05 March 2025

What’s in my NOW? — Asmus Helms

issue #203

Asmus Helms is an artist from Copenhagen. He paints on everything and has self-published two zines and two books. His works draw on autobiographical material, portraying people and places from his daily life. They range from everyday absurdities to themes like identity, addiction, and sexuality. Find him on Instagram @asmushelms.


PHYSICAL

  • Custom Built-in Shelving Unit – My wife and I just moved into a new apartment, and a home isn’t complete without books and art, so one of our bigger upgrades to the space was a built-in shelving unit in the living room. It was build by Made By Baden and we love it.
  • How To Be An Artist by Jerry Saltz – A no-nonsense, inspiring guide to making art. It’s packed with blunt advice, humor, and practical steps that cut through the usual artistic self-doubt.
  • Montana Foldable RPET Bag – Holds all of the groceries, a bunch of spray cans, folds up small, and looks cool. Made from recycled plastic, it’s tough, portable, and the perfect mix of function and aesthetics.

DIGITAL

  • The Art Career Academy – Making a living as an artist is hard. I am not there yet, but this has helped me get much closer. It’s practical, community-driven, and filled with real strategies instead of vague motivational nonsense.
  • Struthless’ YouTube Channel – Funny, smart, and useful. Self-help often gives me the ick, but Struthless is both brutally honest and very funny. His videos offer real insights on creativity, self-discipline, and making things that actually matter.

INVISIBLE

“Whatever you like it all fits in. It doesn’t matter how different those things are that you like. They all fit into this world of shit you like.”

— El-P (On the “What Had Happened Was..” podcast)

Sign up here to get What’s in my NOW? a week early in your inbox.

03/5/25

04 March 2025

The Twilight Children / Make: Tools

Issue No. 56

THE TWILIGHT CHILDREN MIXES SPUNKY KIDS, COMPLICATED ADULTS, AND GOVERNMENT GOONS WITH MAGICAL REALISM

The Twilight Children
by Gilbert Hernandez (author) and Darwyn Cooke (illustrator)
Vertigo
2016, 144 pages, 6.7 x 10.2 x 0.2 inches (softcover)

Buy on Amazon

Any fan of Love and Rockets creator Gilbert Hernandez and of BatmanCatwoman, and New Frontier writer and artist Darwyn Cooke will be excited to read The Twilight Children, a four-issue series by Vertigo collected in this soft cover book.

The Twilight Children is set in a seaside town and the cast of characters includes his familiar mix of spunky kids and “complicated” adults. There are also government goons, a metaphysical siren, and mysterious, powerful orbs. People disappear, children are blinded (yet see again), and what is the deal with the glowing balls?!?

It’s great to see the wonderful art of Darwyn Cooke again, but sadly he died suddenly at age 53 in May, 2016 and this may be one of his last books (reason enough to get the book). Cooke’s commercial art style with lively character design and simple, bold brushwork gives a more “slick” look than what you’d usually expect from a Gilbert Hernandez book. Dave Stewart (my favorite colorist and the best part of many Dark Horse comics!) does a spectacular job. His painterly, subtle palette and restrained use of color hold line art fits Cooke’s drawing perfectly. No gradient mesh or lens flare effects, just solid sponge- and dry-brush painting. The bright and colorful seaside setting is a good contrast to the darker story elements. Also included in this compilation are some nice extras, like full-page paintings between chapters and a sketchbook of characters with storyboards by Hernandez.

Warning: Some readers may feel unsatisfied with the ending. Much is left unexplained and mysteries persist. If shows like Twin Peaks piqued you, you might feel the same about this book. And, although the book looks like a colorful, mainstream comic, it is a Gilbert Hernandez story and is marked “SUGGESTED FOR MATURE READERS.” – Robert Knetzger


LEARN TOOLS AS YOU PUT THEM TO USE IN PROJECTS

Make: Tools: How They Work and How to Use Them
by Charles Platt
Maker Media
2016, 260 pages, 8.0 x 0.4 x 9.6 inches, Hardcover

Buy on Amazon

One of the things I’ve always enjoyed about Charles Platt’s Make: Electronics series (which I instigated as an editor at Make: Books) is his “Learning by Discovery” approach. You learn about electronics by doing the electronics and then learning about the science and engineering behind what you just did. So I was thrilled to see that in Platt’s latest book, Make: Tools, he uses the same project-based learning approach. Here, you do various, mainly wood-based, projects and learn about the tools as they are needed. For instance, in the first project, which is a wooden puzzle, saws are discussed as one is called for, then mitre boxes, clamps, rulers and squares, sanding and finishing tools. In the end, you’ve been introduced to each of the the tools in action and you have a fun puzzle to show for your efforts.

Charles always picks clever projects and Make: Tools is no exception. Projects here include a set of jumbo wooden dice, a pantograph, a Swanee whistle, parquetry, some wooden and plastic boxes, basic bookshelves, and even a few useful shop jigs. Through the course of each chapter, the project reveals the tools needed and explains how they’re used, their features and variations, and any safety precautions. Each chapter is also followed by a fact sheet that delves more deeply into a featured tool or material introduced in the chapter. Charles is known for his intense attention to detail and there’s plenty of evidence of that here. Each of the handsomely-designed pages (photographed and illustrated by Charles and designed by his wife, Erico Platt) has a lot going on and close examination pays off. It’s a fun book just to browse through. And, even if you don’t build anything from Make: Tools, the steps in the projects act as a narrative through which you can better understand how these tools are used in a variety of building situations. By the end, you’ll have been introduced to dozens of tools, materials, and techniques and have gained a solid grounding in how to use them in the real world.

– Gareth Branwyn

Books That Belong On Paper first appeared on the web as Wink Books and was edited by Carla Sinclair. Sign up here to get the issues a week early in your inbox.

03/4/25

03 March 2025

Cold Clothes

Tools for Possibilities: issue no. 127

Lightest down jacket

Montbell Ex Light Jacket

At first sight it’s a nice-looking puffy jacket. Then someone picks up said puffy jacket and throws it at you. You put your hand out ready to catch a pound or so of duck-filled garment and then – nothing. Not what you expected. It’ as though a helium balloon just brushed against your hand. It’s thick and puffy and warm, but it doesn’t weigh anything.

And so began my love affair with the Montbell Ex Light Jacket. Not to be confused with its heavier cousin, the Montbell UL Jacket, the Ex Light weighs in at a scant 5.7 oz for a medium. Don’t expect frills such as pockets or hemmed waists, or the insulation and more durable exterior of a thicker down coat.

I wore this jacket whenever I had a chance on the Wonderland Trail. Rest stops, camp, heck I even slept in it on most nights. It’s a perfect complement to my lightweight summer bag when things get a little chilly at night.

Granted, I’ve spent more time in this jacket off the mountain at this point. It’s so snug, so cozy that I’ve been living in it for most of the winter. It replaces my Bozeman Cocoon Vest, and for 0.4 oz more it packs a whole lot more warmth. The downside is that I’m more vulnerable to rain as the Cocoon was synthetic and this is down, but I’ve found it to be a worthwhile tradeoff. —Brett Marl


Best cold, wet outerwear

Paramo Directional Clothing System

Normal “breathable” shells have three great failings. The worst is that they’re just not that breathable, especially in rain, and extra-especially for people who carry on high-energy activities when it rains. This is because they’re based on a pored membrane that works by letting water vapour go from dryer to wetter air, so when the air outside is wet you’re stuck with living with your own sweat. Their two other failings are that repairing rips with a needle is disastrous, because water flows through the holes the needle makes in the membrane, and that getting dry once you’re soaked – whether by your own sweat or a fall in a river – takes forever. Softshells try to get around some of these problems, but at the cost of letting in moderate to heavy rain.

A company that has found the answer is Paramo with their “Directional” shell fabrics. Instead of using a membrane they use a “pump liner” that sucks water away from the inside of their shells. So sweat is still expelled in the rain, needle holes don’t matter because water trying to enter via them is pumped back, and if you get soaked under your shell when you fall out of your kayak your baselayers will dry out faster with your Paramo on, sucking water away, than if you took it off.

In other good news: Paramo is rustle free, completely windproof (it’s a popular choice of Antarctic exploration teams), is easily washed and re-proofed in a washing machine, and the average hard-used shell seems to last about a decade.

The downside of Paramo shells has been that they combine a shell with a midlayer, making them too warm for many people except in winter, and slightly bulky to carry. However the latest Paramo Velez Light has fixed this problem with lighter insulation and excellent venting. You simply put it on a over a baselayer and work the venting (and roll up the sleeves – something you can’t comfortably do with a normal shell) as needed – the shell stays on all day. Because sweat transport and venting are so good this works in all but summer weather. The Velez Light also has an exceptionally good hood that keeps goggles and spectacles dry in the rain but provides more than adequate side vision even for cycling in traffic.

The bad news is that although discussed excitedly on ultra light-weight hiking lists from time to time, Paramo doesn’t seem to be stocked widely – if at all – in the US. However, ordering from the UK is hardly the adventure it was before the invention of the steamship and wireless telegraph.

How good is Paramo? Good enough so that I can crank a cyclocross bike at maximum speed cross country in heavy rain and ice cold wind and my torso is as warm and dry as it would be if I was cycling on a summer day wearing only a wicking tee shirt. In short, ***astoundingly*** good. — Jonathan Coupe


Traditional wool wear

Filson

Filson’s gear is made in Washington state and is superior to almost all of the winter/outdoor gear I’ve used. They are a bit spendy but spectacularly well made, and they wear like iron. I imagine my Filson Mackinaw will be handed down to my daughter and then to her children before its usefulness has departed. The woolen gear is quiet in the woods, keeps you warm even if damp or wet, and smells just fine to boot. Thumbs up. — John Coates


Ultimate cold protection

RefrigiWear

Having to work outside in really tough conditions is bad enough, but many times worse if you’re cold too.

I found RefrigiWear suits years ago. They’re made for workers in blast freezers, so they’re tough, not super expensive and come in lots of sizes. My whole crew got these suits and they kept us fully functional while outside overnight for February-in-Wisconsin telecom projects.

I have no idea what Iditarod racers wear, and I’m pretty sure these won’t have the right cache for the ski set, but for working people these suits help you get the job done in the cold and won’t drain the piggy bank. — Wayne Ruffner


Tips:

  • A bit of research online shows that 70% isopropyl alcohol in a 2:1 ratio with water seems to be the optimal solution to deice windows (if you have it on hand, methanol is recommended as well), and that it won’t hurt your car’s paint-job(although it might remove some wax). — Oliver Hulland
  • I have a small wet/dry vac that I use as a substitute for renting a rug cleaner to spot clean my rugs and furniture. Use soap and water in a spray bottle or just pour it out of a glass on the spot. Rub it in with a brush or your fingers and thensuck it up with the wet/dry vac. Rinse the spot with plain water two or three times the same way. It works great. I’ve done this to get juice off of my car seats as well.— Stephen Foss
  • Two-inch diameter concave mirror from Edmund Scientific magnifies your face when you look into it, and the shorter the focal length, the more magnification you perceive. While this mirror is intended no doubt for high school studentsconducting optics experiments, I use it to examine my own eyes. Why, you ask? Because when I am traveling, there is a small but tangible chance that I may get a particle of foreign matter in one of my eyes at a time when there is no one around to see it and remove it. (I once paid $200 to an emergency room, merely for removal of a tiny piece of soot adhering to the underside of an eyelid.) I don’t use contact lenses, but I imagine this problem is more acute for people who do. The downside of transporting the mirror is that it is fragile, but I have managed to avoid breaking mine for a couple of years now, and recently I was glad that I had itwhen I was in Florida on my own, everything was shut down because of a hurricane…and I got something in my eye. — Charles Platt
  • I had a white board with old writing on it – I tried Windex, alcohol, etc, to little avail, then my girlfriend suggested using a whiteboard marker – they are full of the correct solvent! Just color over what you want to erase and wipe it away.Doh! — David Spargur

Once a week we’ll send out a page from Cool Tools: A Catalog of Possibilities. The tools might be outdated or obsolete, and the links to them may or may not work. We present these vintage recommendations as is because the possibilities they inspire are new. Sign up here to get Tools for Possibilities a week early in your inbox.

03/3/25

02 March 2025

Retro Recomendo: Fun things

Recomendo - issue #451

Anti-boredom

I always carry a deck of cards. Not to play card games, but to practice sleight of hand. It’s easy to have a conversation and practice moves at the same time, and it prevents me from fidgeting. This 4 DVD set, The Royal Road to Card Magic is a bargain at $15, and a great way to get started. — MF

Geography quiz game

I thoroughly enjoy playing this geographical guessing game “City Guesser” — probably because I am good at it. To play online you are shown a first-person view of walking through a city and you have to guess what city in the world you are in. You get points depending on how close you are and how fast you recognize the place. You can play against yourself, or other players, and you can narrow the scope. I’m great in Asia and no good in Africa. The game also works as a virtual vacation because inhabiting someone else’s walk is weirdly comforting. There is a related game, “GeoGuessr”, that plops you into a random place on Google Street View, usually not in the city. Here you can look around in all directions on your own “walk” and control your speed and path. (The free version requires signup.) Some people take this challenge very seriously and there are YouTube channels that follow some of the master navigators, like the champ GeoWizard. The lightning speed of his detective work is unbelievable, and as entertaining as magic. — KK

So many paper airplane designs

I was happy to come across this repository of paper airplane designs on Foldnfly.com. I didn’t know so many possibilities existed! We had a fun family tournament in the backyard this weekend. There seems to be quick, video tutorials for all of the designs. — CD

Deep YouTube

My daughter told me about Astronaut.io. It’s a website that plays a few seconds of random YouTube videos with almost no views — like this video of a cafe in Vietnam with 1 view, and this one of goats eating weeds near a freeway in rural Japan with 0 views. After a few seconds, it starts playing another video. It’s addictive. Many of the videos aren’t in English, which is a plus for me. — MF

Feel connected to the Universe

This helped me get out of my headspace for a bit: NASA’s What Did Hubble See on Your Birthday? I entered all the important dates I could think of and went down a Wikipedia wormhole to learn more about the Sombrero Galaxy and light echos. Every image is awesome and uplifting and teleports me out of my mental space to somewhere else. — CD

Puzzle source

The go-to source for physical puzzles is Puzzle Masters in Canada. They have everything, including lots of Japanese puzzles: Puzzle boxes, puzzle locks, jig saw puzzles, rubik’s cubes of all varieties, magic puzzles, toys, collectible puzzles, all very high quality. — KK

Our subscriber base has grown so much since we first started eight years ago, that most of you have missed all our earliest recommendations. The best of these are still valid and useful, so we’re trying out something new — Retro Recomendo. Once every 6 weeks, we’ll send out a throwback issue of evergreen recommendations focused on one theme from the past 8 years.

03/2/25

27 February 2025

Decades of Travel Wisdom/TripIt App/Carry-on Limits

Nomadico issue #145

A weekly newsletter with four quick bites, edited by Tim Leffel, author of A Better Life for Half the Price and The World’s Cheapest Destinations. See past editions here, where your like-minded friends can subscribe and join you.

50+ Years of Travel Wisdom

Welcome to the many new subscribers after Nomadico co-founder Kevin Kelly mentioned us at the end of this collection of tips gleaned from 50+ years of travel. It’s hard for me to pick a favorite, but here’s a sample: “In 53 years of traveling with all kinds of people, I’ve seen absolutely no correlation between where you eat and whether you have intestinal problems, so to maximize the enjoyment of local foods, my rule of thumb is to eat wherever healthy-looking locals eat.” (And hey, he was a backpacker in the 1970s!)

Travel Plans in One Place

Someone asked me recently which travel apps would be a nightmare to give up on my phone and I had two: Google Maps and TripIt. Uses for the first are obvious, but TripIt is my second brain when I’m on the move, with transportation tickets, lodging reservations, and advance museum ticket times all saved in one place. As soon as the confirmation hits my e-mail box, it gets automatically forwarded to the app so I don’t have to do anything. I’ve been on the free plan for 12 years, but if you pay $49 a year for Pro you get some extra perks like alerts when a better seat opens up or when the flight price drops.

A Complete Guide to Carry-on Luggage Restrictions

While we’ve now standardized our travel tech around Bluetooth and USB-C, the airlines have gone the other way with luggage and splintered off in multiple directions. Not only are the fees a convoluted mess, but so are the answers to the simple question, “How big can my carry-on bag be?” In the USA you’re usually safe with 45 linear inches (22 X 14 X 9) but some allow a tad more. For European or Asian that could be too large though and you’ll also have to check it or pay extra if it weighs too much. EasyJet only allows the equivalent of 100 linear centimeters (39.6 linear inches) and for Air China your carry-on can only weigh 5 kilograms (11 pounds). Afar has done the research and published the most comprehensive rundown I’ve ever seen.

Is It Less Safe to Fly Now?

I’ve always been that guy pulling out stats to show how safe flying is compared to getting in a car, but since the administration change in the USA on January 20, I’m feeling a lot less confident. After 16 years with no deadly commercial airline crashes in the USA, we’ve had a whole series of them in just a few weeks, including 67 people dead in D.C. and 10 in Alaska. Those tragedies would inspire most leaders to increase the safety budget and manpower, but instead we’re seeing headlines like “Hundreds of FAA employees fired by Trump administration weeks after midair DC collision.” Full article here.

02/27/25

25 February 2025

The Earth and I / Have You Seen My Trumpet?

Issue No. 55

Books That Belong On Paper first appeared on the web as Wink Books and was edited by Carla Sinclair. Sign up here to get the issues a week early in your inbox.

THE EARTH AND I – IS CLIMATE CHANGE MOVING TOO FAST FOR A NEW BOOK ON CLIMATE CHANGE?

The Earth and I
by James Lovelock (editor) and Jack Hudson (illustrator)
Taschen
2016, 168 pages, 8.5 x 10.9 x 0.8 inches (hardcover)

Buy on Amazon

It is obviously unfair to dismiss the entire contents of a book for a single tin-eared statement, but the clunker that comes near the end of The Earth and I by Gaia-theory originator James Lovelock is a doozy. The inexplicable passage follows a dozen essays by journalists, a Nobel Prize winner, and several Ivy League professors, who make a pretty good case for both the insignificance of human beings in the universe and their unique ability to end life as we know it here on Planet Earth. In an attempt, then, to give his shell-shocked readers a sliver of hope by celebrating the success of the Montreal Protocol, which banned chlorofluorocarbons in 1989, Lovelock crows about how these ozone-destroying compounds were replaced by hydrofluorocarbons, which, he writes, “are far less harmful to the planetary environment.”

Somewhere between the time Lovelock wrote those words and the publication of his book, hydrofluorocarbons were added to the Montreal Protocol’s list of banned substances – eliminating “less harmful” hydrofluorocarbons is expected to keep our warming planet’s temperature from rising by a full half-degree Celsius.

The inability of even an authority like Lovelock to keep pace with current events points out how quickly both the science and politics of climate change are a changing. In this light, understanding the holistic view of the planet’s processes – from the weather above us to the meaning of the geological history below our feet – has never been more important. The Earth and I delivers on these topics and more, while Jack Hudson’s engaging illustrations lure us in and invite the eye to linger. Many readers may well be tempted to do just that, but they shouldn’t – at last report, Greenland and Antarctica were melting at alarming fast and irreversible rates. – Ben Marks


HAVE YOU SEEN MY TRUMPET? – A HUMOROUS RIDDLE AND WORD-PLAY BOOK FOR KIDS

Have You Seen My Trumpet?
by Michaël Escoffier (author) and Kris Di Giacomo (illustrator)
Enchanted Lion Books
2016, 48 pages, 7.9 x 12.3 x 0.5 inches (hardcover)

Buy on Amazon

The third book in Michaël Escoffier’s and Kris Di Giacomo’s word-play trilogy, Have You Seen My Trumpet?, brings the same silly love of language as their previous two stories, with a healthy dose of humor and animal antics.

What I love most about Have You See my Trumpet? (and its predecessor, Where’s the Baboon?), is that it makes a game of reading for both early- and pre-readers. Every page spread has a riddle of a question in which the answer is actually written. For example, the answer to “Who loves guacamole?” is Mole (see what they did there?), who is also pictured in a creature-filled beach scene cuddling an avocado. Though my preschooler doesn’t read yet, she does know some letter sounds and has begun using the answers to each riddle (written in the question in red) for practice. Because the answers are also illustrated, the book gives an added bonus of reading not just words, but facial expressions, body language, and other social cues.

A different author/illustrator team could have easily missed the mark with this book as the concept, at face value, could be terribly boring and numbingly basic. But the subtle narrative, exciting vocabulary, and clever illustrations make Have You Seen My Trumpet? a book that is fun for little kids and their grown-ups to read again and again. – Mk Smith Despres

02/25/25

EDITOR'S FAVORITES

COOL TOOLS SHOW PODCAST

12/20/24

Show and Tell #414: Michael Garfield

Picks and shownotes
12/13/24

Show and Tell #413: Doug Burke

Picks and shownotes
12/6/24

Show and Tell #412: Christina K

Picks and shownotes

WHAT'S IN MY BAG?
05 March 2025

ABOUT COOL TOOLS

Cool Tools is a web site which recommends the best/cheapest tools available. Tools are defined broadly as anything that can be useful. This includes hand tools, machines, books, software, gadgets, websites, maps, and even ideas. All reviews are positive raves written by real users. We don’t bother with negative reviews because our intent is to only offer the best.

One new tool is posted each weekday. Cool Tools does NOT sell anything. The site provides prices and convenient sources for readers to purchase items.

When Amazon.com is listed as a source (which it often is because of its prices and convenience) Cool Tools receives a fractional fee from Amazon if items are purchased at Amazon on that visit. Cool Tools also earns revenue from Google ads, although we have no foreknowledge nor much control of which ads will appear.

We recently posted a short history of Cool Tools which included current stats as of April 2008. This explains both the genesis of this site, and the tools we use to operate it.

13632766_602152159944472_101382480_oKevin Kelly started Cool Tools in 2000 as an email list, then as a blog since 2003. He edited all reviews through 2006. He writes the occasional review, oversees the design and editorial direction of this site, and made a book version of Cool Tools. If you have a question about the website in general his email is kk {at} kk.org.

13918651_603790483113973_1799207977_oMark Frauenfelder edits Cool Tools and develops editorial projects for Cool Tools Lab, LLC. If you’d like to submit a review, email him at editor {at} cool-tools.org (or use the Submit a Tool form).

13898183_602421513250870_1391167760_oClaudia Dawson runs the Cool Tool website, posting items daily, maintaining software, measuring analytics, managing ads, and in general keeping the site alive. If you have a concern about the operation or status of this site contact her email is claudia {at} cool-tools.org.

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