kukkurovaca

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF

Yeah, aero press is generally considered to be an immersion brewer, rather than a drip/percolation brewer. It's functionally like a french press, but paper filtered.

[–] kukkurovaca@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Welcome to the fediverse! Instance admins are under obligation to federate with every other instance possible, and are also under no obligation to do everything in their power to recapture the reddit experience.

Lol what does any of that wall of text have to do with "diversity."

There's not much drama here tbh; "admin defederates a somewhat controversial instance and some people agree and some people don't" is, as other commenters have said, very business as usual for the fediverse.

I do think it's natural in lemmy for people on other instances to have takes about defed calls because they may use communities on one of those two servers, or both, and be impacted as defederation splits the user bases. But it feels like most of the "drama" here is just free speech maximalist/libertarian trolling.

!fediverselore@lemmy.ca

Hario or their US distributor have a storefront, thanks to which I just found out that they sell cute slash disturbing bird-shaped filters??!? wtf

https://www.hario-usa.com/collections/filters/products/v60-lovedrip-paper-filter-02

And yes, lots of independent roasters carry filters. Rogue Wave in Canada has a really good filter selection including Cafec ones.

[–] kukkurovaca@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I feel like finding a good instance in the fediverse (that's accepting users) is always a nightmare.

That being said, I've been happy with the vibes on lemmy.blahaj.zone and they have a calckey/firefish instance (that's the main blahaj.zone). But it's not strictly general-purpose.

[–] kukkurovaca@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Yep, adding water is a perfectly good solution! You can do it a little at a time until it tastes right and then make a note of however much water that was.

Bypass brewing seems underutilized in pourover -- although it's pretty common in aeropress recipes. Crown coffee has an interesting post about it from a while ago.

Bypass will reduce your extraction and hence efficiency, but that only matters in a commercial setting IMO. That being said, if you want to achieve the same thing without bypass at the end, probably what you'd end up doing is using a longer ratio (more water) and then possibly needing to tweak another variable such as grinding a bit coarser to re-balance the flavor.

I wish there were more boards with solenoids

[–] kukkurovaca@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I feel like I'm not not missing that much blobhaj, headphones at least as far as the sound is concerned.

But it is true that you don't get like the physical feeling of it (unless you have one of those weird vests, I guess).

Crinacle graph of EE Bravado MK1 which go up to almost +15 in the subbass

[–] kukkurovaca@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Neat! I like the keyboardio folks a lot, although their boards aren't always what I'm personally looking for.

[–] kukkurovaca@lemmy.blahaj.zone 12 points 2 years ago (2 children)

https://mas.else.social/@choyer/110746384528095273

Someone checked and there's already an existing trademark for Firefish in software specifically, at least in Europe. Apparently they make HR solutions of some sort.

https://jobs.firefishsoftware.com/about-us/meet-the-team.aspx

ohno

 

Via Carryology. It's fun to see more experimental bag designs sometimes, and these are certainly unexpected.

blobhaj, thinking

 

My RF native kit to date has consisted of the 16mm f/2.8 and the 50mm f/1.8, plus sundry adapted lenses. While I'm extremely pleased with the performance of both those lenses, I did recently find that for landscape-y type scenes I was doing a bit more lens swapping than ideal.

So, after seeing that someone on flickr had some good IR results with the 15-30, I decided to give it a shot. (First time using a zoom lens in like a decade, I think.)

Initial impressions are that it's usable, but not ideal. There's a hotspot that kicks in at f/11-ish. It's somewhat dependent on the scene, so I suspect a lens hood might help (I have one on order.) Overall contrast is a little low, which is no big deal, and at the wide end, the edges can get a bit funky, which is not uncommon for IR.

(BTW, from what I could tell by trolling google, it looks like the 14-35 f/4 L has somewhat worse hotspot performance.)

Here's a hotspot comparison at f/8, 11, 16

 

Search turns up a ton of groups where the string "tea" appears anywhere in the name (e.g., "team")

 

Kolari IR Chrome filter on full-spectrum Canon RP, Canon RF16mm f/2.8

Stock/straight out of camera, the IR Chrome filter gives a pretty orange rendition to IR. Getting to a more traditional pink-magenta look requires a bit of color correction. Example correction in DXO:

The shift is easy, but it can get troublesome to apply in cases where there are visible orange or light brown objects in the scene. Untreated wood is particularly tricky and requires local edits.

 

Since there should be at least one IR photo post, right?

This is a US flag that some folks in Santa Clara, CA hoisted up a very tall palm tree. This photo shows off three of the fun things that infrared light does:

  • Living foliage turns white because chlorophyll reflects infrared light very efficiently
  • Clear skies turn dark, a feature infrared filters share with regular visible red filters
  • Dyes and pigments behave unpredictably. US flags are a great way to demonstrate this because, unlike a piece of clothing, everyone knows what a US flag is supposed to look like. (This also impacts night vision stuff, as a result of which military folks have special patches that are intended to be legible in IR.)

This was shot with an original Canon 5D with a black and white IR conversion (720nm I think) and an old Nikon 105mm f/2.5 K-type.

I spotted this flag from Caltrain while riding to visit a friend in Santa Cruz, then spent a few hours using google street view to figure out where specifically it was located and how to get there.

 

Infrared photography uses modified cameras, filters, and/or specialized film to capture near infrared light that is outside the visible range. Originally used for scientific, agriculture, and notably for military surveillance, but later was deployed for artistic effect due to its distinctive rendering of foliage and skies.

!infrared_photography@lemmy.blahaj.zone

 

Pinned post for links to lens IR performance/hotspot info

 

I don't know a thing about cine stuff, but a friend pointed out to me that this film was partially shot on infrared stock. Fun quotation here:

“We wanted the cane white because sugar is white — it was sugar,” according to Calzatti. “Urusevsky had used infrared before. Russia didn’t produce infrared film, so I came to a manufacturer in Kazan who made film strictly for the military – for shooting the other side of the moon, for spying on American objects. They hand-made infrared for us in what looked like a kitchen. It was of very high contrast and very low sensitivity — around 30 ASA — and it was on celluloid instead of tri-acetate. We had no infrared meter, and no infrared marks on the lens, so many times the results were unpredictable. After a while we just used our instincts, and we became friends with infrared. What you see in the film is okay, but we shot much footage to select from. Each scene was done for 15 or 20 times, so it never was filmed spontaneously.

 

Hi, folks. I'm sure this group is premature at this point because even the main photography communities on lemmy/kbin are not that active yet, but I thought it would be nice to have a place to park some resources and info about IR.

I'm a pretty casual photographer and I've been shooting infrared off and on for a while. (Here's my IR stuff on flickr) I've used unconverted and converted digital cameras and modern IR films like Rollei IR400. Current setup is digital with mainly a converted Canon RP and Ricoh GRIII.

 

Any communities or instances focused on non-white folks or information/news/organizing against racism and colonialism specifically?

There's a wealth of general lefty communities it seems like but at a glance many of them seem to be preettttyyy white

 

Orea, Thailand Doi Seket, Panama Gesha Abu

 

I find it very easy to lock myself into one or two different ratios simply because I don't want to do math first thing in the morning. But sometimes, especially if there's coffee that's just finicky, a big swing in ratio can be just the thing.

My most commonly used ratio is 1:18, but I have a coffee (medium-light, washed) currently that I've mostly enjoyed iced and not hot. So I was going to try doing it hot with bypass this morning, but after tasting it at 1:10, it was really good, so problem solved I guess.

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