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Apply your top coat as your final step. You will want to use a top coat for this style because the white is a thicker polish than the base polish and it chips off easily. This will help to keep it all together, and make your nails feel super shiny and keep the design for longer.
Take either the piece you just cut off (if it's about 6" long, or more), or a previously, cleanly cut piece, and butt it gently up against the edge of the piece you just cut. Be careful not to nudge the left piece at all. This is where our precision is coming from, so even a bump you can't see could jog it a hair to the left, which would mean we're not getting things exactly aligned, as we want.
After spending six months with a woefully inadequate posterboard TtV contraption, I finally built myself a keeper!
Read the details on my blog!
2 lamps on 45º!!! That's the way to Capture your Collage/Painting on digital! It worked also with glass framed collages!
I used hot-melt glue to attach the dinosaur to a jar lid, then unmolded a small ice globe made in a balloon placed in a flat-bottomed bowl. The flat end of the ice globe had frozen over (as desired), and I melted a circular access point using a metal bowl of hot water. With the ice globe placed back into the bowl, flat-end up, and without emptying the cold water from the interior, I placed the dinosaur into the center and then set the globe to re-freeze (in a freezer, because the outdoor temperature had risen to near the melting point).
Sew along the two sides of the fabric, using at least a 1/4" inseam.
With the slip cover still inside out, place it on the chair. If there's any part that is loose then use a pencil to draw where you need to sew to fix it. I always get the corners wrong!
Place a pin through all the corners gathered in the center. Force the pin through the center of the paper, so it appears in the back.
I'm pointing to a section of Incra TRACK - specifically at the 0 mark. This, and it's twin on the other side of the saw are each 36", but they're available in other sizes (18" and 52" where I found them). The red things in the background are a different fence system from the same place I bought the Incra stuff, and not part of this how-to.
In the top of the tracks are thin, flexible lexan rulers. These slide in, and remain pressure-fit in place. The front of the track has a T-slot, useful for attaching additional fencing. The back of the track, behind the highest section with the ruler is mostly for stability, and provides screw holes to tie down the tracks. This is how I've attached them. You can also tie them down with bolts in T-tracks that run along the bottom.
You can see the profile of these things, as well as how I've secured them with screws, and get a sense of how the rulers fit in place in this image from Day 2 of my 3-day side table build.
Unscrew the screw.
Part 4 of 7 in a HOWTO on replacing the chamber in a padlock: cheaphack.blogspot.com/2008/01/how-to-replace-chamber-in-...
Snap this with your camera phone and it'll bring you to my blog.
You can make your own at qrcode.kaywa.com/