Make sure none of the peaches are touching, or they'll freeze together. Cover the baking sheet with plastic wrap. Place the baking sheet in the freezer and leave it there until the peach wedges are frozen solid. You can use either tubs or freezer bags. Fill the container with the peach wedges, leaving a little room at the top. Since the wedges were pre-frozen, they shouldn't stick together. Label the container with the date the peaches were processed and stored. They should keep for 8 to 10 months.
++++++++++
One-sentence summary -- Place the peach wedges in a single layer on a baking sheet. Freeze the peaches. Put the peaches in a freezer food storage container. Store the peaches in the freezer.


There's a lot of free information about most people on the Internet, most of which was put there by the people in question. If you want to find a person's address, you may be able to figure out their general location (e.g., a city) and work backward from there. This requires an appreciation of context. For example, if you're looking at a location to which you know the person often travels, you can infer that they live relatively close to that location. If you can find three (or more) sources which list their current location as being in a specific city, you can assume that they're in that city for the time being. Knowing this will narrow down your search.  Social media is the easiest way to determine this information, as most social media services will make your current city and state (or country) public information by default. You can also check graduation records, news articles, and other public records to see if you can find additional information about the person. You can learn a lot from viewing someone's common activities on social media sites like Facebook and Twitter. Look for instances of any of the following:  Check-ins to places where they often eat or visit Relationships with other social media users (especially mutual friends) Location tagging (common on Instagram), especially when near their home Occupation or job history If you can find the person on LinkedIn, you can most likely figure out where they graduated from, what they currently do for a living, and where they work. This information will confirm their general location, and may even help you determine which part of the city (e.g., which neighborhood) they live in. If you know someone who frequently visits the person whose address you're trying to find, you may be able to talk to that person in order to determine where the person currently resides.  You might even ask the person if they want to visit the person whom you want to find with you in order to get directions to the person's address. In general, you'll want to avoid asking where the person lives outright. Determining the person's neighborhood and working your way down from there is a less creepy way to approach the conversation. If you absolutely can't find a person's address but you do know where they work or where they tend to eat, you can try hanging out near the location in order to run into them when they arrive. Keep in mind that this should be your last resort, and should only be considered if you and the person whom you want to meet are on good terms.  Using this method to stalk or harass someone is illegal, and may result in criminal charges or other consequences. Do not follow someone to their house without explicit permission from them.
++++++++++
One-sentence summary -- Understand what to look for. Attempt to triangulate their general location. View their social media activity. Check LinkedIn. Speak to a mutual acquaintance. Try meeting the person in a neutral location.


Check out hipster girls like Cory Kennedy, Willa Holland, Leigh Lezark, Agyness Deyn, Peaches and Pixie Geldof, the Jagger girls, Keith Richard's girls, Alice Dellal, Dree Hemingway, and Erin Wasson. See which hipster role model most appeals to you, and follow up on her trends, from what she wears to where she's partying, or what she's eating.  If you have a close friend who is a hipster, check out what she wears, reads, and listens to -- just don't be obvious about it. Hipsters don't want to be worshipped. Check out some fashion-themed websites to see which styles appeal to you the most. Though not every style on the sites is made for hipsters, you can pick and choose whatever suits your look. Checking out some cool magazines and books can help you get a better sense of your own hipster style. Try subscribing to a few magazines and picking up a few fashion-centric books to get a better sense of the style you want to achieve. Here are some magazines and books to try:  Magazines: NYLON, Dazed & Confused, Elle, Paper, POP! Magazine, and British Vogue Books: the three books from NYLON magazine, Pretty, Street, and Play, and Misshapes, a book by a DJ trio that features the cool outfits people wear at clubs. Many hipsters are artists or at least have a creative side. If you don't have a creative interest yet, then you should find out what you enjoy, whether it's photography, drawing, painting, writing, playing an instrument or even DJing. Whatever you like, get to know the specialists in that field.  Enjoy photography? Know and love photographers like Ryan McGinley, Dash Snow, and Ellen von Unwerth. If you enjoy writing, read the classics and try getting into poetry. Get inspired by the work on Jack Kerouac, Ken Kesey, Sylvia Plath, J.D. Salinger, Haruki Murakami, Chuck Palahniuk, Bret Easton Ellis, Dave Eggers, William S. Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, and Chuck Klosterman. If you like art, check out the work of Georgia O'Keefe, Alice Neel, Pablo Picasso, and Andy Warhol. Listening to indie, underground, and even classic music is a big part of being a hipster. To be a hipster, you can't listen only to what's popular, but have to be able to recognize cool music with the potential to make it big -- at which point you'll have to ditch it completely. You can't just listen to the music on your LP player or iPod -- to be a true teenage hipster, you'll have to make an effort to go to concerts, whether the venue is the basement of a tiny cafe or a larger (though not too large) arena. Here are some bands to check out if you want to get into the female teenage hipster groove:  Daft Punk Wild Child Justice Panda Bear Ratattat Yeah Yeah Yeahs The xx The Vaccines The Kooks Animal Collective Bright Eyes Deathcab for Cutie Vampire Weekend Minus the Bear Friendly Fires Milky Chance Imagine Dragons Bastille If you want to learn how to be a hipster, they you have to not only be familiar with hipster fashion and music, but you also have to be aware of hipsters in films and TV shows. And remember never to refer to films as "movies" -- that's not a very hipster thing to do. Here are some films and shows to be familiar with:  Hipster films from the last decade: 500 Days of Summer, Garden State, Blue Valentine, Juno, The Royal Tenenbaums, Little Miss Sunshine, Amelie, Tiny Furniture, Lars and the Real Girl, Drive, Away We Go, Greenberg Older hipster films: The Shine, Reality Bites, Clerks, Kicking and Screaming, With nail and I, The Rocky Horror Picture Show. TV shows: Girls, Portlandia, Workaholics, Bored to Death
++++++++++
One-sentence summary --
Get some hipster role models. Get inspired by hipster websites. Get inspired by magazines and books. Get creative. Get inspired by music. Watch hipster films and shows.