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Prepare your surface to be painted. I did a base layer of my desired color, and used painter's tape to outline the section to be painted. Also, protect your work surface with some scrap paper!

 

Mix 1.5 tsp unsanded tile grout per 1 fl oz acrylic paint, in the plastic cup. Mix with plastic spoon until lumps are gone.

Please don't make me eat hard-cooked yolks. =(

In order to get nice, crisp hexagon edges, it is best to use some sort of implement (like a bone folder) to press at the seams a bit and make sure all the corners are nice and pointy.

Sujetando la punta del hilo, llevar la otra parte hasta la pinza opuesta y traerlo de vuelta hasta el punto de origen.

La cantidad de azúcar se puede variar según gustos. Mezclar hasta que quede más o menos homogéneo, pero da igual si quedan grumos.

 

Insisto: mejor a mano que con batidora.

from the universal self instructor, published 1884.

Once final layer is completely dry, slate the chalkboard by lightly rubbing chalk over the surface and then gently rubbing it off.

Sorry about the window glare.

Light tent made from sections of pvc pipe. I used sections coupled with joints so that I could add different pieces to hold supports or places to hang backdrop paper or light diffusion screens.

At the beach. This is my favorite.

Next, push the pole out over the pool. I have the advantage of a deck that's slightly above the top of the pool. It would be harder otherwise.

Note how the even details are printed and folded in such a way as to be visible in the final origami crane.

As discovered via Fatwallet, BestBuy has interesting "Back to School" coupon booklets at their stores. It's interesting because they appear to give you random sets of discounts. Someone found a way to identify the one that give you the 30% off coupon.

 

Basically, I've confirmed two ways to quickly spot the ones that have the bigger discounts:

 

1. As you'll see in the photos, the 30% off ones have slightly different copyright text than the lower (10% 5% 15%) booklets. If you get one with a 29528_1 to the left of the copyright symbol on the back cover, you have a lower one. If there's no text to the left of the the copyright symbol, you've got the 30% off!

 

2. I found the "Back-to-School" booklets next to the customer service counters. Since there were sales people there, I couldn't afford to stand around and sort through stacks of booklets. A quick way to find the ones with the bigger discounts is to look from the top side of the stack (i.e. spine of the booklet fold). The 30% off ones will be less yellowish in print, probably because of a difference in printing or folding batch.

 

Read more here or join FlickrDeals to be in the know.

As discovered via Fatwallet, BestBuy has interesting "Back to School" coupon booklets at their stores. It's interesting because they appear to give you random sets of discounts. Someone found a way to identify the one that give you the 30% off coupon.

 

Basically, I've confirmed two ways to quickly spot the ones that have the bigger discounts:

 

1. As you'll see in the photos, the 30% off ones have slightly different copyright text than the lower (10% 5% 15%) booklets. If you get one with a 29528_1 to the left of the copyright symbol on the back cover, you have a lower one. If there's no text to the left of the the copyright symbol, you've got the 30% off!

 

2. I found the "Back-to-School" booklets next to the customer service counters. Since there were sales people there, I couldn't afford to stand around and sort through stacks of booklets. A quick way to find the ones with the bigger discounts is to look from the top side of the stack (i.e. spine of the booklet fold). The 30% off ones will be less yellowish in print, probably because of a difference in printing or folding batch.

 

Read more here or join FlickrDeals to be in the know.

The excellent webcomics referenced are, of course, get your war on and Dinosaur Comics.

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.

 

www.4photos.de/camera-diy/exchangeable-filter-dslr.html

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.

Once final layer is completely dry, slate the chalkboard by lightly rubbing chalk over the surface and then gently rubbing it off.

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".

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