24 June 2025
Craft for the Soul / The Coloring Book for Goths
Issue No. 72
CRAFT FOR THE SOUL SHOWS US HOW TO CONSTANTLY GENERATE IDEAS AND CREATE COOL STUFF






Craft for the Soul: How to Get the Most Out of Your Creative Life
by Pip Lincolne (author)
Penguin Books Australia
2016, 216 pages, 6 x 9 x 0.9 inches (hardcover)
When it comes to dishing out all there is to know about living a creative life, Pip Lincolne is certainly your go-to woman. She’s the author of several creative titles and the talent behind popular blog Meet Me at Mike’s. She is also the founder of multiple inspiring projects, including worldwide craft group Brown Owls and the eMag series The Good Stuff Guide.
For some, stumbling upon Pip Lincolne’s book, Craft for the Soul, might seem a bit like discovering a rare gem. Sure, there are plenty of books about creativity, as well as numerous books filled with cute craft projects, but Lincolne has seamlessly blended the two to produce a book that is bursting with all things creative. Nestled among her down-to-earth advice about morning rituals, keeping active for creativity’s sake, and how to constantly generate ideas (among plenty of other topics), you’ll also find her favorite delicious recipes, along with adorable illustrations, inspiring quotes, and crafty DIY projects.
The author stresses that each and every one of us are capable of filling our day-to-day lives with more creativity, happiness, and fun. And for those of you thinking you don’t have a creative bone in your bodies – the pang of inspiration you feel every time you turn a page will certainly have you thinking otherwise! – Melanie Doncas
THE COLORING BOOK FOR GOTHS: THE WORLD’S MOST DEPRESSING BOOK






The Coloring Book for Goths: The World’s Most Depressing Book
by Tom Devonald
Atria Books
2016, 96 pages, 5.5 x 7.5 x 0.4 inches (paperback)
I wasn’t a big fan of high school, and my high school wasn’t a big fan of me. Weird, awkward, and music-obsessed, I was a concert-tee-clad speck in a sea of polo shirts and boat shoes. My 30th high school reunion was last July. A friend of mine from high school, who has a sadistic sense of humor, added me to the reunion Facebook page. One of the organizers for the event asked the group what songs they wanted to hear at the reunion. They all commented with one singular word, “Eighties.” The organizer tried their best to be diplomatic, and calmly asked which particular songs they wanted to hear, which then prompted the response of, “Eighties.” This went on for a while. Finally, someone commented with Starship’s “We Built This City.”
Needless to say, I didn’t attend the reunion. I try my best to avoid situations where I might accidentally hear one note of Starship’s “We Built This City.” In a strange coincidence, some of my friends who didn’t attend my high school organized a gothic/punk/industrial ‘club kid’ reunion the weekend prior to my high school reunion. During the early-to-mid ’80s, the midwestern city I lived in had a great alternative music club scene. We would spend most of our evenings dressed in black and coiffed outrageously, dancing to Bauhaus’ seminal track “Bela Lugosi is Dead,” Joy Division’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart,” amongst other doomy, angsty, deep cuts and non-hits. Going back to my hometown and dancing with old friends to great music was one of the highlights of 2015. Yes, I dressed in black.
Well, let’s segue into the review. The Coloring Book For Goths is a humorous coloring book requiring only one color: black. Geared to the current coloring book fad, it has one joke. Once you color it in, the page turns completely, thoroughly black. Featuring crows, black widow spiders, pentagrams, coffins, and crypts, and making references to Edgar Allen Poe, Robert Smith, and Friedrich Nietzsche, the book often only makes a passing reference to the goth subculture.
Some pages are funny and clever – a page of Metallica lyrics, pages exploring oblivion, the unknown, and the unknowable – but there are just as many embarrassing pages that belie a rudimentary understanding of the culture. An insecure killer whale? A polar bear in witness protection? Embarrassing tattoos? Unfortunately, someone enveloped in the goth culture would probably never purchase this book, and tourists to the culture probably won’t come away with a better understanding of it. It both embraces and pokes fun at the culture. Still, it was cute and made me snicker, because while we may have a serious demeanor, goths (and former goths) can take a joke. – S. Deathrage
06/24/2523 June 2025
Clays
Tools for Possibilities: issue no. 143

Non-fired sculpting clay
Sugru is a soft moldable material that reminds me of Fimo clay. But unlike Fimo, it does not have to be heated to cure. It air drys and is rubbery and sticks to anything. I used it to make a new button for my utility knife when the plastic one broke. I made bumpers for my cell phone. I put some on my tools so they would not roll off the table. I am still discovering ways to use the product. — Philip Lipton
This stuff comes in tiny pouches of different primary colors. You knead a bit with your hands until soft, then you apply it where you would like an additional grip, or stop, or section of repair. It’s pretty sticky, can be worked like clay, but dries into a hard rubber. The photo shows a paring knife handle that was falling apart from years of dishwasher use. I coated the outside with Sugru and it now it feels great and is dishwasher proof. See Sugru’s website for other ways it can be used. — KK

Better than clay
Artists know about this stuff. It’s flexible polymer clay that hardens into rigid plastic after a spell in your kitchen oven. Bright steadfast colors. Or you can paint, drill, and polish it. Great for making toys, models, small sculptures, modern jewelry, and weird stuff — anything that demands that colored plastic look. SuperSculpey is a translucent beige-colored (skin like) variety sold in bulk that dollmakers and Hollywood special effects swear by. Most good art suppliers will stock it. — KK

Stiff polymer clay
A few weeks ago, my 11-year old son and I decided to sculpt, so we got out SuperSculpey Firm polymer clay. After working with this newer style of Sculpey for a while, we decided it totally kicks ass on softer styles of Sculpey. Why? Because it doesn’t flop over on its side when handled. And it’s firm enough to keep its shape when carved. My son began making a tank. So I made a tank. We have yet to paint them.
The Sculpey brands are especially encouraging for beginners, yet professionals artists depend on them as well. Pros ranging from vinyl toy artists to designers for film use it. Unlike normal clay, Sculpey hardly changes shape or size when baked, and hardening takes place quickly, at the relatively low temperatures of a convection oven (even a toaster oven will do).
Because of its polymer base, there’s loads of fun techniques to try with Sculpey: like baking your sculpture for only half the allotted time. When you take it out of the oven, prematurely, you’ll find your little masterpiece has a soft, rubbery texture. In this state, it won’t lose its shape and can be easily carved with a knife or a file. Have you cut too much away? Add a little more Sculpey and put it back in the oven, for more cooking! — Robyn Miller

Silver clay that becomes silver metal
Precious Metal Clay lets you make fine jewelry with little experience or equipment. It works like Fimo clay, except it is more crumbly because it contains powdered precious metal, such as silver, or gold. (It will also dry out faster.) The organic clay binding burns off when you fire it and you end up with pure fine silver or gold in the shape of the clay you made. If you have jewelry skills you can keep working it from there, soldering, shaping, etc.. Since I don’t have much skill I just polish up my pieces or antique them with silver black. There’s an implication that you have to fire PMC pieces in a kiln (that would be nice), but so far everything I’ve done I’ve fired myself on the kitchen floor with a basic propane torch.
All PMC shrinks significantly when fired. However since the shrinkage is proportional, jewelers use this shrinkage to produce very fine detail that would be difficult if you had to work at full size. PMC comes in various formulations with different shrinkage rates. The original PMC shrinks 30%, while PMC+ and PMC3 shrinks only 10%. (I’ve never tried using the torch on anything except silver PMC+ and PMC3 because I prefer the lower shrinkage of these.)
My one piece of advice about firing PMC with a propane torch: This stuff is very expensive (it’s silver or gold, remember!) so take a small piece and sacrifice it to learn how to heat evenly first. It is very easy to overheat it which will melt the silver into a blob., which is bad. If you aren’t sure if it’s metal yet (it’ll be whitish), pick it up with needle nose plier and drop it very gently on the metal surface you fired it on. It should make a satisfying metal-on-metal thunk. When I am feeling more flush, I’ll find out if gold PMC can be fired this way. — Quinn Norton

Moldable plastic
Shapelock is “Ultra-High Molecular Weight Low Temperature Thermoplastic. Similar to nylon and polypropylene in toughness., except it’s easy to work with and shape.”
You get a bag of plastic pellets, put them in 160F water, and they phase change, becoming soft and moldable. If you don’t let the water get too hot, when you take the plastic out, it’s cool enough to shape with your hands.
When it cools down, it hardens into a strong, durable, paintable, machine-able white plastic. If you don’t like what you made, you just put it in 160F water again and reshape it.
Great for making prototypes — also fun to play with. The same stuff, under a different name (Friendly Plastic), is available in larger quantities, at a slightly cheaper rate. — Patrick Tufts
06/23/2522 June 2025
Personal info audit/Free audio transcription/Than Average
Recomendo - issue #467
Auditing personal info on web
Google has made it easier to see what personal information about you is currently posted on the web. Go to the Results About You page at Google, and fill out the form. It will take several days to weeks before you get results back showing what the public web shows. For me about a dozen occurrences of my home and email address. You can ask Google to delete each instance, but it only deletes it from its search results and not the web. (For that you need to contact the site displaying it.) — KK
Free audio transcription
Speech-to-Text by Borg is an automated transcription service with a generous free tier. You can upload MP3s up to 25MB (roughly 30 minutes of audio) and get fast, high-quality transcripts without paying a cent. They offer a paid tier at $0.06/hour for longer recordings. I use it for interviews, meeting notes, and voice memos. — MF
Compare yourself to others
Than Average is a small, “unscientific” investigation into how you compare yourself to others—for fun. Just answer the questions instinctively and see where you land in a room with 100 strangers. You can view all the questions and see how many people have answered them. I left my emotions and insecurities out of it, and found all the results interesting. — CD
Used stuff marketplace
Rather than trashing my old stuff, I like to find a new home for it, selling it or giving it away for free. The real action for used stuff has moved away from Craigslist to Facebook Marketplace. (The broadest reach is on eBay, but everything needs to be packaged for shipping.) Facebook Marketplace is the best for local and bulky things. It is a lot easier to use than Craigslist, and in my experience has 10 times the responses (for selling) or varieties (for buying). It is free to use. If you have patience you can find almost anything you want on Facebook Marketplace used, or get rid of almost anything you want with minimal hassle. — KK
Suction cup caddy
I needed a caddy for a newly tiled shower stall but was skeptical of suction-cup mounts, which in my experience always fail. The Hasko Shower Caddy changed my mind — it uses a knob-tightening mechanism that creates an incredibly strong hold on smooth tile. I installed it a month ago and it hasn’t budged, even when loaded with heavy bottles and supplies. For rough surfaces, it includes adhesive mounting discs. — MF
Beginner’s Wood Whittling Kit
Through ACER, an online integration community I am part of, I occasionally host wood whittling sessions. I am not a detail-oriented person or particularly skilled with my hands, but I find it very soothing and meditative to shape and smooth out tree sticks, which I then glue crystals and feathers onto to create wands. My only tool is this beginner’s carving kit by BeaverCraft. I’ve used it for a year now, and the knives are still sharp and easy to hold. They’re helping to build my confidence to someday carve a figure. — CD
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06/22/2520 June 2025
Book Freak 183: How to Read a Book
The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading

HOW TO READ A BOOK, by Mortimer J. Adler & Charles Van Doren | 1940 (Updated 1972)
Why It Matters:
In an age of information overload, the ability to read deeply and extract genuine understanding becomes increasingly rare and valuable. Many people can read basic text, but few know how to truly absorb and engage with challenging material in a way that transforms their understanding.
Three Levels of Mastery:
Inspectional Reading
Learn to quickly evaluate a book’s value before investing deep time. Systematically preview content to grasp the main structure and decide if fuller reading is warranted.
Analytical Reading
Engage in genuine conversation with the author. Identify core arguments, challenge assumptions, and connect ideas rather than just collecting facts.
Syntopical Reading
Master the art of reading multiple books on the same subject. Create a dialogue between different authors and develop your own well-reasoned position.
Try It Now:
Pick up a book you’ve been meaning to read. Set a timer for 15 minutes. First, read only the table of contents and write down what you think the main argument will be. Then, read the first and last paragraph of each chapter, jotting quick notes. Finally, flip to three random pages and read them carefully. Stand up and try to explain to an imaginary person, out loud, what this book is about and whether it’s worth your time.
Quote:
“Reading a book on any level beyond the elementary is essentially an effort on your part to ask it questions (and to answer them to the best of your ability). The art of reading is largely the art of asking the right questions in the right order.”
06/20/2519 June 2025
Craghoppers Clothing/Cheap Japan Flights/SE Asia Hotspot
Nomadico issue #160
Craghoppers Clothing is Back in the USA
Ever since ExOfficio went into decline after a buyout (they only sell underwear now), it has been more difficult to find tough travel clothing meant for adventurers. That was partly because UK apparel company Craghoppers pulled out of the U.S. market for a while. I’m happy to say they’re back in action at CraghoppersUSA.com and I’ve been trying out some of their “guaranteed for life” rugged shirts and pants, many items treated with Insect Shield to keep the bugs at bay. They also make treated skorts, leggings, and other items for women too. See my rundown here and get 15% off if you click from there or directly here with code TL15.
ZipAir for Cheap Japan Flights
Via partner Kevin Kelly (and of Recomendo), we’re getting reports of people finding crazy low flight prices to Japan on budget airline ZipAir. (They’re so cheap the domain is zipair.net—couldn’t afford the .com!) Kevin says one friend got a $300 round trip from the USA West Coast to Japan and another found a round-trip deal for $276. Lie-flat business class flights can be as low as $1,408 from Los Angeles to Tokyo if you pull up the next few months of dates. The website looks like a Coding 101 school project and the contact info is limited though, so be sure to have travel insurance in place. And expect to pay add-on fees.
Travel Fee Avoidance for Canadians
I often highlight tips for keeping transaction fees to a minimum while traveling, but I’ll be the first to admit that USA citizens have a lot more options than those in most other countries. My blogging buddy Bri Mitchell covered the best steps for Canadians though in her Substack newsletter The Weekly Traveler. Get the scoop here on what she advises for travelers from Canada in terms of debit and credit cards on the road.
Southeast Asia’s Top Nomad Hub
Chiang Mai has been the top digital nomad destination in Southeast Asia for about as long as people have been working remotely from a laptop. Bali was a close second, with Canggu especially getting plenty of transplants. James Clark of Nomadic Notes knows the scene in the region better than anyone though and his recent travels have convinced him that Da Nang in Vietnam is now the champ. Getting my attention: “part of the 27 km coastline that goes all the way to Hoi An” and “beer is somehow cheaper than a coconut.”
06/19/2518 June 2025
What’s in my NOW? — Musa Gathuru
issue #215
My wife and I call Kenya home, but we love to visit other places. We love to read, and we love to learn new things. As long as I am learning something new, I am happy. — Musa Gathuru
Links:
Productivity Blog
Travel Blog

PHYSICAL
- Beat up old guitar: my guitar is an old guitar that a friend gave me after she fell off a bodaboda (local motor bike transport) in Uganda and got the side bashed in. It sounds reasonably okay, and probably matches my skill level since I started to learn late in life. Here’s the thing: Since I started learning to play, it has brought me immeasurable pleasure and joy, even when the sounds emanating from it were more akin to an animal dying than actual music. And not just playing and singing myself, but my enjoyment of other people’s music has intensified, since now I actually have an appreciation how skilled they actually are. I think everyone should learn how to play an instrument at some point in their lives. You are welcome.
- Beat up old book reader: I bought an old second hand Kobo book reader on ebay. It cost me 50$ and I use it at least once a day. I am on course to read 52 books this year as I have done the last few years since I rediscovered my love of reading. As Carl Sagan says: “What an astonishing thing a book is. It’s a flat object made from a tree with flexible parts on which are imprinted lots of funny dark squiggles. But one glance at it and you’re inside the mind of another person, maybe somebody dead for thousands of years. Across the millennia, an author is speaking clearly and silently inside your head, directly to you. Writing is perhaps the greatest of human inventions, binding together people who never knew each other, citizens of distant epochs.” Apart from the bit about trees, everything he says applies to electronic books as well. My only challenge is remembering what I read. But my one invisible thing has helped me out with that.
- Macbook: I have tried a bunch of different laptops, and macs really do have it worked out. The perfect blend of usability, power, battery life and durability. And prettiness, which is an underrated quality to look for in a laptop. My last mac lasted 10 years before I had to upgrade it, which is pretty good value for money. I use my mac for pretty much everything. I don’t own a TV, so it is my entertainment center, communication, music, learning as well as the host of my 2 digital things.
DIGITAL
- Zettelkasten: A zettelkasten is a personal knowlege management system made famous by a German social scientist named Nicklas Luhmann. It made him so ridiculously productive that he pumped out more than 70 books and 400 scholarly articles in his lifetime. This was before computers, so his knowlege management system worked with index cards. I started managing all my notes and data using this system a couple of years ago, and in this short time I have built up a couple of thousand notes linked to each other. I use an app called ‘Obsidian‘ because it stores my notes in plain text that I can read on any computer or phone, and allows me to link between notes. You can view a subset at the link below, but the long and short of it is that I am soo thrilled to be able to find my information in a natural organic way. As Luhman says, it becomes a ‘second brain.’ It sounds freaky, but you can hold ‘conversations’ with since it keeps on throwing up interesting stuff that I created in the past. And since I created, it’s always interesting even if I forgot I wrote it!
- Johnny Decimal system: I tried a bunch of different file organization systems, and the JD system is pretty simple, and yet powerful enough to manage all my files. It applies to everything: task management, file storage, cloud file storage, etc. There is a simple index file which keeps track of the number assignment, and each folder gets a number in the format xx.xx. The genius of the system is that you are not allowed to have more than 2 levels of folders, so there is a kind of natural limit that forces you to keep things simple. Since I started using it I stopped spending ages looking for lost files, and know where everything is.
INVISIBLE
Barbell reading method
I have an exceedingly bad memory. I like to joke that my memory does not discriminate: I can forget your name, face and details regardless of your age, color, origin or gender. And it is not limited to forgetting names and faces. I can read entire books and not even remember whether I read the book or not. On more than one occasion I have reread a book in it’s entirety only to realise towards the end that I have actually read it before. Enter the Barbell reading method. Read once to get through the material. Mark sections that have value to you to revisit later. This may be electronically, or physically by highlighting. Then go back and process the marked sections. This is best done by rewriting the section (and this is important!) in your own words. You might do additional research, or draw charts, or mindmaps, or whatever you want. You might apply it to your own life, or area. You might think of examples. You might even change your mind and write down the reverse of what the original source says. The important thing is that this step makes it yours. Henceforth, this idea now belongs to you and can be used for whatever you want.
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06/18/25ALL REVIEWS

Book Freak 182: The Let Them Theory
Letting others live their lives will free you to live yours, by Mel Robbins
EDITOR'S FAVORITES
COOL TOOLS SHOW PODCAST
WHAT'S IN MY BAG?
18 June 2025

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