• sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      … so long as it does not materially impact your ability to provide basic necessities for your own wellbeing, food, water, shelter, some level of climate control, etc.

      … and you are not directly, indirectly, or functionally spending other people’s money on your hobbies.

  • 🍉 DrRedOctopus 🐙🍉@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    there has to be a list of hobbies one can try that cost practically nothing:

    Solving Rubik cubes (a high quality speedcube is about 20$)

    Crocheting/stitching (needles and yarn after cheap)

    Writing (free)

    programming

    … (please expand if you have any ideas)

    • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      Cooking is basically better than free.

      Yes, ingredients and equipment cost money, but the end result averages out to be cheaper than if you didn’t know how to cook. And even if you take on more expensive ingredients or tools, you’re probably offsetting even more expensive restaurant meals that you would’ve eaten.

    • Emi@ani.social
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      5 months ago

      Drawing, pencil and paper for start and drawing tablets are not that expensive for starter ones and there’s free open source drawing software.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      D&D costs $90 for the hard cover core book set and $0 for the pirated pdfs.

      Biking can have a high upfront cost, but I’ve been using the same bike for 20 years with tune-ups and replacements running in the low three figures over that time.

      I’m a big fan of podcasts, particularly ones that cover old movies. Criterion collection films are everywhere, they’re dirt cheap, and they’re classics for a reason.

    • Writing (free)

      Maybe if you only write in dirt with your finger. Orherwise you need writing implements and something to write on.

      Actually free things you can do:

      • Walking/running

      • Stare

      • Singing

      • Collecting rocks

      • Stare

      • Sleeping

    • 𒉀TheGuyTM3𒉁@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Drawing (we should stop pretending one need expensive material do draw nice things, pencils and erasers are the only requirement, and a good sketch book can be found for less than 15 bucks)

    • Rinn@awful.systems
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      5 months ago

      Crocheting/knitting is cheap to try out but once you really get into it (and start worrying about yarn quality and so on), the money pit opens. Ask me how I know.

    • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      I wanted to kill a rat in my garden, so I borrowed my parents’ air rifle. but the scope was too tiny to be any use at night, so I bought an air rifle with a bigger scope. but that rifle sucked and an internal part broke, so I bought a proper one. but I still have the crappy one and want to tinker with it, so I printed some replacement parts. but I want to make proper replacement parts that will withstand impact abuse, so I need to turn them on a lathe. but my lathe is just a wood lathe, so I designed and printed a four jaw chuck. but it’s not any good for parts requiring more than one setup, so I bought a cheap real 3 jaw chuck. but it didn’t come with the adapter plate to mount to my spindle, so I tried to buy one. but there doesn’t seem to be any suitable adapter plate for sale that will fit both my chuck and my spindle (there’s one that is close, but would require machining to make it fit - machining that I can’t do without a lathe), so I decided I’ll just drill mount holes through my existing faceplate. but that faceplate isn’t true with the shaft, so if I want to mount my chuck on it and have it be useful then I need to turn it true. but I don’t have carbide tools for metal lathing, so I needed to buy some. and I need to locate the holes that I need to drill to mount the chuck, so I drew up and am printing an template. and that’s where I’m at right now, waiting for that to finish printing, so I can center punch the bolt holes.

      so that I can mount a chuck, to turn a replacement part for an air rifle that isn’t even ‘the good one’, to shoot a rat that is digging in my garden and making holes in my yard that’ll twist my ankle eventually

      hobbies huh.