wintertime workshop clothes (and heat) on a budget
Posted: Tue Jan 21, 2025 10:09 am
I go to the thrift store and I grab some thicker 2XL sweatshirts. I prefer that they not have writing on them - even though I'm only in my shop, but beggars can't be choosers.
The thicker ones last longer and 2XL fits nice and loose. I'm personally not much of a fan of smocks, just fwiw.
Inevitably, holes get burned in the fronts of the sweatshirts and also get worn in them from jamming tubing up against myself while working on the other ends of things. Maybe these aren't the best work techniques, but I prefer to hold things and work on them rather than set things down and work on them, though some things - of course - have to be set down to be worked on.
Since the sweatshirts are 2XL and loose fitting, once I get too many holes in them I can turn them around and wear them backwards, so there aren't any holes in the front anymore. After both the front and the back are full of holes, I cut them apart and use the side areas (with no holes) to cover my earth magnets. Eventually, it's time to go pick up another two or three $1 to $3 2XL thrift store sweatshirts.
So many of my habits - which tend to resemble these - are why I tend to chuckle at rich people and multi-million dollars paid talking heads who wag their fingers at me from the television set, telling me that I need to save the Earth and be more conservationist...
... it's only 19° right now and I've got horns to fix, but I'm going to go out and cut down some more storm blown over trees out in the woods from last year's 100+ mph windstorm, so Mrs bloke can continue to feed the wood stove. Please don't report me for spewing carbon into the atmosphere, even though otherwise all of those limb and branches would rot and spew carbon into the atmosphere anyway... and frankly spewing that carbon into the atmosphere personally costs me quite a bit less than spewing burned natural gas carbon into the atmosphere... as well as keeping the woods cleaner - which discourages forest fires and actually makes it easier for the wildlife (some of which becomes our food) to forage. One other thing... I'm not going to kill myself splitting huge ends of limbs nor (certainly not) trunks, I'm also not going to send money to Asia to buy a gasoline wood splitter, and I'm also not going to burn the gasoline required to run one, so all of that huge stuff goes into washes and ravines to reverse erosion.
The thicker ones last longer and 2XL fits nice and loose. I'm personally not much of a fan of smocks, just fwiw.
Inevitably, holes get burned in the fronts of the sweatshirts and also get worn in them from jamming tubing up against myself while working on the other ends of things. Maybe these aren't the best work techniques, but I prefer to hold things and work on them rather than set things down and work on them, though some things - of course - have to be set down to be worked on.
Since the sweatshirts are 2XL and loose fitting, once I get too many holes in them I can turn them around and wear them backwards, so there aren't any holes in the front anymore. After both the front and the back are full of holes, I cut them apart and use the side areas (with no holes) to cover my earth magnets. Eventually, it's time to go pick up another two or three $1 to $3 2XL thrift store sweatshirts.
So many of my habits - which tend to resemble these - are why I tend to chuckle at rich people and multi-million dollars paid talking heads who wag their fingers at me from the television set, telling me that I need to save the Earth and be more conservationist...
... it's only 19° right now and I've got horns to fix, but I'm going to go out and cut down some more storm blown over trees out in the woods from last year's 100+ mph windstorm, so Mrs bloke can continue to feed the wood stove. Please don't report me for spewing carbon into the atmosphere, even though otherwise all of those limb and branches would rot and spew carbon into the atmosphere anyway... and frankly spewing that carbon into the atmosphere personally costs me quite a bit less than spewing burned natural gas carbon into the atmosphere... as well as keeping the woods cleaner - which discourages forest fires and actually makes it easier for the wildlife (some of which becomes our food) to forage. One other thing... I'm not going to kill myself splitting huge ends of limbs nor (certainly not) trunks, I'm also not going to send money to Asia to buy a gasoline wood splitter, and I'm also not going to burn the gasoline required to run one, so all of that huge stuff goes into washes and ravines to reverse erosion.