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Trophy created by Todd Nienkerk and Aaron Stanush of Four Kitchens.

Let it dry again for 24 hours and voilá, you have a new pig bank

How to make? (FFX/tidus) cosplayItem

this time you shouldn't see protection warning

A tutorial on how to make a Japanese switchback cut without leftovers.

 

Post on Graasland.

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.

Installing Nuvi 200w into my 2010 Legacy.

 

Full howto here: abella.net/?page_id=124

Installing Nuvi 200w into my 2010 Legacy.

 

Full howto here: abella.net/?page_id=124

If you're not terribly ashamed of your end project, then you may wish to sign it somewhere.

2 lamps on 45º!!! That's the way to Capture your Collage/Painting on digital! It worked also with glass framed collages!

Installing Nuvi 200w into my 2010 Legacy.

 

Full howto here: abella.net/?page_id=124

The pattern is really versatile -- these are all variations on the same pattern. The green one is all long bugles, the blue/purple one has short bugles on both sides. It's fun to mix it up.

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!

Installing Nuvi 200w into my 2010 Legacy.

 

Full howto here: abella.net/?page_id=124

Some people have been curious how I do my indoor macro photography and how fancy the light setup is.

 

This is an indoor macro setup for cheap. I used an extra black shirt I got as a free gift for the backdrop. Then I used a flimsy tripod that cost me 11 euro to suspend the shirt on a wire hanger I received from the dry cleaners. Then I purchased two 150W shoplights that cost 7.50 euros each. With a sturdy tripod, macro lens, and good camera, the rest is simple! Oh and the flowers cost under 5 euro.

 

Oh I almost forgot, you can use a piece of crumpled then uncrumpled aluminum foil for top bounce. Then take a reference photograph of a bright white piece of printer paper for proper white balance and apply the result to the photos in your series.

 

I'm pretty pleased with the end result:)

Part of my tutorial on (re)stretching a canvas!

Trophy created by Todd Nienkerk and Aaron Stanush of Four Kitchens.

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