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rio-bevol t1_ixx88ol wrote

Annotating in general: I don't do this, but I love highlighting and adding notes on my Kindle. I imagine for plenty of people it's just a thing that they like doing!

Annotating beautifully: Uh, aside from some people just having nicer handwriting, I think this is just one of those "Instagram isn't real life" things.

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Cultured_Ignorance t1_ixxjnkh wrote

I'm not familiar with the pictures you're referencing, but annotation should be second nature if you're an active reader. Books should not be one-way conversations. In the course of the argument/explanation, you should be analyzing the turns taken or connections made.

That's probably the most common reason for annotation for me, it makes it easier to go back and analyze the text. Other major reasons: allusion/reference, relation, disagreement, paraphrasing.

Basically, annotation is your side of the conversation with the book, created in the course of reading.

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blueberrywasp t1_ixy21n3 wrote

Some accounts I enjoy visually (if you feel like looking) are @pageswithv , @posiesandpagies , and @hxreads on instagram. My question isn’t so much why people annotate it’s more how do people have the time to annotate in that way, whilst still reading a decent amount of books

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MusicSoos t1_ixy9g59 wrote

When you get money from posting these pictures, you have time to do almost anything to make the picture look perfect, including annotating

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[deleted] OP t1_ixy4hnn wrote

They make it into a hobby that's worth their time. A friend of mine spends his down time being a costumed re-enactor in a roman legion as a scribe.

He makes his own papyrus, his own ink, his own period accurate tools for doing all of that and he writes the re-enactment group's documents with a feather.

For a quick and sloppy job that looks like museum quality calligraphy to me, he spends 8 hours on a single page. For display work, he can spend days just penning one or two pages.

It's just worth the time investment to him.

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oridol t1_ixy2aoe wrote

I love to annotate, but a lot of my friends see it as "time consuming" or "ruining the book" or even "ruining the experience". I don't shed any doubt on any of these claims, as annotating a book is often for analytical purposes.

But, I want to assure you that by no means because you don't annotate do you not understand the book on the same level as these aesthetic book account owners do. In a world of hyper consumption and overwhelming sharing of content, it can be easy to compare something as personal as a reading experience to someone else's and feel lesser than for enjoying the same piece of content in a different way. From an annotation-lover... enjoy books as you always have, and never feel lesser because your reading experience doesn't look like someone else's.

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chuckalicious3000 t1_ixy9948 wrote

I'm a historian so I annotate all my books, tabs (collorcoded) hi-lighters(color coded) and pen markings(using symbols and sometimes color coded) none of it is pretty its functional.

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unlovelyladybartleby t1_ixy72la wrote

I annotate on my kobo or in messy scribbles in actual books

You know how people use filters and the pictures they post are basically lies? So are their annotated books. Stop tying yourself in knots over posers

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minimalist_coach t1_ixxg90b wrote

I've always felt that was a right brain thing. I'm very left brained, so it's never interested me at all. I've always felt like right brained people just naturally find time to add beauty to things.

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