• Seasonal dishes

    My friend, an American-Korean, asked me: “Do you (Indonesians and Malaysians) have cold dishes, like cold noodles? Or dishes that’s specific for summer?”

    I said no, we don’t have it. Then I realized, yes, we do not have such dishes.

    Also, we don’t assign dishes based on seasons. I guess, it’s because we are in the tropics where the seasons and the weather fairly constant all year long. There are dishes based from seasonal fruits, though.

    I guess that’s the perk, yeah? And perhaps, we have hot dishes even when it’s hot outside just so we will get sweaty after eating and the breeze will cool us down ?

    I had bi bim guk su (spicy Korean cold wheat noodles) for lunch, and it’s pretty refreshing. Even though cold noodles usually available in Japan and Korea during summertime, it’s available all-year long here in Kuala Lumpur.

    It also reminds me when my friend once commented that “it smells like winter,” when she whiffed a scent of cinnamon.

    How about you? Do you have seasonal dishes in your country?

  • On tracking our progress

    I used to have an Apple Watch, until I gave it to my son along with my old iPhone.

    I found myself not suitable for wearing Apple Watch — note the wording and the sentence there. In fact, I don’t think I can wear wristwatch ? My skin will get itchy really fast, and it will bleed due to me scratching it.

    Another reason is, I hate to track things. It’s like… Instead of feeling motivated, I would see myself as a failure if I couldn’t keep the streak. Oh, I missed one day? That’s it. I don’t want to continue.

    However, tracking things is important. It shows progress, discipline, and determination. How do you all track your progress?

  • Drawing practice: Puddle

    I’m learning how to draw upside-down, and it’s actually pretty tempting to rotate the canvas (?) I tried to stick with the original canvas orientation and learned how to draw human figure when they are looking up. It’s definitely a difficult task. Also, water reflection and texture (to show it’s, well, “water” as in water puddle in the middle of the road.)

    I feel this is one of those works that I will look back later far in the future and getting myself a massive cringe. Oh well, here’s for more practices!

  • Visitors

    One of the funniest ironies I ever endured was (or is?) whenever foreign friends (not residing in Indonesia or Malaysia) asked me/told me, “hey! I went to this so-and-so place in your country!” while me, an Indonesian and an Indonesian-in-Malaysia-since-2014, is actually never been to that place.

    “Hey, Retno! I’m in Indonesia right now! I’m in Lombok!”

    Me. Never been to Lombok despite the island being one of the top tourist destinations after Bali and Yogyakarta AND LOCATED IN MY OWN COUNTRY: “Cool!”

    “Hey, Retno! I’m in Malaysia! I’m hiking in Mount Kinabalu!”

    Me. Only heard the stories of Sabah and Sarawak from my husband as his work requires him to do occasional trip to Miri, Sarawak: “Nice!”

    Somehow, even my friends from the other countries know my country better than I do ?

    Also, I’ve been living here in Kuala Lumpur for 8 years. Guess what? I never been to KL Tower and crossing the Twin Towers’ bridge.

    Oh hai KL Tower!

  • Drawing practice: Bath time

    A couple of days ago, I saw a Tiktok video by Yoshi Yoshitani, one of the artists I respect so very much. In the video, Yoshi discussed about values in color, and I got intrigued. So, yeah, here it is ?

    I started with the outline.

    Then, I added the layers with B/W/grayscale color to determine the values.

    Determining value is crucial and helpful if you want to build focus on your art. Meaning that, you know which area you want your viewers to see first. The main character(s).

    I’ve been struggling with “flatness” on my works, and for most of the times, I didn’t know why and how it happened. There are tons of artworks out there that superbly executed, balanced between light and shadow and drama. Thanks to Yoshi’s Tiktok video, I learned A LOT in 5 minutes (I wonder if Yoshi has online courses I can enroll? It can be a good activity to do during my sabbatical in 2024!)

    I want to focus on the mice, so I added the high value on them and the supporting items as the foreground characters.

    Then, I determined the background — specifically, the darker ones. This should help to pop up the main characters and serve to its purpose: Background.

    Once I’m satisfied with the values, I added the colors. Here it is!

    This is still far from perfect, but I’m so happy with the result! A bit of note; when I colored the areas, I did it on top of the grayscale layers so I won’t forget which areas with specific values. When I hide the grayscale layers, I was so pleasantly surprised to see the drawings looking like children storybook!

    This is so exciting. I’m so happy and I’m excited to learn more.

  • I rarely saved post drafts when writing a blog post because I usually able to ramble in a short period of time, until today, I decided to write about how I designed this blog (sidebar, cute background, pixel-thingy, and the likes.) Suffice to say, it’s, uh, long. My dormant Happiness Engineer-soul came back in full force, hahahah!

    I’m still working on it. Hopefully, I can publish it by this evening (Malaysia timezone).

Nindya. Kapkap. she/her. Indonesian in Malaysia. Millennial. Lo-fi. Animal Crossing: New Horizons. Murder mystery genre.

Currently feeling:

The current mood of retnonindya at www.imood.com

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