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Inside the polypropylene shell are two polycarbonate inserts that clip into moulded lugs. The left hand insert holds up to four credit cards. The one on the right is a money clip. The design is such that the two can be switched around from one side to the other.
EOS 350D / Rebel XT with invented excangable filter system - her I take the UV-cut filter inside the camera - between mirror and shutter.
Position the picture so that it looks right. Remember, you have at most a quarter inch of slack cut in the mat board, so try to wiggle the picture into the best possible arangement. Then, with a pencil, mark the position of the picture. I draw a tiny horizontal and vertical line on the top two corners.
This is a pretty good demonstration of the surprising magnetic power: You can stick a netflix DVD to the fridge. It's pretty secure, too; I opened and closed the freezer door that this was stuck to, and the DVD didn't slip at all.
Even though they're small, these surprisingly powerful magnets have to be useful for something.
So go ahead, show me: Pull a bunch of AOL CD Mailers out of the garbage in your apartment complex or dorm, get the magnets, do something cool with them, and let me know about it!
cables without a cable needle(4-st RC):
If you want to make a cable that twists to the right:
1.Insert right needle from the front through 3rd and 4th stitch on left needle, slip the left needle out releasing 4 cable stitches.
2.Fast pick-up two loose stitches with left needle on the back.
3.Slip the two stitches from right needle back to the left needle by crossing stitches .
4.Knit as directed.
Roll a strip of mmf/sugarpaste according to your measures and cover the inner side of the "neck part".
The cartoon picture of me in the lower left-hand corner is from a poster for Throcky Gets Physical, a physics musical that my AP Physics class created my senior year of high school.
The machine gun photo deserves attribution, it is entitled Guns are cool... and chrismetcalf released it under a by-nc-sa Creative Commons license.
Materials: 1/4 yd tulle, 1/4 yd chiffon, small piece of felt, paper flower pattern (next), scissors, thread+needle, pins, and embellishment (I used a handful of gold seed beads).
Note: 1/4 yard of tulle + chiffon will actually make two 5" flowers (from this tutorial) or one thicker flower.
How-to tutorial: I used a light stand with a 12"x18" black card clamped to it, and placed it behind my subjects -- trying not to block the back lighting from the sun.
This silver-plated ring has given me a green stain around my finger. One of the best ways to prevent this is by coating the inside of the ring with clear nail polish. This will prevent the copper deposits in the ring from reacting with sweat, thereby temporarily preventing the green stain from occurring.
I cut out the section where I actually clip up the top portion of my hair, because I was being awfully rambly. Just make sure you get the bulk of it out of the way.
Also, if you're having trouble with pieces falling out (usually this happens to me when some strands are drier than the rest of the hair), you can keep a mister bottle on hand to dampen things down again.
The instruction below is all about how to log in to Spotify.
Let's click into link below to see:
>>https://bit.ly/2VnvuD0
to make a tripod mount:
use contact cement to fasten mount to camera bottom (piece of wood with a nut glued in it with the tread size that fits your tripod) place the nut under the lens.
here is a photo of the wood: www.flickr.com/photos/safoocat/2049998851/in/set-72157603...
Jan 16, 2008 I just ripped off the velcro as it wasn't stable enough, perhaps extra strength would have been and I'm going to use contact cement to glue the wood directly to the bottom of the camera.
Picture used here: www.lifehacker.jp/2009/07/090706docomopr6.html