h a l f b a k e r yBirth of a Notion.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Only one bottle. The idea would lend to a makeshift
bed of bottles. |
|
|
I will bequeath this a bun only if the pad is a separate item so there won't be fifty billion of them in the landfills. |
|
|
Hah! You use a bottle as a chin rest? Wimp. Real men use a
knife. |
|
|
//Hah! You use a bottle as a chin rest? Wimp. Real men use a knife.//
|
|
|
Read the post again. I use a bottle for a chin rest *at work*. I got fired from a job once for having a knife out and open. Now the knife stays in the pocket, and nobody seems to notice the metal clip... |
|
|
have you got a heavy head or something? |
|
|
//I got fired from a job once for having a knife out and open// You should've told them it was to shave your beard.
// Am I the only one here who uses soda bottles as a chin rest at work??? If not the only one, then in a vanishingly tiny minority. |
|
|
I don't do this, but I'm thinking of taking it up. Is it hard to learn? Are there classes? |
|
|
It can be easy or hard, depending on on a variety of factors. If
you have a cleft in your chin it's probably somewhat easier,
whereas those with pointy chins may have a harder time of
things. A good square chin is always helpful... but a nice round
one provides just enough challenge to make it fun. A bushy
beard, on the other hand, can provide a bit of a cushion, of
course, but the raised scar on my chin adds to the fun as well. |
|
| |