
Eid Mubarak, friends!



At this point, many more people are more aware of Ramadan and what it entails; no eating and no drinking from sunrise to sunset.

The problem is that not everyone knows Ramadanās massive effect on Muslim-majority countries, such as Malaysia or Indonesia. The latter is mainly on the island of Java.
This post is prompted by a couple of tourists who asked the restaurant staff, ā⦠how much longer?ā at the place where we had our iftar (breaking the fast) just now.
This post has no way of criticizing tourists or folks who might not know how Ramadan is in Indonesia and Malaysia. I wrote this post so you, my friends, know what to expect when visiting those two countries during the holiest month of the Islamic calendar. You can read what Ramadan is for more details before we jump to the next section ?

Q1. āHow do I know that Iām visiting Indonesia/Malaysia during Ramadan?ā
Manual way: Grab your calendar, and check if it has āEid al-Fitrā on it. Note the date of the Eid. Then, check the exact date of the previous month (or roughly 29-31 days before.) Those one whole month right before Eid is Ramadan.
Instant way: Type on Google: āRamadan 20XXā (the year). The date you get will be the predicted date of the start of Ramadan. āPredictedā because the Islamic calendar is lunar, and it relies on lunar sightings.
Q2. āIām here in Indonesia/Malaysia, and apparently, itās Ramadan. I want to grab dinner, and I found EVERYWHERE is packed! What happened?ā
Welcome to iftar, a.k.a. The time of breaking the fast. This is what happened to the tourists I saw at Suria KLCC earlier.
During Ramadan, restaurants and cafƩs usually quiet and empty during the day. However, come afternoon, you will see some places picking up.
In Kuala Lumpur, we usually break our fast at 7:25 PM-ish. Restaurants and cafƩs start to fill in as early as 6 PM. You would see patrons beginning to sit and order their food.
But wait. They didnāt touch the food, even when it was already served. Why? We are waiting for the iftar.
Once iftar comes ā you can hear the sound of azan (call for prayer) ā then, and only then, everyone can eat.
So, no. No āhow much longer?ā Everyone in the restaurant is eating at the same time. You couldnāt expect them to start eating at different times, just like when the restaurant operates regularly.
The tips:
Have a reservation for your spot
During Ramadan, restaurants and cafĆ©s are packed during dinnertime. If you must have dinner at restaurants or cafĆ©s, plan ahead and reserve the place waaaay earlier. Find the restaurantās number on Google and call them to book a place, or go to the restaurant/cafĆ© in the noontime and reserve a table for the evening.
You might notice reservations are unnecessary for restaurants serving pork/lard. Pork/lard is considered haram (forbidden/not allowed) in Islam, so there is a small chance restaurant serving pork/lard will be packed during iftar time. However, itās good to plan ahead, too, because folks with religions and beliefs outside Islam might think the same as you are, and they decided to visit the restaurant during dinnertime, which resulted in an equally crowded place.
Have an early dinner
This is the more leisurely approach, although it might be tricky for folks with fixed meal times. When we arrived at the restaurant, a couple of patrons had their dinner, and they finished right before the Ramadan crowd poured in.
Ensure you are aware of iftar time to have enough time to eat. You can Google this information or ask the restaurant staff.
Be flexible: Get yourself some meals from convenience store or street food vendors
While this might not be the most glamorous place, this is one of the most surefire ways to get your dinner. Indonesia and Malaysia have many convenience stores; 7-Eleven, FamilyMart, Lawsonās, Alfamart, Indomaret, and millions more options on street food vendors. If you feel adventurous and you have Norit at your disposal, you can grab yourself some local delicacies and eat them on the spot by the street. You can also grab some rice boxes or meal-on-the-go from the convenience store and ask the staff to reheat it.
And most importantly, have fun and enjoy your trip!
Ramadan is one of the holiest months in the Islamic calendar. While Ramadan is all about abstaining from eating and drinking during the day, you will see the monthās excitement and festivities shown everywhere. If you are lucky, you could even visit Bazaar Ramadan, where food and beverage vendors sell delicacies and refreshments as early as 4 PM.

Iāve been seeing my friends using Uni Posca and Iām intrigued. Then, I just realized they are not available here in Malaysia, at least not in retail-wise. I had to order it online from a trading company specializing in stationeries.
I love using them, and I think it would be the same feelings when painting using gouache, yeah? My only gripe, though, is this.

Iām not sure if thatās expected or that piling caused by the marker and the paper. Iām using Moleskine sketchbook (yeah, yeah, I knowā¦) so Iām thinking of doing another test on a more decent drawing/painting paper.
I love how āimmovableā it is. You can literally put a different color on top of each layer and it wonāt budge.


I combined the marker with my Uni Sketch Art Marker, and I love how they complement each others.
I finally got myself a Copic set, and I opened them just a couple of days ago.
I learned to acquaint myself with Copicās behavior and style. Copic colors are generally more muted and softer, while my Unicorn Art Marker has a more vivid color which gives a really nice variations.

This pond drawing is one of the firsts. I started the drawing annoyed because Copic LOOKED too dry for me. I spent coloring the water with a stream of curses left and right, but as I added more details and the sky blue color from Unicorn, it looked pretty great.
The second one is the usual house drawing.

The colors were flat and weird. At first, I decided to ditch the drawing. But then I revisited it again on the next day and used bold lineart as Iām feeling more comfortable with it. Iām pretty happy with how it looks like now.
As for the latest, itās actually a drawing of my friend: Anien.
I really like her pose there, so I decided to illustrate it.


I am now thinking of buying a Copic set. Unicorn Sketch marker set is great, but the colors are too vivid and too neon to my likings. Iām looking for muted gray-ish colors, and from what I see, it seems like Copic provides such colors.

This is my personal blog, so anything goes. This blog has been around since 2014, which means you would, and could, see my past writings with different perspectives and mindsets at that time. While I tried to tidy things up here, I personally feel that things should not be too “clean” or polished. You see me grow and learn in this blog. This blog is a record-keeping of what I was, what I am, and what I will be. What I wrote in the past might not reflect who I am right now, nor me revisiting the topic.
While things here are generally PG-13, I must remind you that I’m an adult, which means some topics might be too heavy for younger readers.
Next project: Intermediate Theme Developer
I want to develop themes that sing praises for the 2000s. I always feel we could have a bit more 2000s-era whimsy.

Nindya. Kapkap. she/her. Indonesian in Malaysia. Millennial. Lo-fi. Post-Rock. Gregorian. Animal Crossing: New Horizons. Murder mystery genre. “Love is Love“.
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