It's rather easy, but I don't trust my knowledge enough to do it myself. I suppose I
could do it, but really, I USE them more than make them, wonder if it's not a priestly duty anyway, and quite frankly I find the rubrics nearly incomprehensible.
There's a site called
iCalShare where Google, Outlook, Yahoo, and other "cloud" calendar users can find and subscribe to various calendars. (There are other sites too, but that seems to be the going "free open source" one). I had subscribed to the Trad Calendars for a few years, which got me out of typing it all by hand every year on my computer —but the two there now are out of date and not maintained.
If someone has the time and knowledge of
traditional Feast Days (1962 at least),
all you have to do to publish and share it is:1. make an iCal file (new calender saved as ICAL format) and publish it to iCalShare (you need to have an account there because so many services use that site). Also, if you program at all,
iCalShare has an API they're willing to send you free so your calendar could last a long time (you can program in how to calculate Easter every year, etc).
or
2. use
Pratie.com to make an iCal file.
TIPS! While it's
interesting, calendar space on phones and tablets is at a premium (appointments, etc), so you might want to stick to the red letter days.
Name of CalendarIt should have "Traditional Catholic", of course, but also what Missal it's based on (1962, etc), as some NOvites call their calendars "traditional" and they're NOT. Also, in the description, note how long the calendar is good for if it's just for a few years. Many of us had iCals that worked through 2013, but come 1 Jan 2014, nothing. In fact, there are no trad cals at all there now that I can find. As I said, on iCalShare, there had been two, (1962), but now, there are only NONE. I find that so sad.
Any takers? :D I noticed even traditio.com's calendar runs through THIS YEAR ONLY, which is why I put topic here (Resistance) instead of the computers subforum. I think it's a Resistance issue (or maybe even a Crisis!), more than a computer issue.