Does PrepHole have any comfy or ASMR tutorial videos they like watching? Can be about anything really, just something that's relaxing but you're also learning something interesting and potentially useful.
Does PrepHole have any comfy or ASMR tutorial videos they like watching? Can be about anything really, just something that's relaxing but you're also learning something interesting and potentially useful.
clickspring, my mechanics when he isn't talking with that horrid accent. the only thing I learn is how much cooler their tools are and how much they know about everything.
Not really useful but I made the mistake of clicking on a car wrapping video (i had never heard of this as a cheap substitute for re-painting your car) the other day and the noise pretty much put me a trance.
Honestly nothing beats this old house episodes or golf on a Sunday afternoon.
Crafsman is good. Like a black Bob Ross
Crafsman is my brothers favorite channel, he has down syndrome.
Crafsman is obviously white
Only in spirit
The Lawn Care Nut for DIY Boomers like myself, as well ae Lawns Across America. Dude is based, and also you can learn a ton a out how to take care of your grass and how big box stores sell you worthless lawn care products.
On youtube, there's a bunch of asmr diy channels ("Mr Sun Y" is one of them) which show fun but sometimes really terrible ways to combine nuts, bolts, washers, zipties, dowels, etc. together to do all kinds of things. Just make sure never to actually use any of them in a real project as I'm 200% certain none of them will be up to code in any way.
I meant mostly unintentional asmr, not the deliberate stuff where they're doing fake knife restorations or whatever the fuck
I was about to give you grief but since you share my dislike of Facebook tier garbage, splitting granite is very satisfying.
Thunk thunk thunk thunk thunk thunk
thanks, doc.
Danke doktor
The only reason I ever watched svseeker was welding asmr to fall asleep to when he was fucking around building the boat.
How It's Made TV series. There's like 26 seasons. I have it playing nonstop in the background. Soothing as fuck and somewhat educational. Industrial automation is comfy
In the late 80s I used to work the graveyard shift. I'd get home just in time to catch Bob Ross on PBS. That show used to make me so relaxed that I was ready to crash out when it was over.
For tutorials I like Mr. Carlsons Lab on youtube. I like his troubleshooting methods and explanations. The guy lives in my region.
One youtube channel I like to watch is RailCowGirl. There's something comforting about watching a cabview of a train rolling across the Norwegian countryside. The winter ones both night & day are my favourites. Could be the soft background noise combined with the gliding motion over the rails. Appealing both visually and audibly.