Wtf is going on with that white border?
Someone took a screenshot, pasted it into MS Paint, and then forgot to crop it.
Source: personal experience lol
Why not just right click/long press > save image?
Normally I’m pasting it in to Slack or similar, not posting it on Lemmy, so in my experience I don’t care or want it to get saved to my computer.
Alright then, right click > copy image. Depending on your OS, taking a screenshot usually also saves it to your storage.
Control shift S, choose crop area and then you can just control v to paste it in whatever chat.
deleted by creator
why would you ever want to do that
Sometimes people add stupid stuff to a meme and I just want an easy way to crop it.
MS Paint for me is just an easy crop tool that I can add text to if I want. I understand it’s a garbage tool but it hasn’t changed in 20 years so I don’t need to learn anything new lol.
Use lightshot. It’s free and good.
Enhance!
Calm down. I don’t think that’s the topic.
My parents were killed by a poorly-cropped screenshot and I WILL NOT CALM DOWN!
Thoughts and prayers
The origin story of a permanently online superhero.
In all seriousness though: Pretty sure this is referring to using straw as insulation, not structural elements.
Haybale homes have been around for ages, mum said they popular in the the 70s with the earth loving movement, and I recall them getting popular on pinterest again in 2012ish with the eco house movement.
You stack the bales, run insulated cables and plumbing as needed, then render over the whole lot.
Seems like it could be a disaster if you get a leak of any sort.
People lived that way for thousands of years. You do a bit of yearly inspection and maintenance. It’s literally slapping mud on the wall to fix it, not too bad.
It just seems like getting a small leak that you don’t know about would cause a mold nightmare. Hay costs more than fiberglass insulation, so I guess I don’t see the benefit.
I think the newer developments compress the straw more than older bales, though I’m not actually familiar with older hay bale homes.
I forsee many issues with mould
I’d be more worried about fire. High temperature plus a bit of moisture from, say, a leak, will cause hay piles to spontaneously combust.
Fire needs air. Hay bales are entombed with plaster or mortar. So you can’t really burn. They are also treated against burning and other issues.
The cob or other earthen plaster incorporates clay or livestock manure which add hydrophobic and polymeric properties, which then air-cures to seal out moisture, and it’s thick so if it gets wet it has to get really wet to penetrate the hay. Ideally these also have large overhanging rooves to sheet away rain.
Still love Green Jellö. My cousin had a VHS of their music videos. Balsac does a guest appearance on at least one if I remember right.
My guinea pigs would love if my home was made out of straw.
My revolutionary idea is live in trees.
To all the comments saying this is just straw insulation: it’s more than that.
Compressed straw as building blocks is a thing now. Apparently it’s strong and fire removedant too, though I don’t know how much treating and cladding it needs above just being compressed.
Usually the straw block is made with a big motorised machine, but I’ve seen a hand-operated straw block press, with a great big long pole as an enormous lever. And the building made from its produce: a two storey building with conference hall and kitchen/accommodation. I think only the conference hall half was made with the straw blocks; the other half is interlocking bricks (like Lego 1-by-2s) also made on site.
I worked on one of these years ago in the mid-atlantic. It was a fucking disaster. I’m sure they are great in the desert.
In the middle of the Atlantic?! No WONDER it didn’t work, what were you thinking?!
So you can be hot 90 percent of the year and freezing in December?
Nah, I mean it’s great insulation. The problem is moisture.
Also bugs. Lots of bugs like to eat plant matter.
Image Transcription: Twitter Post and Reply
designboom, @designboom
future homeowners in france are now looking into “straw houses”
designboom.com/architecture/s…
[A photograph of a building interior with straw lining the walls. Two large windows are present on the wall.]
HOOD VOGUE is tired of poverty, @keyon
Y’all don’t read classic literature.
Apropos to nothing in particular, there are some cool developments in hemp building materials over the recent years.
Straw and sticks, but not of bricks!
You can tell the age of the meme from the “Twitter” footer
Yeah, it has the date on it.
Doesn’t using straw in roofing or insulation spread bed bugs? I remember reading how the little monsters used to spread in medieval Europe that way, and in their straw mattresses.
Hay is treated and these houses do get walls. Hay is just used for insulation, nothing more and this image posted is not representative.
Compressed straw blocks can also be used as structure
Are there wolves in France?
Yes, mostly in the Pyrenees.