• fluxion@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      My wife cuts food with her own sewing scissors. I never realized i was living with a crazy person until this point. (Ok maybe i kinda did)

        • fluxion@lemmy.world
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          18 days ago

          Yah it’s like once every few months or so to fix up a new outfit or something. It just happens to be close to where the upstairs TV is so she’ll grab them if she needs some while we’re eating while watching a show or something. Then they end up in the utensil drawer and I’m usually the one that finds them and furrows my brow a bit before putting them back by the sewing machine

  • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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    19 days ago

    So I am definitely the odd person in the sewing world who cuts everything with my scissors. I’ve been a sailmaker for 30 years and we cut paper, Mylar, Kevlar, carbon fiber, fabric (of course), rope, tape, adhesives, you name it. I’ve been using the same pair for 20 of those 30 years as well. We do get them sharpened but not all the time.

    Dyneema is the one thing that will mess up your scissors though. My buddy at work had a dull spot on his that wouldn’t sharpen from dyneema webbing. We ended up getting a special pair for that and Kevlar, with micro serrated teeth.

    I will say though that a person’s scissors are sacred, you don’t touch another sailmakers pouch and tools. What they do with them is their business, use your own tools.

    • Zron@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      That extends to all tools in my opinion.

      Don’t borrow someone’s tools without their express permission, and don’t lend someone a tool unless you either know what they’re doing with it or you don’t care if it gets damaged.

      • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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        18 days ago

        Yup. I hired an apprentice once, and the first few days every time I’d come into the shop my pouch would be either missing or emptied and I’d have to run around finding my tools. Did that twice and was like your first job is to make your own pouch and then got him his own tools. My fault really, I should have done that right off the bat.

        • kboy101222@sh.itjust.works
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          18 days ago

          How do you get into a job like that? I figured they would mostly be made by machines nowadays.

          What’s the biggest sail you’ve worked on?

          Best/worst material to work with?

          What kind of equipment does your job require?

          You mentioned a knife but I’m guessing it’s not a common knife. I’m imagining more of a hook shaped blade to pull easier, but would love to know if I was wrong

          • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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            18 days ago

            Great questions!

            I kinda fell into it tbh. My buddy worked at the local sailmakers and got me the job when I was 16. Never looked back. A lot of people will start because they race or sail but there’s an equal amount that just do it as a job and don’t sail at all. I did grow up sailing but it wasn’t on my radar for a career. I still talk with my buddy every now and then, I credit him with a long a varied career!

            Quick edit: They are made on sewing machines, but you still need humans to do the work.

            The biggest sail I’ve ever worked on was the spinnaker for the HMCS Oriole. It was 6000 sq/ft if I remember correctly. Freaking massive. We never saw it fully open until it got raised on the boat as we were in a very small shop! My coworker sewed all the panels together and I did all the rest, my boss painted the oriole on it and did a fantastic job. We were very proud of ourselves. I was so worried there was going to be a tub of pins somewhere in it and they would rain death down on the deck when they raised it!!

            Hmmm, that really depends on what you like to do best. My specialty was racing sails, so I guess I’d have to say laminates were my favourites. Though if you were a traditional sailmaker than you’d like the heavier and softer fabrics and ropes. My coworker likes the spinnakers best as all she did was sew so getting those under the machines is much nicer. Being a shop with big sewing machines you end up sewing things other than sails and the job I hated was the boat house curtains. So big and heavy. The material wasn’t terrible it was just a crap job lol. And they were usually filthy.

            You do need some specialized equipment, but it’s all the different parts on the sails that really make it niche. So there’s the obvious sewing machines, and you’ll need at least 3 different ones to cover what you might come across. The main one being a long arm walking foot. Then a straight stitch for canvas, a lighter zigzag for dinghy sails and sail bags, and a triple stitch for seams and resewing. But you can resew with the zigzag so that one is optional for a small repair loft. Hand tools like a hot knife, grommet punches and dies, palm for hand sewing, big hand sewing needles. Big rulers, carpenter squares, and lofting battens. I know I’m forgetting stuff but that’s what’s jumping out at me. The stuff that adds up though is all the things you need to repair or make sails. Different sizes and types of webbing, slugs, slides, rings, batten hardware, batten material! Oof, you end up collecting a lot of random stuff. I had a small repair loft and I couldn’t keep every little bit in stock so would save what was still good for that random sail that would come in.

            Another edit: Pins and awls!! That’s how you flatten the sail on the floor to work. And I forgot the most specialized piece of equipment of all! The shop. That one can be hard. You need a space that’s big and open that you can pin into the floor and lay out as much of the sail as possible. Also the ideal is to have the machines in pits that are flush with the floor so you don’t have to lift the sails up to the table, and instead just slid them along. But that’s a hard one. My shop didn’t have that and the pinched nerve in my shoulder can attest to that.

            I’m not sure about the knife you mention? Did I say that? We would use a hot knife for melting and sealing all the time.

            Let me know if you have any other questions! That was fun.

            • kboy101222@sh.itjust.works
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              18 days ago

              Thanks a ton for the answers!

              I’m honestly unsure where my brain got the knife thing if I’m being honest.

              One more question for you if you don’t mind -

              How’s kevlar to work with?

              • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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                18 days ago

                Haha, my brain does the same thing all the time.

                Kevlar is a funny one for me as I’m now allergic to it. Yay occupational disease! If I have to use it for a quick job it’s fine, but anything longer than an hour I get what feels like a sunburn. Usually on my arms and cheeks, basically where I touch when I push up my sleeves or whatnot. Doesn’t get red, just feels like a bad sunburn. One of the ways it’s used is in big rolls with an adhesive backing, for patches. So we’re not really sure if it’s the Kevlar or the adhesive, but I can use any other product with an adhesive back and it doesn’t happen.

                Anyhoo, Kevlar is really tough, so it can be a pain to cut. That toughness makes it great for backing patches or chafe patches. On Genoas we’d use it to make spreader patches. It’s really only used like that on laminate sails. Though I’ve seen Kevlar leech line used on Dacron sails. Another common use is in kayak hulls along the keel for abrasion resistance. It also has a very high melting point and will char more than melt, which also helps with chafe. Its UV resistance isn’t the best so it will deteriorate over time. But racing sails don’t last as long as cruising sails so it evens out. You can recognize it on a sail as it’s a golden yellow.

                Edit: I think it’s fallen out of favour over fibers like dyneema and carbon. I haven’t been in that part of the industry in a long time.

                The fibers and technology in racing sails are pretty crazy. There’s some neat videos online if you want to dive a bit deeper into it.

                • kboy101222@sh.itjust.works
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                  18 days ago

                  A kevlar allergy is definitely an interesting one!

                  I gotta ask what you mean by patches. Judging by the fact you seem to mostly work on racing ships and other very expensive sailing ships, I’m guessing you don’t mean patches in the sense of filler material to fix holes?

        • macrocarpa@lemmy.world
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          18 days ago

          Hey did you follow the americas cup this year?

          What did you think of the wingsails / twin skins / no boom configuration?

          • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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            18 days ago

            Hi! I didn’t at all tbh, but your question just made me go on a deep dive looking at the boats. So crazy! I’d seen pics of them but hadn’t looked real close. I have to say, it makes sense for the racing they are doing to have that boomless shape. You’re getting every bit of wind with no waste. Those boats are engineered to the hilt, I can’t wait to see what they do next year. I’m going to watch some videos later, thanks for the rabbit hole!

            The race I have been following is the Vendee Globe. The website is so good. I highly recommend!

            • macrocarpa@lemmy.world
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              15 days ago

              Vendee global is amazing! I feel like it’s the closest thing to a pure “all rounder” sailing - solo sailors, robust and well-engineered boats that are just smashing it every condition and loving ayvoace as well. I’m subscribed to their updates on YouTube.

              So as to the madness of the americas cup - if you look at the sails they each have two wide counter coloured bands on them. when doing boat testing they use upwards facing LIDAR on both sides of the boat to calculate the best sail shape, live, and adjust accordingly. I feel a bit odd about that, I think trimming is one of the fine arts of sailing and to see it automated out is a bit sad. But if you’re doing 45 knots on foils, I guess the fewer jobs the better.

    • TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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      19 days ago

      Interesting, is sail fabric thicker or easier to cut than like clothing fabric?

      Also it’s interesting to see so many people who do different jobs online, I met someone the other month who lived in a boat during the FL hurricanes.

      • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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        19 days ago

        It can vary from thicker and heavier to lighter, and there are lots of different finishes as well so it can be quite stiff or supple. The cloth is made from polyester, or Dacron as it’s also known. We also use ripstop nylon for spinnakers. And then you have the laminate sails which can be made with Mylar and different fibers like carbon, Kevlar or dyneema.

        • TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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          19 days ago

          Interesting, thanks for the information! In exchange I will give you information about my workplace.

          At the grocery store when you have something you don’t want to buy just give it to the cashier, we have a dedicated system for someone to go put it back. don’t leave raw chicken sitting next to the candy, we can’t sell raw warm chicken.🙃

          • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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            18 days ago

            Oh man, that drives me nuts when I see that! I always try to find someone to give it to, you can’t put that back, you never know how long it’s been sitting there! Some people are so dense.

            I’ve not worked in a grocery store but I did work at a butcher/deli. It was really fun, lovely people. Luckily it was small enough we didn’t have to deal with that!

    • adarza@lemmy.ca
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      19 days ago

      fabric scissors need to be sharp to do their job effectively.

      cutting other things, even paper, can (and will) dull the blades enough so they’re no longer suitable for their original intended task.

      then when gramma, or whoever, wants to use ‘their scissors’ to cut some fabric, and they aren’t functioning properly… let’s just say it may not go well for the guilty party.

      tl;dr: they’re no longer pure and must be replaced with new virgin scissors.

      • Pieisawesome@lemmy.world
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        19 days ago

        Can’t you just sharpen them? Won’t fabric dull them? You can’t tell me that paper dulls scissors faster than fabrics.

        I highly doubt using fabric scissors one time for cutting paper will do anything to them

        • spamellama@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          You are hereby banned from the sewing room.

          You think cutting through a tree won’t dull scissors? Fabric is made from plant fluff or hair.

          More seriously - Yes you can sharpen them but many fabric stores no longer offer the service regularly. Some knife sharpeners will do it but others won’t. My scissors can be sent back to the maker to be sharpened but then I would be without my fabric scissors for weeks. If you do it yourself you will fail.

          • ettyblatant@lemmy.world
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            19 days ago

            This is one of my favorite comments of all time. I have sent a screen shot to three different people that get pissed when I won’t let them use my shears.

            • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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              19 days ago

              They are more difficult than knives because they have to be sharpened so that they work as a set. If you screw it up, they no longer cut clean along the correct plane.

              • porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml
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                19 days ago

                It’s not that bad, they’re single bevel so you’d have to try to sharpen the wrong side of the blade to fuck it up too badly

                • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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                  19 days ago

                  Any disruption of the interference fit between the contact or cutting faces can ruin scissors - it’s a lot like grinding a straight razor, but where you have incredibly strict angle requirements across a compound surface. You’re absolutely right though that the #1 mistake people make is to mess up the hollows by flat sharpening them like knives.

        • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          You’re highly wrong, then. Go get a straight razor and drag it through some paper, then see how nice it is to shave with. Fabric shears have surfaces honed to the same degree.

      • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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        19 days ago

        Does cutting fabric not dull the blades? It seems like a lot of fabrics should be tougher to cut through than paper?

        • the_artic_one@programming.dev
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          19 days ago

          Paper is made out of wood, the fibers are much harder than most sewing fabrics like cotton. It’s only easier to cut because it’s so stiff compared to fabric so even dull scissors can split it.

      • TheFogan@programming.dev
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        16 days ago

        tl;dr: they’re no longer pure and must be replaced with new virgin scissors.

        Damn that’s a horrible punishment. (I’m at least assuming if fabric scissors are only to be used on cutting fabric).

    • Pilferjinx@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      Fabric scissors just happen to be very good at cutting most things. I use mine to cut open packages, leather, plastics, and cloth! Just avoid cutting anything harder than the steel your scissors are made out of like metal, wires, and such. A quick hone will refresh the edges when you need it.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    I was totally ignorant to the world of fiber crafts the first- and last- time my wife found me cutting up something with her sewing scissors.

    Of course, that was before she became addicted to every fiber craft under the sun. Now I live in a house with several spinning wheels and a tapestry loom. This could be you too if you start crocheting. Take heed.

    (I’m actually fine with it because she’s making me an Ernie sweater. I saw an Ernie costume on Halloween and I suddenly realized how much I wanted an Ernie sweater. So I asked and she immediately said okay. Yay!)

    • prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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      18 days ago

      When she’s done the Ernie sweater could she make me a penguin one? Thanks

      Thinking black sleeves on a white sweater, penguin on the white part of course, the cuffs are penguin foot yellow and the collar black as well.

    • Liz@midwest.social
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      18 days ago

      The thing is, it’s pretty dang easy to sharpen scissors on a sharpening stone. Like, use em for everything! Go ham! Just sharpen them when they get dull.

      • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        18 days ago

        So you know how when you cut something and the object was to hard for the scissors and the object turns sideways between the 2 blades and makes it so the scissors never function as well again? I’m way to good at doing that… Other than pulling my head out of my ass and using a different tool, any suggestions on how to fix those tools? My kitchen sheers are like that now after using them to prune my strawberries outside. (Clearly I need to have designated sheers/scissors for different things, but sometimes I’m just that idiot that thinks 1 hammer fits all jobs

        • oatscoop@midwest.social
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          18 days ago

          Scissors work because the blades are tight against each other – there’s no gap between them when they’re cutting. When they “go sideways” it’s usually because the hinge is loose.

          If they’re good quality scissors, you probably need to tighten the screw holding the blades together.

        • Baaahb@feddit.nl
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          18 days ago

          Use the right tool for the job. If you can’t figure out what the right tool is, you are the wrong tool.

  • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Family is gathered around grandpa in this exact situation. He raises his head off the pillow and squints around the room.

    That you, Bill?
    Yes, dad, it’s me.
    Is Carol here?
    Yes, I’m here dad.
    Jimmy? Sally? Are they here too?
    Yes dad, the kids are here.
    Is Walt here?
    Yeah dad, I’m right here.
    You’re all here?
    Yes, we’re all here dad.
    Everybody’s right here?
    Yes, dad.

    Then why is the goddam kitchen light still on???

    • JimVanDeventer@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      I am sliding gracefully into dad mode about thermostats because that is ancient technology and you should know better. Lights are all LEDs now and I even got the ones with batteries so they stay on in a blackout, so leaving them on charges them and is good, sort of.

      • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        Grampa still uses incandescents - he saw a meme about how you need a hazmat team if you break one o’ them newfangled bulbs and he’s not letting Obama jam those things down his throat!!!

  • glitchdx@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    on the one hand, other people should respect your shit.

    On the other hand, you should know better. I’m usually against victim blaming, but if the scissors that are the easiest to find are your fancy expensive ones, then what did you expect.

    The best way to protect your fabric scissors is to ensure that other scissors are more easily available to the idiots who’d wreck yours without a second thought. This also means keeping track of the shitty tools you never use because they exist purely to keep others away from your good shit.

    I’ve been on the receiving end of this, and I’ve learned from it. I like candles, and have lived with potheads most of my adult life. Lighters go missing faster than I can buy them. Now i keep an electric lighter that can’t be used for smoking but can be used as a taser.

  • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    Well don’t leave them where they are accessible in cutting things that aren’t fabric.

    Or maybe keep them with your fabric things.

    Or maybe get a whetstone like your grandma did, grandma

    • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      Consumer grade whetstones are completely unsuitable for maintaining fabric shears. Maintaining a consistent bevel on stones that coarse is damn near impossible, and you’re most likely going to ruin the mate between the cutting faces beyond repair.

      (“well I sharpened mine with an unoiled chunk of arkansas asphalt and they cut even better now”: no you didnt, you’re cutting with the burr, it won’t last, I hate you.)

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Well don’t leave them where they are accessible in cutting things that aren’t fabric.

      You have so never had a little girl Kelly in your life.