I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.
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I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.
It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.
If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.
I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.
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# 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking
## 2 Picks
Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.
Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool
## 3 Lock Types
Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangementSketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock
## 4 Pins Types
A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).
Standard: plain cylinder
Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
Serrated: like standard pins, but clickierThere are many others, but they're much rarer.
Sketches: each of the 3 pins
## 5 Techniques
Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
Raking: generate random bitting guessesโtry rising, falling, flat, and rocking motionsSketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions
## 6 Practice Locks
Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
Laminated Master: good until trivial
Master 140: has spools, good until trivialSketches: each of the 3 padlocks
## 7 Bypasses
Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
Shims: good for cheap padlocksSketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims
## 8 About Alice
Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.
Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock
LGBTQIA.space/@alice
[email address]@alice knowledge does not take space so having a long-form version available at some point would be nice. Noting this and the hashtag for future reference, too!
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@diverdutch I could include a couple short testimonials for good measure

@alice Only apropos
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@diverdutch I could include a couple short testimonials for good measure

@alice @diverdutch "Alice shares her passion clearly and makes learning fun, unlocking potential wherever she goes"
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I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.
It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.
If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.
I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.
---
# 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking
## 2 Picks
Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.
Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool
## 3 Lock Types
Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangementSketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock
## 4 Pins Types
A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).
Standard: plain cylinder
Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
Serrated: like standard pins, but clickierThere are many others, but they're much rarer.
Sketches: each of the 3 pins
## 5 Techniques
Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
Raking: generate random bitting guessesโtry rising, falling, flat, and rocking motionsSketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions
## 6 Practice Locks
Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
Laminated Master: good until trivial
Master 140: has spools, good until trivialSketches: each of the 3 padlocks
## 7 Bypasses
Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
Shims: good for cheap padlocksSketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims
## 8 About Alice
Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.
Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock
LGBTQIA.space/@alice
[email address]@alice I would love to see this! An updated zine would be awesome. Have you seen Schuyler's from like 20 years ago? https://www.locksport.net/files/LSI_Guide_To_Lockpicking.pdf
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I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.
It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.
If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.
I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.
---
# 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking
## 2 Picks
Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.
Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool
## 3 Lock Types
Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangementSketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock
## 4 Pins Types
A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).
Standard: plain cylinder
Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
Serrated: like standard pins, but clickierThere are many others, but they're much rarer.
Sketches: each of the 3 pins
## 5 Techniques
Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
Raking: generate random bitting guessesโtry rising, falling, flat, and rocking motionsSketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions
## 6 Practice Locks
Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
Laminated Master: good until trivial
Master 140: has spools, good until trivialSketches: each of the 3 padlocks
## 7 Bypasses
Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
Shims: good for cheap padlocksSketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims
## 8 About Alice
Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.
Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock
LGBTQIA.space/@alice
[email address]I had no idea you were into lock picking.
I don't suppose you do or would consider a total beginners' course?
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I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.
It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.
If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.
I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.
---
# 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking
## 2 Picks
Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.
Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool
## 3 Lock Types
Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangementSketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock
## 4 Pins Types
A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).
Standard: plain cylinder
Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
Serrated: like standard pins, but clickierThere are many others, but they're much rarer.
Sketches: each of the 3 pins
## 5 Techniques
Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
Raking: generate random bitting guessesโtry rising, falling, flat, and rocking motionsSketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions
## 6 Practice Locks
Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
Laminated Master: good until trivial
Master 140: has spools, good until trivialSketches: each of the 3 padlocks
## 7 Bypasses
Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
Shims: good for cheap padlocksSketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims
## 8 About Alice
Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.
Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock
LGBTQIA.space/@alice
[email address]@alice YES!!!!
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@alice @diverdutch "Alice shares her passion clearly and makes learning fun, unlocking potential wherever she goes"
@Nikkileah I'm not a girl, but I like the sentiment

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@alice I would love to see this! An updated zine would be awesome. Have you seen Schuyler's from like 20 years ago? https://www.locksport.net/files/LSI_Guide_To_Lockpicking.pdf
@Sempf ooo, that's good! Way bigger than what I want to make (I'm aiming for a 5-minute primer to cover the most FAQ I get, that'll fit in a pocket), but I'm going to share that one with folx too.
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I had no idea you were into lock picking.
I don't suppose you do or would consider a total beginners' course?
@DarkSheepArts I'd be happy to. Check out the hashtag in the parent post for a short series I did for Fedi.
Were you thinking something in person, remote, or materials for DIY learning?
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@DarkSheepArts I'd be happy to. Check out the hashtag in the parent post for a short series I did for Fedi.
Were you thinking something in person, remote, or materials for DIY learning?
Thank you - I'll check out the hashtags.
I'd be interested in remote learning. It's something I've been interested in doing for a long time, but also in my job, I keep coming up against either (a) doors that have been locked as long as everyone can remember and nobody has a key for, but which I literally have to get open, or (b) someone locked a door that isn't usually locked and then immediately loses the key.
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I'm making a #LearnLockpickingWithAlice zine for Fedi, and to hand out at an upcoming conference where I've been asked to host a lockpicking village.
It's intended to answer "what should I know about lockpicking (and Alice) in the first 5 minutes?". Then I can explain concepts, teach techniques, and run hands-on demos from there.
If Fedi is excited about this, I'll likely do more in-depth ones on specific aspects of lockpicking and related skills, like: improvised tools, decoding combo locks, slipping latches, etc.
I'll make the finished versions available on my Codeberg page for free.
---
# 1 Alice Watson's Itty-Bitty Intro to Lockpicking
## 2 Picks
Slim teardrop-tip short hook for small keyways, sturdy gem-tip medium hook for bullying, a w-rake for luck, and several turning tools. I've opened 10x more locks with those three picks than all others combined.
Sketches: each of the 3 pick profiles, and a double-ended wiper-insert turning tool
## 3 Lock Types
Warded: wards stop wrong key from turning
Wafer: flat wafers prevent core turning
Pin-tumbler: pin stacks prevent core turning
Tubular: pin-tumbler, but circular arrangementSketches: a key and keyway for each of the 4 lock types, a wafer, and the inside of a pin-tumbler lock
## 4 Pins Types
A pin-stack consists of a spring, driver, and a key pin. Driver pins have different shapes, key pins have different lengths (bitting).
Standard: plain cylinder
Spool: like a thread spool, causes false-sets
Serrated: like standard pins, but clickierThere are many others, but they're much rarer.
Sketches: each of the 3 pins
## 5 Techniques
Torsion: rotates core, use just enough force to balance a few coins on your fingertip
Single-pin picking: find binding pin, set it, repeat
Raking: generate random bitting guessesโtry rising, falling, flat, and rocking motionsSketches: turning tool & pick setting pin in cutaway pin-tumbler lock, raking motions
## 6 Practice Locks
Clear: good for first 10 minutes, terrible feedback
Laminated Master: good until trivial
Master 140: has spools, good until trivialSketches: each of the 3 padlocks
## 7 Bypasses
Keys (TSA007, CH751): they just work
Combs: open some locks as fast as the key
Shims: good for cheap padlocksSketches: TSA007 & CH751 keys, comb, padlock and door shims
## 8 About Alice
Alice is a love-lock enthusiast, professional lockpicker, and lockpicking instructor who has been in the sport for nearly a decade. In that time, Alice has taught at several security conferences, hosted workshops, become a brand ambassador for Red Team Tools, and opened many thousands of locks.
Sketches: Alice's profile pic, heart-shaped love lock
LGBTQIA.space/@alice
[email address]@alice What about rubbings of the TSA007 and CH741? Easier to use as templates for filling copies.
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