Bleary like Sunday morning
Aug. 16th, 2009 09:08 amomg so many tabs open, and I haven't even checked news feeds or Twitter yet.
There were some really interesting comments in the previous entry about the way people physically write, what kinds of pens or paper when they do write by hand, so... discuss. When I get my laptop (so I can download pictures from my camera), I'll take pictures of my handwriting and the way I lay things out on the page (which can be kind of... varied), just for kicks.
Anything else we want to talk about? Because... I can't really manage linkspam too well without Semagic.
(Help
cmdr_zoom with a computer problem?)

There were some really interesting comments in the previous entry about the way people physically write, what kinds of pens or paper when they do write by hand, so... discuss. When I get my laptop (so I can download pictures from my camera), I'll take pictures of my handwriting and the way I lay things out on the page (which can be kind of... varied), just for kicks.
Anything else we want to talk about? Because... I can't really manage linkspam too well without Semagic.
(Help
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Date: 2009-08-16 02:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-16 02:53 pm (UTC)I hope your computer tribulations are at an end. I think it's my turn next!
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Date: 2009-08-16 03:05 pm (UTC)It was about property damage but I couldn't help but think there should be a company that does that for more everyday problems.
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Date: 2009-08-16 03:28 pm (UTC)The upshot of all this is that I end up transcribing hundreds of handwritten pages into a word processor so I can edit them. I've heard rumors that big-deal writers have people to do this step for them. ^_^ I think I'd be too embarrassed. Also, my handwriting is surreal. ("Is that a B? Or a 3?" "... it's the word 'is'")
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Date: 2009-08-16 03:32 pm (UTC)I write in teeny tiny all caps, and only in red pen.
I never (hand) write in all caps except for when I'm writing about my MC.
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Date: 2009-08-16 03:37 pm (UTC)Or I use a Lamy Safari fountain pen with a fine nib in a moleskine notebook.
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Date: 2009-08-16 03:48 pm (UTC)Also, as hoped, Vinyl Evangeline is quite pretty in person, despite being hideous in photographs.
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Date: 2009-08-16 03:52 pm (UTC)I always use a retractable ballpoint pen in a spiralbound notebook. Gelpen smears and a pencil just makes me want to draw. And in the morning, if my face is a little puffy, I'll put on an ice pack while writing my plotlines.
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Date: 2009-08-16 04:03 pm (UTC)do you plan on seeing district 9, btw? i hear it's supposed to be fantastic.
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Date: 2009-08-16 04:03 pm (UTC)Really, what I do depends on the story. Sometimes I'm perfectly fine starting on the computer, setting it up all nice and formatted properly before I even start to write.
Sometimes I feel it necessary to write on paper, and a reguluar spiral-bound notebook of any size will do; I've even been known to write notes in the tiny little portable ones that fit in a purse or a pocket. Any pen will do, too, so long as it writes well. I work in the medical field (clerical medical field, not a nurse or doctor or anything), though, and with a lot of legal things, so writing in anything other than black ink is weird. I used to only write in blue, though.
When I have a random idea out of no where, I will write it down on anything with anything available to me.
When it comes to writing down just general notes, like character profiles, details about the country or religion or culture I'm making up (this is why I write fantasy, folks, so I can make this shit up), it's on paper all the way. Spiral-bound again, though I tried for a while keeping color-coded three-ring binders (gold for details about royal families, green for details about countries, blue for religion, etc. etc.), but that didn't work. Sometimes I'll use composition notebooks, but I've mainly used those as personal journals (I can't for the life of me use a book actually made as a journal for a journal, though I can surely use them to write notes about writing stuff if I have to).
Usually, I end up losing the specific notes about something in the notebook in between notes about other things that pop up and won't let me alone.
I have a shiny blue pocket-sized notebook that has some of my early notes from one of my big projects in it, and the damn thing keeps disappearing on me. I'll find it, only to lose it again immediately for YEARS, and then I'll find it tucked back behind some books on my bookshelf or something.
Uh... /babble
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Date: 2009-08-16 04:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-16 04:15 pm (UTC)Writing in sketchbooks is fun because it opens up the possibilities of drawing around the writing--or writing around drawings--but because of the size of the Moleskine I always feel like I'm writing more when I write in it.
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Date: 2009-08-16 04:17 pm (UTC)When I do actually sit down to write a story, I use a mechanical pencil on a legal pad to write an outline/character sketch. I write down what needs to happen and any details about it that I can think of, but sort of like bullet points rather than paragraphs. Then I get on the computer and actually write out the scenes. Then I print that out, read it, and scribble all over it.
Even if i one day became A Famous Writer, I would never show anyone my handwriting. It's God-awful. It hasn't improved since I was in the second grade, so it sort of looks like an 8 year old boy did it.
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Date: 2009-08-16 04:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-16 04:35 pm (UTC)I favor pens over pencils, but I do love mechanical pencils.
I hold my writing utensils in an abnormal way, apparently. I rest the pen on my third/ring finger, while most seem to rest iton their middle finger (I think?). I have a permanant callous on my third finger from writing, one that's not as prominent now since we've just had summer. Once school starts it will build up again.
When I write, I always end up doodling on the same page, too. Normally something that has to do with the scene. I'm no artist, but as far as doodles go I'm well practiced and they look like little illustrations.
:3
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Date: 2009-08-16 04:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-16 04:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-16 05:05 pm (UTC)If I write by hand though (which I still love to do) I am picky:/ Ideal tools? Spiral-bound, smaller notebook, lined pages, but not WIDE lines or DARK lines, and a Papermate Flexgrip Ultra in medium. The most perfect pen ever (and of course, they no longer make it;P).
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Date: 2009-08-16 05:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-16 05:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-16 05:39 pm (UTC)...
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Date: 2009-08-16 05:40 pm (UTC)It's kinda hard for me to write by hand, largely because I handwrite slowly and because I like music while I write. It's nice for notes and super-super rough drafts and outlines and things, though, because I can circle bits and move them via arrow and because I can physically see the changes as I make them. Also, because I can doodle on the margins and chew on pens while I'm thinking of the next thing, versus the computer where I, well, surf the web while I'm waiting for inspiration to come. (Fun fact: it doesn't help.) Um, maybe I should write by hand more, actually.
I know some people really prefer writing by hand, perhaps because of the tactile experience, or the look of it, or something. Natalie Goldberg's "Writing Down to the Bones" claims that writing by computer creates black, blocky letters and produces black, blocky work, so maybe others feel that way? But I feel like I write better on the computer. I don't know.
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Date: 2009-08-16 05:50 pm (UTC)I'm not too fussed about my writing implement; I tend to use whatever's at hand. I like mechanical pencil and ballpoint and gel pens (red and dark blue, preferably) the best, tho'. They also don't seem to run out as fast as others.
When I've got a story idea, my hand just seems to fly over the paper - I write *really* fast! I much prefer to write by hand, even if it means I have to go back and type it all up adfterwards. Writing by hand makes me more productive, and I can do it anywhere, at any time. I like that. :)
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Date: 2009-08-16 05:52 pm (UTC)This icon is the reason I don't write on the computer anymore.
Date: 2009-08-16 06:03 pm (UTC)I used to have a bad habit of writing very small, and ignoring all the lines and margins on the paper, essentially filling every inch, with an average of 1.5 lines of text per line of the paper, but I've recently broken that habit and am now filling the lines properly, leaving the margins for notes/etc. I use crossouts and carets to correct mistakes and add stuff in. If I decide I need to add an entire line or two in, I'll draw an extended arrow up into the margin/side margin and write it there.
When writing, especially on the back of the page where the binder's rings would bother my wrist, I often just take the page I'm working on out and write against the front of the binder. I also keep post-its stuck to the inside front cover of the binder with info and stuff about the story I'm working on.