Blair

joined 4 days ago
2
Editing Resources (self.writing)
submitted 3 days ago by Blair to c/writing
 

Programs/Apps

Editors and Beta-Readers:

Misc:

6
submitted 3 days ago by Blair to c/writing
 

Apps and Programs

World Maps:

How-To’s:

Apps/Programs:

Generated Maps:

World-Building Questions:

Misc Tools:

[–] Blair 1 points 3 days ago

No problem! I will post the other lists shortly

[–] Blair 1 points 3 days ago

Thanks! I edited the post to correct the mistake

 

A waulking song is a traditional song that was sung for a group to keep in sync while rhythmically beating newly-woven fabric on a surface. This motion shrinks the fibers of the fabric, which makes it better at repelling water.

β€œThere would often be 24 of them at one table, singing songs for four to five hours at a time, during which 300-400 yards of cloth would be waulked.” Audio Recording Transcript: β€œWAULKING THE CLOTH, ” Track ID: 65191, Date: 1961. Source: tobarandualchais.co.uk

This could be done sitting around a table and moving the fabric with your hands, but in some places the fabric was waulked using feet. As they sing, they both beat and move the fabric in a clockwise direction. There is a video you can watch here.

Related to this practice is a water fairy called Loireag(lorryack). She was a rather mischievous fairy that is often described as having an obsession with tradition.

Not only did she make sure things were done in the right order, but she also disliked people singing out of tune, and hated hearing the same waulking song twice.

” If a song were sung twice at the waulking, the β€˜loireag’ would come and render the web as thin as before, and all the work of the women of no avail. They had to begin anew and waulk the web over again, taking special care not to repeat the offence. β€œ Carmina Gadelica, Volume 2, by Alexander Carmicheal, [1900]

The loireag had such a great love of milk that people would leave out offerings of it for her. If this was forgotten, she would take matters into her own hands by enchanting the milking animals to be as still as a statue while she drank her fill.

In one story where this occurred, a girl in Benmore discovered a loireag sucking a cow. The girl tried to drive the fairy away, but nothing worked so she went to fetch her father. It turns out her father was a Carle. Carle can be a derogatory term for a commoner man, but it can also be an alternative name for the β€œBodach,” which they may be intending in this case.

β€œThe little Carle leapt out at the door in sparks of red fire, swearing at the impudent β€˜loireag,’ and at the cow. He threw a boulder at the β€˜loireag,’ wishing to kill her, but struck the cow instead and nearly killed her!” Carmina Gadelica, Volume 2, by Alexander Carmicheal, [1900]

He then grabbed the very point of one of the cows horns in the name of β€œColumba the kindly,” who was β€œthe best leech of man and beast in Alban in his day.” With those words, the cow broke from the enchantment and leapt away. At the same time, the loireag took off running while singing back insults.

β€œLittle carle of Corrie-foot, Little carle of the short coat, Little carle of the foot of the Pass Much I praise your aim.” Highland Mythology by Watson, E. C. (1908)

Waulkings Song Examples:

  • (link) In this waulking song a man mourns the fact that another is courting his beloved while he sails the seven seas.
  • (link) This is a short fragment from a waulking song with a love theme.
  • (link) The composer describes going through the strath and seeing a herd of hinds. A man was driving them down the hill. He had a bow and arrow and a gun.
  • (link) This is a waulking song of the type found at the start of a waulking. The chorus refers directly to waulking the tweed, which is unusual in waulking songs.
  • (link) In this waulking song a sailor tells of his feelings, as the girl he loves is unfaithful. He expresses the hope that his beloved will not take the tailor, the shoemaker, the shepherd or the herdsman.
  • (link) In this waulking song, the composer lists by their occupation the men who are unsuitable, and then gives details of the one she would accept.
  • (link) In this waulking song, a woman longs for the man she loves, but his family disapprove of the relationship.
10
Writing Resources (self.writing)
submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) by Blair to c/writing
 

I am a bit of a cataloger when it comes to writing resources, so here are some of them. I haven't tried all of these myself, so please let me know if I get anything wrong. If people find this helpful, I have world building and editing related ones I can share too.

  • πŸ†“yWriter: It is not the most sleek looking program, but it works.
  • πŸ†“Google Docs
  • πŸ†“Slugline
  • πŸ†“Highland
  • πŸ†“ Wavemaker
  • πŸ†“ Joplin: The cloud hosting does cost money. Open source alternative to Evernote.
  • πŸ†“ Only Office: This one is good for people who want a private cloud-hosted alternative to Google Docs. It is open-source.
  • πŸ†“ Obsidian: I have started using this for world building, but many authors use it for writing. Within it, you can create your own wiki, and view connections in a cool graph. It has many plug-ins you can add.
  • πŸ†“Anytype: The program is free and private, but for the cloud, you have 1GB of storage, then you’ll need a plan for more.
  • πŸ†“ Manuskript: I haven’t tried this one, but it looks similar to yWriter, but with some different features
  • πŸ†“ Bibisco: A writing and note organizer program with timelines, mind-maps, and more.
  • πŸ†“ Reedsy Book Editor: It is online(not self-hosted/a program download)
  • πŸ†“ SmartEdit: a MSWord alternative for writers that is supposed to have several helpful editing features.
  • πŸ†“ Quoll Writer: Open-source, and has several unique features, such as β€œwarm up session.”
  • πŸ†“ Trillium: Self-hosted and open-source.
  • Plot Factory
  • 4thewords: It turns writing into a game, where you send your game character on a monster-fighting quest by writing.
  • NovelPad:
  • Plottr:
  • Living Writer:
  • Squibler:
  • Notion: Free limited version
  • Scrivener:
  • Atticus: