danieljoeblack,

I got into leatherworking during the pandemic and it's been really rewarding. The actual act of cutting and sewing the leather is very zen to me, and in the end you have something new that you can use or give as a gift!

Getting started is fairly cheap (some punches, needles, thread, a sharp knife, and leather is all you really need to get started). I order everything online so no need to interact with people.

Lots of good tutorials online to learn (Carter leather, weaver, are both good YT channels)

I'd anyone is interested in trying it I'd be happy to help get you started 😊

Object,

I found about leatherworking some weeks ago and I'd like to get started during the summer :)

ArtieShaw,
ArtieShaw avatar

This never would have occurred to me, but it looks interesting. Thanks for the suggestion!

Tigbitties,
Tigbitties avatar

Do the Blender donut tutorial and learn 3D modeling. It's free. It's a great time sink. Amazing online community. Personally, I find it very rewarding. I learned during lockdown and it's one of my favorite accomplishments and I still have so much to learn.

shepherd,
shepherd avatar

@blender (kbin.social)

@3dmodelling (kbin.social)

@blender (lemmy.world)

danieljoeblack,

What's the doughnut tutorial? Been thinking of getting into blender for checks watch years at this point.

DrYes,
DrYes avatar

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjEaoINr3zgFX8ZsChQVQsuDSjEqdWMAD

I believe this is the latest version but it might already be outdated. Blender changes stuff around often so these get outdated pretty quickly. I did the version before that (came out 3 years ago).

edit: if stuff isn't there or not working like it's shown you can search "how to do [x] in [current Blender version]"

fearout,
fearout avatar

Definitely +1 on 3D modeling. It’s very cool to just be able to come up with a thing and then just create it :)

drdiemz,
drdiemz avatar

I had a lot of fun building my 4wd rc car

ScottyB,
ScottyB avatar
  • Lockpicking
  • Rubiks Cubes
  • Raspberry Pi stuff.
  • Narrative driven Video games, obviously
  • Cooking
h3x,
h3x avatar

Are you me?

shepherd, (edited )
shepherd avatar

Just cause I'm going through the magazines anyways!

@cubers

@RaspberryPi
@raspberry_pi

Oh god there's so many for cooking lol. Most popular seem to be:
@food
@cooking
@food

tunetardis,

This is going to sound a little strange, but playing music on stage works for me. At least in moderation, and provided you aren't the lead singer/MC who has to interact with people. You just wanna be some guy in the corner jamming on whatever you jam on.

You kind of get the best parts of being in a social situation in terms of seeing new places, having interesting experiences you can ponder for days to come, and occasionally getting free food and/or a green room where you can veg out in isolation and no one expects anything of you. But you can avoid the negatives: having to make small talk, looking awkward with nothing to do and no role to play, being labelled antisocial, getting roped into some horrible activity you did not sign on for, etc.

And it turns out there are a lot of introverted musicians. You only really need one extravert in a band.

cassetti,

I put on headphones (ANC transparency mode enabled) and jam out while bicycling for an hour daily. I put over 3,000 miles on my Trek Verve2 annually

shepherd,
shepherd avatar

@cycling (kbin.social)

@bicycles (lemmy.ca)

@notjustbikes (lemmy.ml)

Prej,
Prej avatar

Metal detecting, provided it's legal where you live.

aroom,
aroom avatar

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detectorists is a really wholesome show about this

Wot_The,
Wot_The avatar

I am ignorant about this, but have had thoughts about taking it up. Why would it be illegal?

ArtieShaw,
ArtieShaw avatar

Some countries with a wealth of antiquities (like Turkey) have tried to stop looting by banning metal detectors. It doesn't work. Lots of ancient coins are being taken out of Turkey, despite the illegality.

In contrast, England allows detecting, but has strict laws on reporting if you find significant treasure. Their laws on the sale and ownership of the found treasure are also quite fair and reasonable.

<edit: a word>

NotTheOnlyGamer,
NotTheOnlyGamer avatar

This is going to go against what a lot of people will tell you, but my thought is that you should try to challenge yourself to be social and learn to develop those skills, rather than continuing to develop antisocial skills in your comfort zone. To that end, I'll suggest you look into things like Toastmasters or another public speaking club, and tabletop RPGs - in person, not on Discord. You will have to overcome the challenges of being social and learning at the same time, but I think that those would be valuable experiences for you. Local boardgame groups will also be helpful, as you'll be able to focus on the game rather than the socializing.

Everyone needs to learn how to be social. Don't hide from it.

whatsarefoogee,

Some people prefer to be introverts. An introvert is not a defective extravert that needs fixing.

NotTheOnlyGamer,
NotTheOnlyGamer avatar

You're not wrong. That still doesn't change the fact that everyone needs to learn to be more socially adept. What I'm suggesting are hobbies with fixed timelines and specific goals, to try and develop those skills. Being uncomfortable and finding a path forward is an important part of life, too.

postscarce,

Gaming
Gardening
Hiking
3d printing
Woodworking
Reading

soft_frog,

Second woodworking. I picked up carving during the pandemic and I find it incredibly enjoyable, it's probably my favourite hobby right now. I just put on Levar Burton Reads or a podcast or an audiobook and work away.

I want to learn how to carve with chainsaws next.

schizohybrid,

I enjoy miniature painting, as it will let you engage as much (or little) with the various communities as you wish. Order paint online, and paint in the troll cave by yourself? Certainly! Make some small talk with the clerk and patrons at your local hobby shop, now that you share a common interest and have something to talk about? Absolutely!

Get obsessed with 40K lore, wonder where all your money and free time went, realize you have enough miniatures to paint for several decades, and yet you still can’t stop buying them and oh god those paints would go amazing with that color scheme you pictured so maybe just one more purchase —-

osarusan,
osarusan avatar

Came here to say this. I almost never play Warhammer, but I absolutely love making and painting the minis and putting together little dioramas to photograph or film. Since getting a 3d printer its been even more fun, as you can make your own villages and set up fun scenes!

Hairyblue,
Hairyblue avatar

I tried miniature painting for the first time a few years ago. But I did the plastic miniatures that came with board games I liked. I saw a youtube video explaining how to play the game and he painted his. So I thought they looked great painted and so I painted 2 board games miniatures.

Gloomhaven Miniatures: The Cragheart Tinkerer With green Pack for his gadgets

Castle Ravenloft Players and Monsters

I'm not great at it and I don't think I have the patients for it. But I'm happy I tried and I like the way they look now.

Kudos to thoes that have the steady hand and eyesight to get this done well.

theinspectorst,
theinspectorst avatar

Exactly the answer I had in mind. It's something you can do on your own time and in your own space, but it also creates opportunities to interact with other hobbyists.

Something I hate as an introvert - and notice in many other introverts - is the pain of making idle small talk. Having a common interest as a reason to talk to other people feels much more natural to me and is great as an entry point for introverts wanting to get to know other people without it feeling forced.

You can do it for wargaming like 40K, but also for TTRPGs like DnD. Sometimes I just paint models for the hell of it that I never intend to use in any game. You can also branch out from making models to building terrain and scenery - there's loads of great tutorials on YouTube.

lymingseng,

As an introvert myself, I’d say GYM

stackPeek,
@stackPeek@lemmy.world avatar

Programming. Start with Python, or maybe C++

SadTrain,

Disc golf. It can be very cheap to get started. Most courses are free. It gets you outside and in nature.

It can be as social or solo as you want. I like to play alone because then I can take all the time I want to throw/rethrow as long as I don’t have people coming up behind me.

barnyard_noise,
barnyard_noise avatar

@FrostBolt I’m a big fan of plant care! I find it super relaxing to have a little garden in my apartment (plus I love the pop of color in my living room!)

Other hobbies I have are puzzle games (eg sudoku, crosswords, word scrambles), podcasts, and audiobooks

aconis,

Programming (python), making music/learning instruments and synths.

gonesnake,

Music is a good one. Especially electronic instruments, mostly because you can play and record with headphones and it's easy to get a lot of different sounds to play with.

SpaceToast,

Even electric guitars sounds great with amp plugins nowadays, so headphones work for that too.

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