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On my blog is a description and how to make your own whiteboard soooo much better than those smudgy boring whitboards.
1.5 tsp unsanded white tile grout, 1 fl oz acrylic paint, plastic cup, plastic spoon, paintbrush, chalk, and surface to paint (I used Ikea Knuff wooden magazine files).
If you're doing it right, your dog will be frothingly anxious to try one. Here's Misty the Wonder Mutt, being very, very good.
This is what the "bottom" of the flower will look like after center-bunching and securing with thread and needle.
Howto create a belt mounted trash bag holder.
Cut the bottom out of the tub and bend the hanger as shown to be the belt hanger.
Start drawing or painting. Remember Shrinky-Dinks? It is pretty similar here, but I'm using watercolour pencils to mark out my design.
You really only need two hinges to hold the picture up, so cut them now. The picture's bottom should just hang free. This reduces the likelyhood of the paper getting twisted or bent out of shape down the road.
Flip the picture so that it's face down and line it up to the marks you made in step 4. Once you've applied the hinges, you will flip it down.
Mezcla las claras hasta que ya no se noten, pero no te pases batiendo porque si no la crema perderá la esponjosidad que le dan las claras.
You want to hinge the mat to the backing board. I use tyvek tape for this, too. Simply cut a length that's not quite as long as the backing board and apply it up top with the two boards openeed up like a book.
In honor of Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day I thought I would have some fun making a version of a lens cap pinhole lens for my Canon A95. Unfortunately it didn't quite work out the way I had hoped. Or, I suppose I should say, my pictures' crapiness exceeded my expectations.
1. use some sturdy scissors to cut out a circle from the side of a soda can that fits over the end of the camera's lens.
2. use an extremely thin sewing needle to punch a hole through the middle of the disk.
3. sand off the extra metal from the back of the hole.
4. turn off the camera's 'auto off' function so it doesn't retract the lens while you have stuff taped to the end of it.
5. tape the disk to the end of the lens with masking tape. I used that blue painter's tape so it wouldn't leave a gummy residue on the lens. I also cut the tape in half lengthwise.
6. set the camera to aperture priority and set the aperture as far open as possible (f2.8 probably).
Now you're all set to take pictures the size of a pea. The problem with this setup is that the lens's diaphragm is in the way so you can only record an image in the space where the light passes through the aperture and since the pinhole isn't right up next to the diaphragm, the cone of light is pretty small. My pictures turned out all black except for a little circle of image in the middle. All the extra black tricked the camera into mis-exposing the image so i had to do lots of work in photoshop afterwards to add contrast and brighten the colors.
Pipe goggles, are a solutiont to seeing underwater, when you want to go very deep on one breath. Since every 10m pressure doubles and it take another volume of air to equalize fill the same space. You need eventually use a bit of your breath just replacing the air in your mask. Here is a pair of swim-goggles converted to deep diving equalizable goggles. I just added tubing to join the air spaces and have a tube go into the mouth for equalization.
Third, prop the pole over a convenient railing and tie it to the deck. I had to drill a hole in the handle to put the rope through. I didn't want it slipping off.
I use an infrared remote to trigger the camera. I need to invest in a 30-foot USB cable so I can trigger it from the computer and see what the framing is like.