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Hobby Thread - July 11, 2026 [TRex]

07112026-matchbox.jpg

Welcome hobbyists! Pull up a chair and sit a spell with the Horde in this little corner of the interweb. This is the mighty, mighty officially sanctioned Ace of Spades Hobby Thread. For this week, the Wheel of Hobbies (TM) is feeling micro. It spun and spun and landed on a small scale theme for this Hobby Thread.

A what? You heard me.

Top photo:

The Erzgebirge mountain range in eastern Germany near the Czech border is known for woodcraft. The silver and tin miners used to whittle lindenwood (basswood) as a hobby but when the mines ran dry, the whittling turned into a way to make a living. The nutcracker was born there. A wide range of wood toys, ornaments and decorations are still made and the skills and traditions passed down through the generations.

This matchbox scene shows a woodshop in a box only 2 inches long and 1.5 inches high. Lots of other scenes and characters are available in matchbox form.

***

There is something about scale that piques our imaginations. There are roadside attractions dedicated to large-scale furniture, food and animals. The only novelty is the size (and the random location of an unusually large random item).

On the other end of the spectrum, small scale is interesting for different reasons. In nature, we're fascinated by small worlds that we barely see. We're impressed by details and the dexterity it takes to produce. We also like being able to wrap our hands around a small scale version of something too large to hold. Scale models allow us to collect cars, airplanes and boats. Doll houses and battlefields are arguably different flavors of the same instinct.

Have you heard the phrase "God is in the details?" What about the converse that says "The devil is in the details?" Both can be true.

Miniatures and small-scale is an unspoken part of hobbying and crafting. Anything small is often more accessible than full scale or large scale. For today's theme, let's focus on the details.

Does the world of miniatures speak to you? What hobbies or crafts or interests revel in the small scale or details? What worlds do you build or observe under a microscope? Do you have any hobbies that require a magnifying glass (other than the painful march of time that often makes it more difficult for those over 29 to see anything clearly)? Do you take extreme pride in details that you know are there, but few others will ever know or see?

Let's get small. It is a small world after all.

***

What are you hobbying?

The thread is not limited to to the theme. Anything (legal) you are hobbying is welcome. Even if the theme does not speak to you, you might learn something. If not, find something else or offer something else relating to hobbying. If all of that fails, just check in and say hello.

As per usual Hobby Thread etiquette, keep this thread limited to hobbying. Leave politics and religion to threads elsewhere (unless your hobby is building or restoring churches). Pants are optional. As always, puns are welcome and encouraged.

Play nice and do not be rude. Do not be a troll and do not feed the trolls.

***

Making a miniature artist studio:

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Making a dollhouse library (the tiny rolltop desk is amazing):

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Making miniature plants:

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Making miniature tiny furniture:



More miniature furniture woodworking:

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Miniature book making - with an actual bookbinding method:

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Warning: this video is long. But if you start watching, prepare to watch the whole thing (maybe later).

***

Skip - this one is for you. Making tiny toy soldiers in 1965 England:

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Clever re-purposing of a plastic model kit:

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I don't think I need one, but it makes my heart happy to know that you can buy a micro scale Caterpillar D8T bulldozer as a keychain.

D8T.jpg

***

Miniatur Wunderland in Hamburg is high on my list of things to see in Germany someday:

***

Before this week's Hobby Thread research, I had never heard of the Japan Hand Plane Championship. After watching, I still don't fully understand what I'm seeing but looks like the goal is to create the thinnest wood shaving.

The number of niches across the spectrum of interests and hobbies is breathtaking. How events or people exist just below the radar screen of awareness?

A silver lining of social media and YouTube is the ability to allow people with niche interests to find each other and for us to stumble onto people and interests we did not know exist.

On a related note, between the Hobby Thread and ONT research, the YouTube algorithm for me is quite something to behold... You should see the weirdness in my recommendations...

***

Horde hobbying from lurker LF:

This came from my great-grandfather's attic. He and his across the street neighbor helped build each other's houses. Both were coopers in the Chicago stockyards. My g-gf died in 1917 right after his roof was finished so last used then.

What was he doing with a Sabatier knife? I have his larger one also. Likely making German sausage for home use and the first floor store.

That and two rental apartments sustained his widow and the rest of the family until it sold in 1965. Oh, and the cracked handle repair is a nod to kintsugi!

Before photo with a dirty blade.

20260709-knife3.jpg

After:

20260709-Knife1.jpg

20260709-Knife2.jpg

I simply used various grades of steel wool, no powdered abrasives or sandpaper. I clamped and epoxied the handle, but didn't get a photo. The tang prevented the complete closure of the split. Next I will sent the initials on the handle. I remembered MH, my great grandfather's, but clearly MM, his neighbor and co-carpenter of their respective homes.

***

Genealogy hobbying humor:

20260711-bubbly1.jpg

***

Did you miss the Hobby Thread last week? We did a flreworks theme. The comments may be closed, but you can re-live the content.

Notable comments from last week:

20260709-orson.jpg
20260709-SMH.jpg

***

Words of wisdom:

"Because despite all our troubles, when things are grim out in that wide round world of ours, that's when it's really important to have a good hobby." Posted by: tankascribe at June 22, 2024 07:41 PM (HWxAD).

***

Reminder: if you put links in the comments, use a URL shortener and describe what you're linking to. Failing to do either or both makes you barrel-eligible. Don't make people click to find out what you're linking.

Send thoughts, suggestions and photos of your hobbying to moronhobbies at protonmail dot com. Or just email to say hello. Do mighty things.

Posted by: Open Blogger at 05:30 PM




Comments

(Jump to bottom of comments)

1 Welcome Hobbiests

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 05:31 PM (Ia/+0)

2 Huh? I was expecting a small font for some reason.

Posted by: OrangeEnt at July 11, 2026 05:32 PM (1Ff7Z)

3 I don't think I'd have the patience to do work like this. That and having hands that won't work like I want them to.

Posted by: OrangeEnt at July 11, 2026 05:36 PM (1Ff7Z)

4 Scale models! I've told the story of my boyhood and young adult adventures with Aurora, Pyro, AMT, Revell, Hawk, and Tamiya model kits, ranging from the Universal Monsters to cowboy figures, custom and stock cars, sailing ships and WWII subs, and a couple of German tanks. I do miss it.

Imagine making a doll's-house version of Nero Wolfe's West 35th St. office and ground floor; would be amazing.

Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at July 11, 2026 05:36 PM (wzUl9)

5 Does the PSA Micro-Dagger count as small scale?

Because of the Summer weather, I've switched up my EDC to my church gun.

Posted by: Mark Andrew Edwards, Buy ammo at July 11, 2026 05:38 PM (xcxpd)

6 Miniature Tanks. 1/285 (6mm) used in a diorama I did about 20 years ago. They're from a site called ghqmodels and are typically used in tabletop wargaming.

The Shermans in the photo each would sit on a dime.

https://ibb.co/SDVVqKH1

Posted by: Martini Farmer at July 11, 2026 05:43 PM (jehhT)

7 Of COURSE you need the tiny dozer. Why would you not?

Posted by: tcn in AK at July 11, 2026 05:44 PM (bl07w)

8 Details of doll house ( 1 "=1')
https://tinyurl.com/3zssuxhj
https://tinyurl.com/4r654ccf
Back side
https://tinyurl.com/47xnp39t

Made this, first time and only, when my niece was about 10yo, she is 40 now

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 05:44 PM (Ia/+0)

9 Tamiya offers putty so you can customize your model builds? Well, knock me over and call me a doormat. Pactra used to offer putty in a tube along with their paints. I think they are still around. I know Testors still offers some paints, and Tamiya and Humbrol have a lot of the market sewn up. I see their stuff at the hobby shop in the suburbs.

Which reminds me, I need to buy some more brick-red paint for the red tip of my vintage 1950s Gillette Super Speed. Back then Gillette offered the plain, steel colored tip Super Speed razor -- the knob to unscrew the razor doors was the same shade as the rest of the tool. They also sold a Blue Tip and a Red Tip. I think the Blue was the mildest, the plain or silver came in between, and then came the Red. The red paint wears after a while; I think I last touched it up in 2018 or so.

Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at July 11, 2026 05:47 PM (wzUl9)

10 We are de-miniaturizing our house. In the middle of adding a ground floor bedroom, breezeway, connection to the garage, redoing the crappy little kitchen into a real one, and moving the tiny bathroom to the old office so that DH and I both fit at the same time. It's hard to think small when DH is so... Viking-sized.

I love the idea of building doll houses, and I would architect the hell out of them, but I have no kids to give them to, and they do take up space. I guess I could do them for charity or something.

I did some miniature knitting--tiny mittens for Christmas ornaments. They are awfully cute and take nearly no time at all.

Posted by: tcn in AK at July 11, 2026 05:47 PM (bl07w)

11 Martini Farmer have played a minature game with micro armor
There will be games with them and hundreds of other kind of miniatures next weekend at Historicon.
Plan to be there Friday and Saturday in Lancaster

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 05:49 PM (Ia/+0)

12 If I made a dollhouse, it would be mid-century modern.

Posted by: tcn in AK at July 11, 2026 05:50 PM (bl07w)

13 As far as my hobby of pipe smoking: I've got my eye on a sandblast straight Comoy's pot-bowl pipe, possibly from the 1950s or -'60s, on eBay. Comoy's was a French company, or at least it started there, but it produced a lot of its pipes in England. This one says "Made in London, England" on it.

Also I picked up some more Virginia-type flake at the local pipe/cigar shop this morning. I'd been hoping to pick up a blend called "Country Lawyer" from BriarWorks; they had a bunch of those blends a while ago; but they were all out today.

Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at July 11, 2026 05:50 PM (wzUl9)

14 OrangeEnt that would have been very funny

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 05:50 PM (Ia/+0)

15 The Colleen Moore dollhouse is in the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry. It's a miniature fairy castle and incredibly detailed. It has working water fountains, and some of the tiny books in the library were written by the authors and donated.

Posted by: Lirio100 at July 11, 2026 05:54 PM (ky7/T)

16 My plans for a long weekend of SOTA hikes at the coast was foiled by the apparent death of my backpacking radio. Oh well, I still got to enjoy the hiking part. I also went to the Maritime Museum in Astoria, OR; highly recommended if you're in the area. I will finish my trip by gorging on steak and seafood tonight.

Posted by: PabloD at July 11, 2026 05:55 PM (iuwdv)

17 OrangeEnt that would have been very funny
Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 05:50 PM (Ia/+0)

Does Rex have the special key to change fonts?



Wolfus, how is the house hunting hobby going?

Posted by: OrangeEnt at July 11, 2026 05:58 PM (1Ff7Z)

18 > Martini Farmer have played a minature game with micro armor
There will be games with them and hundreds of other kind of miniatures next weekend at Historicon.
Plan to be there Friday and Saturday in Lancaster
Posted by: Skip
---------------
Lancaster, Ohio? My place in WV is only about an hour from there. Significantly farther from here in KY however.

Posted by: Martini Farmer at July 11, 2026 05:59 PM (jehhT)

19 If I made a dollhouse, it would be mid-century modern.
Posted by: tcn in AK at July 11, 2026


***
A model of Rob and Laura Petrie's house in New Rochelle! Or Darrin and Samantha Stephens's place. Was it supposed to be in New Rochelle too?

Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at July 11, 2026 05:59 PM (wzUl9)

20 I've always loved miniatures.

Posted by: lin-duh in Texas at July 11, 2026 05:59 PM (VCgbV)

21 Wolfus, how is the house hunting hobby going?
Posted by: OrangeEnt at July 11, 2026


***
A nice property popped up on Realtor this morning: 2BR, 1BA, garage, basement, porch; all the floors are wood or laminate, the walls already have colors I like, the kitchen and bathroom are of decent size. 1000 sq. ft. I emailed my agent to set up a video tour.

Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at July 11, 2026 06:01 PM (wzUl9)

22 Oh, yes! 12in-scale interiors, dollhouses and book nooks! I am so there, and have been since I was making dolls in high school - dolls on a wire armature with head, hands and feet made from a sort of clay made from soda and cornstarch cooked together with water until it thickened! I actually worked my way through college by making 12-inch scale dolls with hand-sewn costumes for a local miniature shop in Montrose, California. Honestly, they were not the greatest doll-house sized dolls in the world then - but I was one of the very few people making them, and the sweet miniature enthusiast who owned that shop paid me $5 a doll, and sold them for $10, and steered special orders for dolls and doll clothing my way. I could make five dolls a week - which I did for nearly five years. ($25 X 52 weeks a year does add up, especially when one lives at home and occasionally buys gas and groceries for the parents.) This paid for tuition at the local community college, then the state uni, all my books ... and I had enough left over after graduation to spend the summer in England on the student charter-Britrail pass-youth hostel plan. Kay, at Miniature World, Montrose, California - thank you!

Posted by: Sgt. Mom at July 11, 2026 06:02 PM (Ew3fm)

23 Moki, if you are here from the Pet Thread, yes; it's always hard to say goodbye to a friend, maybe even especially the four-legged ones.

Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at July 11, 2026 06:03 PM (wzUl9)

24 The only miniature work I've done involve Christmas ornaments: scenes inside a globe ornament. It can be challenging, and causes one to really think about how to achieve the desired result.

Posted by: The Grateful - Acta Non Verba at July 11, 2026 06:04 PM (IQ6Gq)

25 Not so miniature

Wonder Fest Louisville KY this year, a group of modelers recreated almost in full 1/1 scale the models workshop area for the 1977 Star Wars film. Not only did they recreate the X-Wings and Y-Wings but the benches, tools, and even the kit boxes.

Posted by: Anna Puma at July 11, 2026 06:05 PM (4T3aT)

26 Historicon is in Lancaster Pennsylvania at the Convention center

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 06:05 PM (Ia/+0)

27 Moki, if you are here from the Pet Thread, yes; it's always hard to say goodbye to a friend, maybe even especially the four-legged ones.
Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at July 11, 2026 06:03 PM (wzUl9)

She's supposed to be reading a book someone sent her....

Posted by: OrangeEnt at July 11, 2026 06:06 PM (1Ff7Z)

28 Kay, at Miniature World, Montrose, California - thank you!

Posted by: Sgt. Mom at July 11, 2026 06:02 PM
***
Great story!

Posted by: TRex- Bad Motor Scooter dino at July 11, 2026 06:09 PM (IQ6Gq)

29 The vintage carbon steel Sabatier blades are high quality, indeed!

Posted by: mrp at July 11, 2026 06:11 PM (rj6Yv)

30 Haven't gone to Philadelphia Flower Show in decades, but remember many miniatures displays there

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 06:12 PM (Ia/+0)

31 TRex,
Thanks (and dammit!) for those videos. Thanks because they look really interesting. Dammit! because I'll probably stay up watching all of them. :-)

Posted by: JTB at July 11, 2026 06:15 PM (yTvNw)

32 Toy soldier video was neat

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 06:19 PM (Ia/+0)

33 This the world chamber pot thread?

Posted by: Oyster Guy at July 11, 2026 06:22 PM (xGYhF)

34 My daughter has a gorgeous doll house from England with kinds of fun miniatures. We haven’t done anything new with it for awhile- maybe these videos will be inspirational for her (after vacation).

Posted by: Piper at July 11, 2026 06:25 PM (p4NUW)

35 At first I thought of fly tying but that isn't small scale, just true to life small. But mention of the German woodcarvers fit the bill. A lot of whittling derives from them: dala horses, most flat plane figures, many stylized things like birds and pets. Things that fit in a hand, maybe a child's hand, at their biggest.

They aren't miniatures in the sense of realistic but small and suggesting the actual item.

Posted by: JTB at July 11, 2026 06:31 PM (yTvNw)

36 31 TRex,
Thanks (and dammit!) for those videos. Thanks because they look really interesting. Dammit! because I'll probably stay up watching all of them. :-)

Posted by: JTB at July 11, 2026 06:15 PM
***
Thanks! There is a surprising amount of garbage on YT for miniatures, but I tried to pick good ones. Enjoy!

Posted by: TRex - tiny bulldozer dino at July 11, 2026 06:33 PM (IQ6Gq)

37 I like that top photo of the cottage. It has the homey feel of a Karl Larrson painting.

Posted by: JTB at July 11, 2026 06:33 PM (yTvNw)

38 Other than 3D printing busts, I’ve been programming up a storm, created a custom password/api vault, a movie/tv show library manager that is about a week away from being a replacement for plex, I’m even developing a Roku app front end so it will be wife friendly. The screenwriting neovim config can now export to pdf, and of course there is the ongoing development of the ERP.

Oh yeah, I got a load of lumber and pvc boards delivered today, took next week off and I start the front porch replacement on Monday.

Posted by: Thomas Bender at July 11, 2026 06:34 PM (XV/Pl)

39 Wonder Fest Louisville KY this year, a group of modelers recreated almost in full 1/1 scale the models workshop area for the 1977 Star Wars film. Not only did they recreate the X-Wings and Y-Wings but the benches, tools, and even the kit boxes.
Posted by: Anna Puma at July 11, 2026 06:05 PM (4T3aT)

On a related note, the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is scheduled to open in September. San Francisco was supposed to be the original location, but they were afraid of how it might conflict with the bohemian charm of their open air drug dens. LA (and here I have to give grudging credit to then Mayor Garcetti) had no such qualms.

https://lucasmuseum.org/

Posted by: Joe Kidd at July 11, 2026 06:35 PM (nbLIj)

40 Adorable!!!

Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at July 11, 2026 06:46 PM (ZBho7)

41 My current hobby is cooking dog food. *sigh*

Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at July 11, 2026 06:48 PM (ZBho7)

42 My current hobby is cooking dog food. *sigh*
Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at July 11, 2026 06:48 PM (ZBho7)

Just don't mix it up with tonight's dinner.

Posted by: OrangeEnt at July 11, 2026 06:49 PM (1Ff7Z)

43 41 My current hobby is cooking dog food. *sigh*

Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at July 11, 2026 06:48 PM
***
For a small scale dog?

Posted by: TRex - doggy dino at July 11, 2026 06:49 PM (IQ6Gq)

44 As far as my hobby of pipe smoking: I've got my eye on a sandblast straight Comoy's pot-bowl pipe, possibly from the 1950s or -'60s, on eBay. Comoy's was a French company, or at least it started there, but it produced a lot of its pipes in England. This one says "Made in London, England" on it.

Also I picked up some more Virginia-type flake at the local pipe/cigar shop this morning. I'd been hoping to pick up a blend called "Country Lawyer" from BriarWorks; they had a bunch of those blends a while ago; but they were all out today.

Posted by: Wolfus Aurelius, Dreaming of Elsewhere at July 11, 2026 05:50 PM (wzUl9)

My bass player has rediscovered pipes. He's been buying all kinds of blends. For our jam last saturday he showed up with a frigging church warden pipe. I started calling him Frodo. lol

Posted by: Berserker-Dragonheads Division at July 11, 2026 06:51 PM (S41Gd)

45 http://theminiaturespage.com Diorama board
https://tinyurl.com/38nrs2zc

Take a look at some of these

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 06:52 PM (Ia/+0)

46 I don't think I need one, but it makes my heart happy to know that you can buy a micro scale Caterpillar D8T bulldozer as a keychain.

Me neither, though I love Caterpillar, I do have a miniature Glock 17 on my Toyota keys.

Posted by: Eromero at July 11, 2026 06:54 PM (LHPAg)

47 I worked 9Y4M Trinidad and Tobago today. With a name like that, that country should count as a twofer.

Then I thought, what if they had named it Trinidad or Tobago?

Q: 'Where are we?'
A: 'Damfino. Flip for it. Heads Trinidad, tails Tobago.'

Posted by: gp at July 11, 2026 06:54 PM (Jr5Lq)

48 Hobby right now, all day really, is guitar maintenance. Lots of string changes needed, fingerboard conditioning, set up tweaks, etc. Yeah, its a pain in the ass, but when the strings start to sound like rubber bands you're way overdue.

Posted by: Berserker-Dragonheads Division at July 11, 2026 06:58 PM (S41Gd)

49 Little and I have been indulging in our road trip hobby lately. Last week we trekked up to Kissimmee Prairie State Park for an overnight camping trip. That was a mere two-hour jaunt. Next week, we're driving up the coast to visit family in PA and NJ. Hope to get 11 hours in for day 1, overnighting in North Carolina. Any Hoard recs for points of interest along the I95 corridor? Is South of the Border still extant?

Posted by: Joe Kidd at July 11, 2026 06:59 PM (nbLIj)

50 The only thing small about my hobbies is the fortune I've spent on them.

Posted by: fd at July 11, 2026 07:00 PM (MWfyi)

51 Again about small scale wood carving. Chris Lubkeman specializes in small carvings from twigs and small branches, everything from roosters to tiny flowers or trees to miniature bowling pins. Some are smaller than an inch. He has several books published and YT episodes. His techniques really work, like getting the curl into a rooster's tail feathers, but they can be difficult for those of us with gorilla hands.

Doug Linker's YT channel has a lot of episodes of faces and figures made from 1 x 1 inch bits of basswood.

Some years ago an article in Woodcarving Illustrated detailed the 'comfort bird', a small, smooth, stylized bird that can be held in the hand and stroked to relieve fear, grief or tension. Usually made from a hard wood like cherry, walnut or mahogany that can be made very smooth and stand up to handling. Typically just needs a knife and maybe sandpaper to make. Same function as a worry stone or beads. They proved so beneficial that many thousands have been carved and given to those who need them. Some carving clubs make hundreds as a club project. And they are satisfying to carve.

Posted by: JTB at July 11, 2026 07:01 PM (yTvNw)

52 49 Little and I have been indulging in our road trip hobby lately. Last week we trekked up to Kissimmee Prairie State Park for an overnight camping trip. That was a mere two-hour jaunt. Next week, we're driving up the coast to visit family in PA and NJ. Hope to get 11 hours in for day 1, overnighting in North Carolina. Any Hoard recs for points of interest along the I95 corridor? Is South of the Border still extant?
Posted by: Joe Kidd at July 11, 2026 06:59 PM (nbLIj)
South of the Border, Buckee's before there was a Buckee's.

Posted by: Eromero at July 11, 2026 07:01 PM (LHPAg)

53 The only thing small about my hobbies is the fortune I've spent on them.
Posted by: fd
********
Ha!

My current hobby is cross-stitching Christmas ornaments for the little cousin's St Nickolas Day gifts. Then I'll do some to donate to a Church fair held in early Nov.

Posted by: The Grateful - Acta Non Verba at July 11, 2026 07:02 PM (IQ6Gq)

54 KTY likes those book nooks that are miniature scenes in bookends.

Posted by: vmom deport deport deport at July 11, 2026 07:05 PM (u/wrI)

55 49 Any Hoard recs for points of interest along the I95 corridor?

Posted by: Joe Kidd at July 11, 2026 06:59 PM
***
USMC museum near Quantico, VA - easy access from the freeway. Free admission.

Posted by: TRex - tour guide dino at July 11, 2026 07:06 PM (IQ6Gq)

56 >>Hope to get 11 hours in for day 1, overnighting in North Carolina. Any Hoard recs for points of interest along the I95 corridor? Is South of the Border still extant?

If you have a little extra time I would avoid I95 and go up I81 instead. Less crowded and much more scenic.

I've driven 95 many times from RI to FL and it's more to be endured than enjoyed, at least for me.

Posted by: JackStraw at July 11, 2026 07:06 PM (viF8m)

57 Been to Florida a few times, but SC border to Pa driven lots,
Best done very early or over night

Posted by: Skip at July 11, 2026 07:11 PM (Ia/+0)

58 Top photo: first, fashion a teeny-tiny rudimentary lathe.....

Posted by: mikeski at July 11, 2026 07:12 PM (VHUov)

59 I don't think I need one, but it makes my heart happy to know that you can buy a micro scale Caterpillar D8T bulldozer as a keychain.

Many years ago, I started collecting minis on keychains. I use them as ornaments on my mini Christmas tree. Best thing is that they come with their own hanger already attached!

Posted by: Teresa in Fort Worth, AoSHQ's Plucky Wee One - Eat the Cheesecake, Buy the Yarn. at July 11, 2026 07:12 PM (SRRAx)

60 Many years ago, I started collecting minis on keychains. I use them as ornaments on my mini Christmas tree. Best thing is that they come with their own hanger already attached!

Posted by: Teresa in Fort Worth, AoSHQ's Plucky Wee One - Eat the Cheesecake, Buy the Yarn. at July 11, 2026 07:12 PM
***
Marvelous idea!

Posted by: TRex - deck the halls dino at July 11, 2026 07:13 PM (IQ6Gq)

61

Robert Duvall liked miniatures while in the twilight zone.

www.imdb.com/title/tt0734589

Posted by: Bertram Cabot, Jr. at July 11, 2026 07:15 PM (Cqx++)

62 13 ... "As far as my hobby of pipe smoking: I've got my eye on a sandblast straight Comoy's pot-bowl pipe, possibly from the 1950s or -'60s, on eBay."

Wolfus, Good luck with the auction. The local tobacconist has a sale this weekend on Nording and Stokkebye 4th Generation pipes. Picked up a 4th Generation smooth black grain bent Dublin. Generous size bowl but still comfortable to clench. Also 4th Generation blends: 1931 and 1989. The 1931 is a nice navy flake. The 1989 is an aged Virginia flake that has a slight sweet and citrusy taste. It was a good morning for pipe smoking.

Posted by: JTB at July 11, 2026 07:19 PM (yTvNw)

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They Done Found Us Out, Cletus: Intrepid Internet Detective Figures Out Our Master Plan
Shock: Josh Marshall Almost Mentions Sarin Discovery in Iraq
Leather-Clad Biker Freaks Terrorize Australian Town
When Clinton Was President, Torture Was Cool
What Wonkette Means When She Explains What Tina Brown Means
Wonkette's Stand-Up Act
Wankette HQ Gay-Rumors Du Jour
Here's What's Bugging Me: Goose and Slider
My Own Micah Wright Style Confession of Dishonesty
Outraged "Conservatives" React to the FMA
An On-Line Impression of Dennis Miller Having Sex with a Kodiak Bear
The Story the Rightwing Media Refuses to Report!
Our Lunch with David "Glengarry Glen Ross" Mamet
The House of Love: Paul Krugman
A Michael Moore Mystery (TM)
The Dowd-O-Matic!
Liberal Consistency and Other Myths
Kepler's Laws of Liberal Media Bias
John Kerry-- The Splunge! Candidate
"Divisive" Politics & "Attacks on Patriotism" (very long)
The Donkey ("The Raven" parody)
News/Chat