood) >
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4/ ...but I hate hate HATE painted woodturning. When you look at a bowl, the lines, shapes, and clusters of space that you see are real. When you PAINT a bowl, the pattern of paint has no relation to the underlying form, and often contradicts it. Gross.
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5/ so, re steampunk, if a knob already exists, playing w the diameter, the material, the knurling, etc. is all great. Go and take those gears and given then S curved ribspic.twitter.com/2vrA9HJqmx
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6/ ...but don't just slap fake gears onto your felt top hat with fabric glue that's cringe
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7/ Hmm not sure where I stand on thishttps://twitter.com/random_eddie/status/1484520610323898377 …
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The original show was better and arguably more steampunk than the movie. Plus, they sewed Robert Conrad into his pants. Both of Gilman's books in that world are pretty good.
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Art Deco explanation. Steam Punk as a futuristic device (The Diamond Age) works even better.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Steampunk was better realized in dieselpunk, I feel like. And in many cases folks confuse the latter for the former.
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