Naive Weekly

Share this post

I Luv You

kristoffer.substack.com

I Luv You

Austin Wade Smith, a zine, and collections

Kristoffer
Mar 12
2
Share this post

I Luv You

kristoffer.substack.com
Another Week, Another Newsletter — Observations From The Internet Wilderness.
Sunday, March 12th, 2023

Dear Ana

I see you bloom. And I see the effort and energy it requires: the long days documenting flickering poetry and the late nights editing the atmospheres. It is an impossible balance of work, rest and family, and a path you are paving for yourself, becoming a role model for female photographers who want to continue their careers and nurture a family.

You give everything you have. Like when you hire friends who struggle financially or when you, without hesitation, share food, talent, time and objects: buying a second and third hairdryer because someone needed yours, and how you always inspire to do better, even when it requires collaboration with vulnerability.

When I took that train after the longest hug, I left a part of me on the perron. Thank you for hopping on the plane and uniting us. I love you, and Uno “luves you too.”

With love

Kristoffer


Roadside Flowers

Core 2 Studio is a model to copy.

Bisita Iglesia is a personal click story by Chia.

Little Room is a place where people just come hang out and do their own stuff.


Field Notes

Queer Servers and Feral Webs

A rare essay leading us beyond check-boxes, categories and the binary internet, and, with curiosity as a guide, shows the wonder of living in the present tense. The post is a personal reflection by Austin Wade Smith on their Feral.Earth website — and of becoming the environment.

“I found the constraints grounding, and they didn't stop at the power source. I installed a weather station, also powered by the panel, and began controlling simple functions of the computer based on environmental data measured right at the server sight, aka my home. What if I could only access certain images at high tide, shut off file access on the solstice, or queue applications when the wind blew north.” — Austin Wade Smith

Community Memory

If you write web histories, I recommend making them look like this cute zine by William Kennedy. The drawings are reminiscent of MS Paint pixels, and the text is idiosyncratic in flow and curves.

“Tilde.town is a virtual town in the tildeverse. It is a magical community of folks sharing a unix computer. You log into it from a terminal on your computer. From there you are one of many users on the server, one of many citizens of the town.” — William Kennedy.


Collections

  • A Living Collection of Internet Dreams

  • Bird Albums

  • Underground Radio Directory

  • Diaries of Note

  • Polish Post-war Design Objects

  • Preschool Pocket Treasures

  • Voice Notes for Spring


The Naive Logo. A blue dove with Naive Weekly written on the wings.

Hi, I’m Kristoffer and you have just read Naive Weekly — Observations from the Internet Wilderness.

On Instagram you can follow Ana’s personal and work photos. I aspire to write how she photographs.

Last week this letter was sent to 1442 inboxes. It will always be free for everyone, so I’m keeping it donation-based. Currently, thirty people support me with a paid subscription. Logo by Studio Hollywood. Photograph by Ana Santl.

Share this post

I Luv You

kristoffer.substack.com
TopNewCommunity

No posts

Ready for more?

© 2023 Kristoffer Tjalve
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start WritingGet the app
Substack is the home for great writing