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Mixing Minecraft and Watches

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STOCKHOLM — Lydia Winters moved right here from Florida in 2011 for a dream job within the video gaming trade: director of enjoyable for what now could be the phenomenally profitable sport Minecraft. By 2021, she had determined to tackle one other world additionally historically dominated by males: horology.

Her Instagram feed, @winters.watches, is in homage to her rising watch assortment and has greater than 8,900 followers. It combines her love of pictures — she as soon as was an expert photographer — with a ardour for watches.

“I believed: ‘I’m going to take images that I haven’t seen across the watch group; images that simply really feel very me,’” she mentioned throughout an interview that touched on her imaginative and prescient for the account, which options close-ups of watches from her 18-piece assortment. “I wished them to inform a narrative, and I wished to take this strategy of virtually prefer it’s an individual, it’s a portrait, however of a watch.”

She fashions among the watches herself, as if it had been a photograph shoot in a vogue journal, whereas different current photographs function the timepieces perched on volcanic rocks and nestled in Arctic moss, backgrounds she discovered throughout a visit to Iceland.

Ms. Winters, 34, now travels the world as chief storyteller, what she calls a kind of model evangelist for Minecraft, which is owned by the Swedish gaming firm Mojang Studios. The position finds Ms. Winters, who mentioned she was the primary girl and the primary expat to hitch the corporate, interacting with among the greater than 141 million lively gamers that the sport tallied in 2021.

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She is also a part of a rising worldwide group of feminine watch fans utilizing social media to precise their love of horology — and doing so with out concern of being criticized, ridiculed or harassed.

“This final 12 months particularly now we have seen an enormous shift as a result of so many extra ladies are becoming a member of the passion,” Kat Shoulders, who, with Katlen Schmidt, hosts the Tennessee-based horology podcast Tenn & Two, wrote in an e mail. “And I feel all of us can bounce in and help one another in methods beforehand not out there.

“We aren’t afraid to talk out both if somebody, male or feminine, is being bullied or talked about inappropriately on social media,” she added.

Ms. Winters mentioned that touring extensively for her job has allowed her so as to add worldwide purchases to her watch assortment and to curate unique scenes for her images, which she takes utilizing both of her two Swedish Hasselblad medium-format digital cameras. (In February, the digicam producer named her one among its Hasselblad Heroines, an award it bestows yearly on feminine photographers.)

She additionally makes use of the cameras to {photograph} watches on the dwelling she shares within the countryside close to Stockholm along with her companion, Vu Bui, Mojang’s chief content material officer, who is also a watch collector and photographer.

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To accompany her images, Ms. Winters makes use of her iPhone to create tutorial photographs that show how she composed every shot. And he or she and Mr. Bui not too long ago launched a YouTube channel, Winters & Bui, that delves additional into the artwork of watch pictures.

“The principle aim of all of it has been to be inventive,” Ms. Winters mentioned. “After which to assist encourage others in pictures, which is why I shoot all of the behind-the-scenes photographs and put up them with notes on how I did every little thing.”

She grew to become a real horology convert in 2013, she mentioned, when her Christmas reward from Mr. Bui was what she considers her first “severe” watch: a Cartier Tank Solo in rose gold with a brown leather-based strap.

“Then it was like, ‘Now I perceive why you put on a watch.’ I had worn vogue watches on and off, and my dad and mom appreciated watches, so I’ve been watch-adjacent,” she mentioned. “However sporting the Cartier was like — wow, I actually really feel one thing when that is on me.”

“Rising up in Florida, my model was basketball shorts and T-shirts,” she mentioned. “And now I’ve this watch that’s so elegant and timeless, but in addition cool. And each time I put it on, I really feel very privileged that I get to put on it.”

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Ms. Winters thought the Cartier had glad her urge for food for luxurious timepieces, however quickly Mr. Bui was asking what her subsequent watch can be. The reply to that query got here a month later, when Ms. Winters purchased herself a Rolex Datejust.

Then, in spring 2020, as the 2 locked down at the beginning of the pandemic, Mr. Bui steered that she {photograph} her assortment, which had grown to incorporate a Tudor Mini-Sub bought for an earlier journey to Vietnam and an IWC Fliegerchronograph, purchased whereas visiting Tokyo.

At first, Ms. Winters rejected the concept, turning her digicam as an alternative to flowers within the lush environs of the couple’s dwelling — till winter got here and her topics died. It was then that she began aiming her Hasselblads at watches.

She additionally had began watching YouTube movies produced by the German horology fanatic Jenni Elle, and started corresponding with Ms. Shoulders and Ms. Schmidt, who then requested an interview for his or her podcast.

At that stage, Mr. Bui inspired Ms. Winters to transcend simply pictures by posting them on Instagram.

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“When Tenn & Two reached out for her to be a visitor on their podcast, I resumed my fixed badgering,” he wrote in an e mail. “I believed that if she was going to be launched to the watch group on a podcast, there must be a spot for individuals to search out and work together along with her.”

Ms. Winters began the account and mentioned she was shocked at how rapidly it amassed a following. She quickly discovered herself making dozens of recent watch-fan pals and chatting in WhatsApp teams with tons of of feminine collectors and fans from around the globe.

The camaraderie got here as a nice shock — and a aid. As a girl who has skilled discrimination within the gaming trade, Ms. Winters mentioned she had anticipated to obtain sexist or discriminatory remarks within the feedback part of @winters.watches.

And whereas she acknowledged that she has skilled some chauvinism within the on-line watch world, she mentioned she felt snug and supported as a feminine social media influencer in a rising group of girls watch lovers.

“This isn’t watches 10 years in the past, when there have been in all probability only a few ladies round who needed to pave the best way, which is how I’ve felt in gaming,” she mentioned. “You’re feeling just like the group is massive sufficient now. You may let your guard down.”

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Squirrels gone wild in your L.A. yard? Here’s how to get your revenge

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Squirrels gone wild in your L.A. yard? Here’s how to get your revenge

This is the part where I admit two things — neither of which I’m proud of. First, it was only then, several months in, I realized I’d made a colossal blunder when trying to hang my precious high-tech feeder out of squirrels’ reach. I’d measured the recommended five feet off the ground sure enough, but failed to account for the elevation afforded by a nearby tree stump that cut that distance in half. Within 10 minutes of realizing my error, I moved the feeder to a non-stump-adjacent location. Voila! My immediate problem was solved. As of this writing, it’s been 40 days without a squirrel breach.

Second, even though I’d won the battle by accomplishing exactly what I’d set out to do, I refused to give up. I’d waged this war too long and invested too much. How could I sit back when my friend’s guava tree continued to be routinely ransacked and my co-worker’s avocados savaged and tossed to the ground with grubby-pawed abandon?

Peppermint essential oil, first sprayed and later put in jars with cloth wicks around the yard (a suggested hack found online), worked — but only for a short period of time.

(Adam Tschorn / Los Angeles Times)

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And worse yet, what if they decided to come for the single — and so far unscathed — orange tree just now starting to show pea-sized fruits in my backyard? No, I needed closure. But before I started investing in owl-shaped, light-up motion sensors (these exist) or blasting C-SPAN across my yard at all hours, I needed someone to tell me if protecting L.A. backyard fruit trees (humanely, remember?) was even possible.

And that’s how I ended up on the phone explaining my situation to Roger Baldwin, a UC Davis Cooperative Extension specialist who focuses on human-wildlife conflict resolution.

“You’ll find various chemical repellents that are marketed and sold [to combat them],” Baldwin told me. “But there’s nothing that’s ever been proven effective against tree squirrels. So I wouldn’t anticipate there being anything that you could spray to really keep them away. [And] there’s no kind of sound devices or ultrasonic devices or lights or strobes — or anything like that — that’s really been proven effective.” (He did note that some repellents might work on a short-term basis until the wily critters adapt.)

“No,” Baldwin said, “there’s nothing that’s guaranteed to work when you’ve got fruit trees, which are an abundant food source, and tree squirrels. … But, like with your bird feeder, if you had an isolated tree — meaning nothing else around for a good 10 feet and nothing overhanging it — and its lowest branches were a good five or six feet off the ground, you could put a metal ring around the trunk to keep them from being able to climb it. But basically this is almost never going to happen.”

He added that even trapping, which might be an option for those willing to consider the squirrel death penalty (in California, the eastern fox squirrel can be trapped and euthanized humanely — but not released elsewhere), would likely be only a temporary solution. “Invariably there’s someone — probably more than one person — on your block feeding squirrels,” he said. “And other squirrels will likely move in. And there’s not much you can do about that. There are too many access points.”

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Sensing where things were headed, I cut to the chase. Based on Baldwin’s 16 years of experience, did I have any viable options beyond accepting that my backyard would forever be shared with whatever eastern gray fox squirrels wished to have their run of it?

“There’s probably not a lot that can be done to keep the squirrels from the fruit and the trees given the different limitations that you’ve discussed,” he said. “Yes, it’s more about realistically just learning to live with the squirrels.”

Perhaps sensing my dismay, Baldwin offered a tiny glimmer of hope.

“Sometimes, if you’ve got a very aggressive dog in your backyard — one that can chase squirrels effectively — that can sometimes help reduce problems,” he said.

We’re a dogless household, and the notion of getting a dog just to vanquish a squirrel (or three) felt wrong. (I’m sure our two cats would agree.) So I’m accepting defeat on that front and keeping my focus on the no-longer-under-attack bird feeder.

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But so help me, the minute one of those hairy little heathens helps itself to the fruit of my orange tree, the phrase “dogs of war” is going to take on a whole new meaning on my backyard battlefield.

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In 'Timid,' there is bravery under the surface

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In 'Timid,' there is bravery under the surface

Jonathan Todd/Graphix


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Jonathan Todd/Graphix

Many Americans assume that timidity — or its close cousin, shyness — is solely a negative trait. In our culture, calling an individual timid suggests that he is carrying anxiety, fear, and a lack of confidence. And while some of these associations might be accurate, we could also choose to see this attribute for its potential values. Timidity might go hand in hand with thoughtfulness, deliberateness, even a rich and full interior life.

Enter Jonathan Todd’s new middle-grade graphic novel, Timid. The bright cover on the book alludes to the potential for all these characteristics, from the bad to the good, captured in a single image. A Black tween sits behind an oversized red composition notebook with cartoon sketches splayed across its cover. He is wide-eyed, his oversized glasses poking out from behind the book. The rest of his face is almost completely obscured, as four giant sweat drops jump off his forehead. He is obviously anxious, clutching his book with two huddled arms. But what else is going on behind the surface?

Images from Jonathan Todd's Timid.

Images from Jonathan Todd’s Timid.

Jonathan Todd/Graphix

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Written and drawn by a longtime cartoonist and comics educator Jonathan Todd, who has dedicated the book to “anyone who has ever felt alone,” the semi-autobiographical Timid follows the boy on the cover, 12-year-old Cecil Hall. He is a 7th grader whose family moves from Florida, where they have been living for most of his life, to Massachusetts. From the beginning, it’s clear that Cecil knows exactly who he is and who he wants to be—a future famous cartoonist. But it’s not always easy for him to express or act on his desires. It’s also obvious that others around him, in part because he is so quiet, don’t always take his preferences into account.

Cecil’s father, who grew up in a public housing project, thinks his son needs to be tougher, because it was toughness that got him through his own childhood. His sister thinks he is not showing enough pride in his Blackness, and she advises him to befriend other Black children at his new school immediately.

Cecil knows that his family members are only looking out for him, but it’s his gentle, soft-spoken mother who makes him feel most relaxed. Though their relationship is often relegated to the sidelines, the few quiet scenes showing them alone together reflect a Cecil completely at ease. His mother knows how to let him simply be himself, and she trusts he will find his way on his own terms.

Pages from Jonathan Todd's Timid.

Pages from Jonathan Todd’s Timid.

Jonathan Todd/Graphix


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Meanwhile, at school, Cecil struggles to adjust, particularly in finding a friend group. He is confused by the difference in social make up from his previous school to this new one. Among other changes, what he notes almost immediately is how kids at Webber Middle School are a lot less integrated. This is problematic, for example, when he has to figure out which table to join for lunch—the Black children mainly sit at their own, separate table.

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Organized into 14 chapters illustrated in deliciously bright colors, Timid’s offbeat, cartoony drawing style captures the powerful emotions that drive young people’s lives. Above all else, Cecil wants to be recognized, by his peers and the adults around him, as an artist—to carve out an identity for himself based on the activity that brings him the most joy and fulfillment. Though he may, at times, have difficulty asking for what he wants in a direct manner, he takes chances in his own way. After several false starts, he strikes up a friendship with Sean, another Black student. They share a love of storytelling and Star Trek. They enter, and come in second, in a comic contest.

On the outside, Cecil may seem overwhelmingly timid, but upon closer look it’s clear he is full of bravery. Sometimes bravery just materializes in disguise.

Tahneer Oksman is a writer, teacher, and scholar specializing in memoir as well as graphic novels and comics. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.

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Kevin Costner 'Sensitive' About Movie Intimacy, Says Sex Scene Partner

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Kevin Costner 'Sensitive' About Movie Intimacy, Says Sex Scene Partner

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