The original Blog Links page was getting unwieldy so I figured the start of a new year was a good time to start a new listing of blog links and archive the old one.

January
February
March
April
May
  • ReciproCard - Did you know that libraries often have reciprocal agreements with other libraries enabling you to have more than one library card? More cards = access to more books! Just a note - this appears to be US only.
  • Crocheted Technology - Textile artist Nicole Nikolich creates crochet artworks that reference old technology.
  • The creation of instant coffee - Have you ever wondered how instant coffee came to be? Well, even if you haven't, this is a surprisingly interesting read!
  • Interactive Interstellar Map
  • New theory shows time exists in quantum superpositions, ticks fast and slow
  • Tenfold Knottiness - Somewhat low-res but cool scan of a diagram drawn by scientist Peter Guthrie Tait in 1885 showing possible variations of knots with 10 crossings.
  • HVD Bodedo - downloadable font based on Bodoni, carved into potatoes, stamped on paper and called Bodedo.
  • Microsoft open-sources “the earliest DOS source code discovered to date” - Predating MS-DOS, it's 86-DOS.
  • Scorpions Reinforce Their Deadly Claws And Stingers With Heavy Metals
  • Fav tech museums - Someone made a list of what they thought were the best tech museums they've visited. Cool list with sites around the world!
  • Seeds can 'hear' the sound of rain, new study suggests
  • Color Leap - History's Palettes - "Color Leap is a handcrafted collection of 180 color palettes that showcase colors used throughout 12 distinct eras in history, covering 4000 years. Each palette was created by sampling pieces of artwork from the time period. Every color can be copied with a single click and used in your own project."
  • WikiCity.app - Visualizes the 100,000 most-viewed Wikipedia articles as a city skyline. Each building is an article. The more people who have read it, the taller it is.
  • Signed, Sealed, Delivered: What happens when someone throws a message into the sea? - fabulous long-read article about messages-in-bottles. The article interviews people who look for them, people who have written them and the mystique that surrounds them.
  • Modern Illustration - Archival project from illustrator Zara Picken who aims to document examples of mid 20th-century commercial art. You can search the archive by decade or by medium.
  • A small, aging pride of lions - Not sure where I found this link but this is the personal blog/substack/newsletter of someone who reports on safari parks in Africa and the animals that live in them. I was amazed at the story of a blind lioness who was helped by her adult daughters. They would hunt and then call to her to share in the meal. When walking together they would help guide her around obstacles. I wouldn't think to find such altruistic behavior in a lion pride.
  • the hidden cassettes - Emily found out as a kid that her dad secretly recorded all the house phone calls. Once she found out, she was able to use this knowledge to skirt the family phone rule of keeping calls under 3 minutes. 30 years later she found some of the cassettes and has posted the audio files. There are only 4 up there now but there are placeholders for more, so hopefully this project grows.
  • Since You Arrived - taken - What kind of information is your computer freely handing out?
  • The Bat Cloud - Ask the bats a Yes or No question and receive a reply from The Bat Cloud. Kind of a fun art project experience although I'm a little concerned that the answer to my question of "Will I win the lottery this week?" was FEAR. 🤔
  • Birthday color - kind of a fun site that will tell you what your birthday color is based on your birthdate. In Japanese, so you'll probably have to run the translator. Sad to say, my birthday color is very blah. I hope yours is better!
  • Dracula Daily - email newsletter that sends you Dracula in bite-sized pieces.
  • The Internet has no benches - thoughtful piece on how someone is creating their own internet neighborhoods.
  • When I Heard a Montreal Fortune Cookie Factory Was Closing, I Needed to Get Inside - a photographer finagled his way into being allowed to photograph the last day of a fortune cookie factory through a heartfelt plea and old matchbook bribery.
  • The Y Chromosome May Be Vanishing. What Does It Mean For The Future of Men? - Nothing drastic, as this genetic shuffle has happened in other species as well. Nature just reroutes.
  • Why some mathematicians think we should abandon pi - Apparently tau could be a better option.
  • Embroidered Everyday Objects - Ulla-Stina Wikander, a Swedish fabric artist, covers everyday objects with cross-stitched fabric. She prefers using household items from the 70s for the nostalgia factor.
  • Researchers in Ireland uncover medieval book in Rome with oldest English poem - This poem was written in the 7th century by "an agricultural worker." Amazing that it has survived but also makes me wonder how literate the general population was in the 600s. I wouldn't have thought they were particularly literate but this person worked on an Abbey farm so maybe he had the benefit of ecclesiastical education that the general population wouldn't have had.
  • Magic by Return of Post: How Mail Order Delivered the Occult - Linotype machines, cheap pulp paper, and newly improved postal networks all allowed the occult to blossom in 20th century America.
  • QuiltCon 2026 Winners Gallery - Check out these amazing quilted pieces! My favorites are Tinker Toys, Chingona - (noun), Badass Woman and Momentum. What are yours?
  • Storied Colors - "Storied Colors is a catalogue of named colors — pigments, dyes, lakes, glazes, and a small number of digital hues — each accompanied by the documentary evidence required to call it by its name." Fascinating site cataloging over 250 colors, with a new one dropped every Sunday. Robust search feature that lets you filter by era, hue, status, source, lightfastness, year first documented and tags.
  • A look at search engines with their own indexes - Not sure how I came across this one but it's a blog post about search engines. The author says these are all the ones they were able to find and they intend for this to be a living document. It was originally written in 2021 and updated in 2025.
  • SURVIVA: A Future Ancestral Field Guide - I heard about this when ICT News interviewed the author. This part graphic novel/part art work is part of a larger collective of work in various media that "...seeks to reimagine Indigenous life and culture in a postcolonial world where space exploration has reduced and reconfigured the earth’s population." What I appreciate about this particular work is it's a 1970s military survival guide that has been redacted and edited with artwork. I find that deliciously subversive.
  • Print Gallery of an Artist: A brief exploration of recursive spaces - fun little platformer game! I had to stop before finishing because it was making me dizzy but the graphics are cool.
  • An "art car" parade (Houston, 2025) - This is a post from one of the blogs I follow, TYWKIWDBI. He shows off some screencaps from a 2 hour long YouTube video of The 38th Annual Houston Art Car Parade (and links to the video). For video viewing, he recommends, "best approached for casual viewing by clicking along the scrubber bar at the bottom." I haven't looked through the whole video yet but some of the art cars are just awesome!
  • Pipe Dreams - a shrine to Yahoo Pipes, which "...was a web application from Yahoo! that provided a graphical user interface for building data mashups that aggregate web feeds, web pages, and other services; creating Web-based apps from various sources; and publishing those apps." - Wikipedia
  • Pictureofhotdog.com - this reminds me of the weird stuff you could find back in the glory days of the old web
  • Kittenwar! - click to vote on which is the cutest kitten pic. *You* always win, because you get to see cute kitten pics!
  • Pinball Map - "Founded in 2008, Pinball Map is an open source, crowdsourced worldwide map of public pinball machines." You never know where you might be when the urge to play some pinball hits!
  • I Want My MTV - Rewind - 67 channels, a chance to interact with other users, play MTV Music Jeopardy, submit your own playlist and get into the rotation.
  • 1912 Eighth Grade Examination for Bullitt County Schools - Interesting look at what children were expected to know at one time. Could you pass this test? (via Nag on the Lake)
  • Meet ‘Snuffleupagus,’ a newfound fish sporting shaggy camouflage
  • Culcitology (QUILTS) with Luke Haynes, Olivia Joseph, and Joe Cunningham - almost 2 hour long podcast episode that I have not listened to yet but it looks so interesting! "Scrap quilts. Sewing bees. Secret codes. Political activism. Controversies. Three of your new favorite Culcitologists – Olivia Joseph, Luke Haynes, and Joe Cunningham – are stitched together for one mega episode on one of the most underappreciated and widely practiced arts in the world: quilting. We cover donated quilts, galleries vs. linen closets, incarcerated quilters, the ONE person you do not want to enter a fair with, quilting and covid, the Gee’s Bend Alabama quilters who turned modern art criticism on its head, and the icons you need to know about. Also: washing, preserving, appraising, repairing, and enjoying quilts. It’ll change the way you interact with your aunt, your local thrift store, art shows, and your very bed itself."