View allAll Photos Tagged squeegee

Camera: Zorki 4k

Film Kodak ColorPlus, 24 exposure

 

4 August 2011

 

I'm lucky I have any images at all after the the film snapped at the end of the roll which then slackened the film meaning the teeth stopped pulling the film along.

 

Only thing to do now is get some new developer and invest in a good squeegee.

 

GreySkies | Photography Blog | Tumblr Blog | Abandoned Edinburgh Blog

 

These are the rotary screens. The ink and squeegee roll around inside these drums.

Zeiss Ikon Ikonta 521/2

Lens Novar Anastigmat 10.5cm f4.5

Film Ilford 100

Self develop Kodak HC-110 dilute B

 

With tripod and shutter release cable

 

There are some scratches on the film, horizontal line.

I am not sure if a squeegee with old crack rubber blade cause problem.

 

Airbus A380-841

MSN 148

G-XLEE

 

British Airways

BAW BA

 

Copyright © 2015 A380spotter. All rights reserved.

 

your.heathrow.com/takingbritainfurther/

www.heathrowhub.com/

www.backheathrow.org/

Down here, Pine trees are just everywhere! The pollen fills the air so completely that on some days you can see waves of it. Gassing up our venerable Passat wagon this morning I had an idea. In addition to cleaning the lights and windows, I used the squeegee to make a checkerboard pattern on the hood. FYI: this car was washed last week.

Camera: Zorki 4k

Film Kodak ColorPlus, 24 exposure

 

4 August 2011

 

I'm lucky I have any images at all after the the film snapped at the end of the roll which then slackened the film meaning the teeth stopped pulling the film along.

 

Only thing to do now is get some new developer and invest in a good squeegee.

 

Photography Blog

This was a theatrical adaptation of Singin' in the Rain at the North Shore Music Theatre in Beverly, just north of Boston. The single intermission came just after the show's "Singin' in the Rain" number (performed by Gene Kelly in the movie), whose sprayed "rain" left a wet and puddled stage surface. Several members of the crew came out to squeegee and towel it down before the second act began. Actors could slip on a wet stage -- as the actor doing the "Singin' in the rain" number actually did. He slipped and fell and then bounced right up.

Isn't somebody going to come to squeegee the window before we take off? I'm really not looking forward to photoshop'ing out each of these raindrops.

It's a Luigi from the Super Mario Brothers! I hope he is all that you wanted him to be. :)

 

Request from: lightingbug

 

Adobe Illustrator + Photoshop

There's the infamous squeegee that I've noted in several Scandinavian showers. Instead of banking the floor so that gravity pulls the water towards the drain, you're expected to do the work with the squeegee.

The Birkenau paintings are based on four photographs secretly taken in the death camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau. After a yearlong attempt to render the photographic images, Richter gradually veiled his initial figurative drawings with color, scouring each coat of paint with a squeegee to produce layered, ruptured surfaces. The canvases' distinctive facture and relatively subdued palette reflect the artist's conscious struggle to address the grim documents of historical trauma while curtailing the spectacular nature of the reproduced photograph. Together, the series holds in tension the complex relationship between representation and abstraction, and the opposing forces of destruction and reconstruction.

 

"If you want something done right you have to do it yourself."

 

Vader turns in his light-saber for a squeegee. He must clean the windows on his Tie Fighter before he goes out and does battle with the Jedi force.

 

I was helping my mom move and came across some of my toys when I was a kid. This original Tie fighter is almost 30 years old. It is in pretty good condition except for some dust, so I came up with the idea for this shot from it being dirty.

 

Strobist:

 

SB-800 with shoot-thru-umbrella @ 1/8 camera right, fired optical slave

Qflash behind toy @ 1/64, fired via sync cord

Fill cards on both sides of toy

This is the little love of my life, Squeegee. Squeeks started his life living outside the fabric store where I used to work. I had been feeding his mother and father, and eventually, all his six siblings! I wanted to adopt his father, a grey tabby I'd called "Mr. Bill", because of his extreme vocal whining! Mr. Bill turned out to have feline AIDS, and I couldn't bring him home because I had another cat, Noelle, who was old, and I didn't want her exposed to the disease, which is fatal. I had Mr. Bill fixed to stop him from fighting the other males in the neighborhood, and found him a home with a nurse who fell in love with him at first sight!

 

On a stormy, October day, with the wind blowing up a gale, I managed to catch Squeegee with the help of a good friend, and get him stuffed into my cat carrier, which was no easy task, as he was spread eagle, fighting capture with all his might! I brought him to the vet, and had him tested for diseases. He was negative, so Squeegee went home with me and has been there ever since!

 

A year after bringing Squeegee home, he got deathly sick and began throwing up violently. I raced him to the vet, and the blood work showed that he was going into renal failure, and other tests revealed all his major organs were enlarged and in distress. The vet sent me to a clinic in Winter Park, which was very expensive. They discovered Squeegee's kidneys looked "bright" on X-Ray, which means they were too dense. Still, no one knew what was causing any of it! They put him on Cipro, a drug given to children as an antihistamine, I believe, to stimulate his appetite, because he'd lost about 5 lbs. in a short period of time. My vet placed him on Torbutrol, which is a narcotic pain killer, because he seemed to have back pain. None of this had an explanation! $2500, two ultrasounds, and a muscle biopsy later, we still didn't know why Squeeks was sick. He was better, though, so we continued the Cipro and Torbutrol, and eventually, Squeegee recovered, although he was never able to come off the Torbutrol, even when I've tried to wean him off it. He still hurts too much when he doesn't get it.

 

When Squeegee first got sick, I literally went bankrupt to save his life. Many people wouldn't understand that, but as a single woman with no children, my pets are the closest thing I have to that, and the bond is stronger than if I had my own family. It's a substitute, and an outlet for the void left in my maternal instincts.

 

Torbutrol was always expensive, costing about $70 every 40 days when I gave him 1/2 a pill twice a day. Through the years, that has increased dramatically. I now give Squeeks only 1/4 pill every day, and it costs me $19.50 every 16-20 days. There are days when he just has to have more, because I can tell he's hurting. He should have at least twice that amount, but there's no way I can do it anymore.

 

Squeegee would have died when he was two without my help. He's now about 13, and I can't imagine my life without him! As personable as Tigger is, and as pretty as Barrymore is, there's still no other cat in the world that will ever mean more to me than Squeeks. Maybe it's all we've been through together, but I think it was already like that when all this started. He's just special. To most people, Squeegee is just a talky, orange cat. To me, he's my baby; soft as silk, and full of love.

 

There's another facet to Squeegee that makes him one of a kind. I've suffered from migraines from the time I was 7. Shortly after getting Squeeks, I realized that he'd wake me up at night when he sensed one coming on, much like seizure dogs alert a person when they are going to have an epileptic seizure. At first, I would just yell at him to shut up, but soon realized that every time he did it, I was having migraine symptoms. When I paid attention to Squeegee's insistent squeaking, got up and took my meds, and maybe had some coffee (which shrinks the enlarging blood vessels that cause pressure and pain,) I could often make it to work and overcome the migraine. When I ignored him, I would be sicker than death, and in agony! As I've aged, I get fewer headaches, and Squeegee seems to be off his game a bit, which is okay. He's old now, and entitled! I owe him as much as he owes me.

I wasn't keen on trying to develop my own film so had a roll done at my local lab. The negs were fine but the scans were pretty poor. Paid for high-res but the file sizes suggests they might be in low-res. The scans had dust on them and for some reason, they didn't scan all the negs. Strange.

 

Anyway, I think I will now have a go at developing. Been reading up on this and I think these are the things I need:

 

Kodak Professional T-MAX Developer

Ilford Ilfostop

Ilford Rapid Fixer

kodak Photoflo wetting agent

Film changing bag/tent

AP tank

Clock/timer

Thermometer

Measuring jugs

Clips

Squeegee

 

Do I need anything else?

Windows need to be thoroughly cleaned. For more details read: hhttp://www.hightechdad.com/?p=6208

Foil-Grip 1402 is a pressure sensitive, 40-year cycle, duct joint and general purpose rolled sealant. It provides an instant water resistant grip to most surfaces including sheet metal, duct board, flex board, PVC coated duct, and duct wrap vapor barriers. Foil-Grip 1402 is suitable for sub-grade application on PVC coated duct.

 

Product comes in 100' rolls with widths of 2" and 3". Also available unprinted in widths of 2", 3", 4", 6", and 36".

 

More information about this product can be found at

www.carlislehvac.com/product.aspx?id=53

In November 2022, I returned to physical studios for only the second time since Covid-19 and took part in two sets of courses/workshops (experimental screenprinting and monoprinting techniques).

 

The underlying image used here was a photograph of an oil painting I had produced (www.flickr.com/photos/77334245@N00/8711102814) as possible cover art for my draft novel Liberty Mine. The photo was placed onto the screen which had been coated with photosensitive emulsion. The screen was then placed into an exposure unit, which developed the emulsion, hardineing it into a stencil/resist for the printing. At first I printed with balck acrylic ink. Then, without cleaning the screen, I added extra colours, creating a mix of results as the squeegee work blended older and newer inks.

 

For more of my art, please check out my website at <a href="http://www.carstentenbrink.com" rel="nofollow">www.carstentenbrink.com</a> or follow my Artist's page on Facebook at <a href="http://www.facebook.com/CarstentenBrinkWordsandImages" rel="nofollow">www.facebook.com/CarstentenBrinkWordsandImages</a>

My doctor thinks that the bulge on the outer side of my femur is due to bone trauma but I think it is as a result of the ossification of previous karate low-kick induced haematomas. Since I currently have another haematoma the bulge of ossified blood shown above is likely to get bigger as my current haematoma subsides.

 

The Net tells me that people can have these things in their thigh for a long time without noticing (as I have), and that they can be much larger, not attached to the femur, and sometimes that they are suspected of having becoming malignant and metastasing to the lungs. The latter case report, from 1936, was inconclusive - and seems unlikely to me (I am not a doctor).

 

In order to avoid an increase in the size of my ossified haematoma, I suggested surgery to remove some of the blood in my thigh but my doctor was not into that idea.

 

I am very active and have remained active post trauma in the past. I am not a doctor but I think perhaps my high level of activity may be one of the reasons why my ossified haematoma is a nice (?) small dense bulge next to my bone rather than a larger dispersed oval mass in my thigh. With all my thigh movements the last of the congealing blood may have been squeegeed back to the region around my femur, rather than left in spaces in my thigh muscles.

 

Removed large, non malignant ossified haematoma (Zadek, 1969)

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/4975069/

 

Malignant (?) ossified haematoma (Butler, & Wooley, 1936)

pubs.rsna.org/doi/10.1148/26.2.236

 

More recent advice (Saber, & Farooq, 2021) suggests that MOT can be mistaken for malignancy and that there is no reason to suspect that post traumatic ossification ever becomes malignant.

radiopaedia.org/articles/myositis-ossificans-1?lang=us

 

This paper details the many types of Myositis ossificans traumatica (MOT post injury bone formation)

www.chiropractic.ca/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/jcca-v54-4...

 

It seems that ossification can be more of a problem if it occurs near to a joint such hip

www.researchgate.net/publication/299653749_MRI_findings_o...

ankle (Muir, 2010)

www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2989395/

or between the fibia and tibia (Nieuwenhuizen, van Veldhoven, & van Oosterom, 2019)

casereports.bmj.com/content/13/8/e233210?rss=1&utm_ca...

 

The original X-ray shows my pelvis including an x-ray of my genitals, so after experimenting with mosaic, I have removed the top part of the x-ray. If anyone medical practitioner should need the larger photo, showing my pelvis etc, I'd be happy to send it.

Some are pests, but this guy doesn't clean windscreens unless vehicle occupants agree

Coloured Mindplein / Colored Mind square

 

Een grauwgrijs, vergeten sportveldenplein omturnen naar een artistiek bonte plek waar de buurt sport en zich ontwikkelt: een droom van kunstenaarsduo Bruce en Linda. Nu werk in uitvoering, en bijna klaar.

De basketbal- en voetbalveldjes aan het Coloured Mindplein (hoek Heemraadssingel-Essenburgsingel) lagen er maar troosteloos en verwaarloosd bij, vonden buurtbewoners Linda van der Vleuten en Bruce Tsai-Meu-Chong. Ze dachten: zou het niet mooi zijn als deze plek kon bruisen? Het ontwerpersduo diende een plan in bij gemeenteprogramma CityLab010, dat bewoners stimuleert om te dromen van een betere stad. En ze kregen subsidie - ook uit andere fondsen - om hun plan waar te maken.

Enorme kleurrijke vloerschildering

Bruce Tsai-Meu-Chong: 'Ons droomidee gaat om een enorme kleurrijke vloerschildering, zodat de pleintjes veel aantrekkelijker ogen. Maar daarmee heb je nog geen bruisende buurtplek. Samen met 3X3 Unites, Panna Knockout en Concrete Lions leiden we leaders uit de buurt op om andere jongeren op sleeptouw te nemen, om samen een netwerk op te zetten. Een community. Voor een echt buurtgevoel met toekomst. Alles draait om mensen erbij betrekken. Zo hebben we voor de vloerschildering bijvoorbeeld leerlingen van het Marnix Gymnasium laten meeontwerpen.'

Het idee heet Rebound, een term bekend uit zowel basketbal als voetbal. 'Maar nu gebruiken we hem symbolisch', zegt Linda van der Vleuten, 'in de betekenis van opveren of opleven. Als impuls voor de buurt.'

Plenzen, uitsmeren en rollen maar

Voor de schildering van 2500 vierkante meter gebruiken de kunstenaars een grove, glijvaste sportveldverf, met zand erin. 'Eén veld kost met drie man gemiddeld een week werk', zegt Tsai-Meu-Chong. 'In het begin ging het heel langzaam. Tot de verfleverancier ons tips gaf hoe het moest. Niet gelijk rollen zoals je thuis met een muur doet. Maar eerst een plens verf op de grond, die uitsmeren met een trekker en dan pas rollen. Toen gingen we tien keer zo snel.'

Deze maand (augustus 2021) moet de make-over klaar zijn, en komt er een feestelijke opening. 'We hopen', zegt Van der Vleuten, 'dat Rebound voor het sportplein ook het begin betekent van een verdere verbetering in de aankleding. Bijvoorbeeld nieuwe baskets, en nieuwe maar ook meer bankjes en vuilnisbakken. Verder nodigen we heel Rotterdam uit om eens te komen kijken hoe we het hier aanpakken. Iedereen is welkom om te komen sporten en buurten.'

 

Turning a grey-grey, forgotten sports field square into an artistically colorful place where the neighborhood sports and develops: a dream of artist duo Bruce and Linda. Now work in progress, and almost done.

According to local residents Linda van der Vleuten and Bruce Tsai-Meu-Chong, the basketball and football fields on the Colored Mindplein (corner Heemraadssingel-Essenburgsingel) looked desolate and neglected. They thought, wouldn't it be nice if this place could bustle? The designer duo submitted a plan to the CityLab010 municipal program that encourages residents to dream of a better city. And they received a subsidy - also from other funds - to realize their plan.

Huge colorful floor painting

Bruce Tsai-Meu-Chong: 'Our dream idea involves an enormous colorful floor painting, so that the squares look much more attractive. But that doesn't mean you have a bustling neighborhood spot. Together with 3X3 Unites, Panna Knockout and Concrete Lions, we train leaders from the neighborhood to take other young people in tow, to set up a network together. A community. For a real neighborhood feeling with a future. It's all about getting people involved. For example, we had students from the Marnix Gymnasium help design the floor painting.'

The idea is called Rebound, a term known from both basketball and football. 'But now we use it symbolically,' says Linda van der Vleuten, 'in the sense of rebounding or revitalizing. As an impulse for the neighbourhood.'

Splash, smear and roll

For the painting of 2500 square meters, the artists use a coarse, non-slip sports field paint, with sand in it. 'One field with three men costs an average of a week's work,' says Tsai-Meu-Chong. “It was very slow in the beginning. Until the paint supplier gave us tips on how to do it. Don't roll like you do with a wall at home. But first a splash of paint on the ground, spread it out with a squeegee and only then roll. Then we went ten times faster.'

The makeover should be ready this month (August 2021), and there will be a festive opening. 'We hope', says Van der Vleuten, 'that Rebound will also mean the start of a further improvement in the decoration for the sports field. For example, new baskets and new, but also more benches and garbage cans. We also invite the whole of Rotterdam to come and see how we are doing things here. Everyone is welcome to come and play sports and neighborhoods.'

 

Vispa XP

Work capacity up to sq.m./h-ft²/h - 900

Autonomy up to (h)- 1

Working width (cm/inch)- 28

Width with squeegee (cm/inch)- 32,5

Solution tank (l/gal)- 3

Noise level dB (A)- 65,7

Power supply- Battery (Li-ion 36V)

Телефон для заказов:

+79633477264

8(812)9821489

The overnight chill left this tiny fly weighed down with dew drops. I got the shot just in time, since a minute or so later it began using its legs as a very efficient squeegee to clear the dew away. Johnston Mill Preserve, Orange County, NC. Fly length about 5 mm.

Squeegeed with PSE 2.0. I like the 1st better.

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

In November 2022, I returned to physical studios for only the second time since Covid-19 and took part in two sets of courses/workshops (experimental screenprinting and monoprinting techniques).

 

The underlying image used here was a photograph of an oil painting I had produced (www.flickr.com/photos/77334245@N00/8711102814) as possible cover art for my draft novel Liberty Mine. The photo was placed onto the screen which had been coated with photosensitive emulsion. The screen was then placed into an exposure unit, which developed the emulsion, hardineing it into a stencil/resist for the printing. At first I printed with balck acrylic ink. Then, without cleaning the screen, I added extra colours, creating a mix of results as the squeegee work blended older and newer inks.

 

For more of my art, please check out my website at <a href="http://www.carstentenbrink.com" rel="nofollow">www.carstentenbrink.com</a> or follow my Artist's page on Facebook at <a href="http://www.facebook.com/CarstentenBrinkWordsandImages" rel="nofollow">www.facebook.com/CarstentenBrinkWordsandImages</a>

Red and Green MUGA Sports Court Surfacing. This image is released under creative commons. Feel free to use and please credit www.softsurfaces.co.uk

In November 2022, I returned to physical studios for only the second time since Covid-19 and took part in two sets of courses/workshops (experimental screenprinting and monoprinting techniques).

 

The underlying image used here was a photograph of an oil painting I had produced (www.flickr.com/photos/77334245@N00/8711102814) as possible cover art for my draft novel Liberty Mine. The photo was placed onto the screen which had been coated with photosensitive emulsion. The screen was then placed into an exposure unit, which developed the emulsion, hardineing it into a stencil/resist for the printing. At first I printed with balck acrylic ink. Then, without cleaning the screen, I added extra colours, creating a mix of results as the squeegee work blended older and newer inks.

 

For more of my art, please check out my website at <a href="http://www.carstentenbrink.com" rel="nofollow">www.carstentenbrink.com</a> or follow my Artist's page on Facebook at <a href="http://www.facebook.com/CarstentenBrinkWordsandImages" rel="nofollow">www.facebook.com/CarstentenBrinkWordsandImages</a>

Do all the little graphics first so you get the hang of the squeegee process.

Maker: Auguste Bevalet

Born: France

Active: France

Medium: studio label

Size: 4" x 5"

Location: France

 

Object No. 2013.726b

Shelf: F-4

 

Publication: :

 

Other Collections:

 

Notes: written in ink on verso: "Charles Louis Morel, 1855

agé de cinquante ans". These direct positive collodion images were made on glass and transferred onto a secondary support material by placing the glass plate bearing the image in an acidified water bath that caused the collodion film to shrink. The secondary support was then placed in the water and the two were taken out of the bath with the image in contact with the surface of the secondary support. The back of the support was then pressed against the glass with a squeegee and the plate. The back of the plate was then gently heated until the image and support fell from the glass. Often called pannotypes, from the Latin word pannos meaning cloth, these images were transferred onto black oil cloth, patent leather, and black enameled paper.

 

The origins of the pannotype are steeped in controversy. Jean Nicolas Truchelut, a student of the photography pioneer Louis Daguerre, is credited with its invention. However, the Wülff brothers – chemist-retailers in Paris – helped refine the pannotype process and attempted to patent it. Truchelut challenged their claim, and due to leaks in the press, the process was never formally patented.

As a result, little documentation survives about the exact methods and materials used, adding to the mystery surrounding these rare images. Because they were never standardized in the way other photographic processes were, pannotypes exist in multiple variations, with differences in material choices and finishing techniques.

  

To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS

 

For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE

05.28.10

 

I'm seriously going to miss California sunsets. My family and I went out for my parents' 27th wedding anniversary today, and on our way back home, I was literally whining for my dad to drive faster so I could catch the last light of the day.

 

In my hand is my FGR: Dollar Store treasure for the day. I really did need one of these since I park my car outside and I need to clean up the windows once in a while. Sadly, this is not my car in the shot---when I was in the east coast for a week, I guess the battery just drained itself due to lack of use, and now I have to call AAA to revive my baby, Max.

 

Happy Anniversary, mom and dad!

Pedro Fifito Manuel Galbán, 6, sits on a railing at the intersection of San Vincente de Paul St. and Mella Highway in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, while taking a break from his daily work cleaning windshields with a squeegee and sponge. Fifito works with a group of nearly two-dozen other street children who are managed by his mother, 27-year-old Maribel Galbán. The group lives and works together on the streets of the Dominican capital, where Maribel manages the children during the day and works as a prostitute at night. Photo by Brandon Quester

putting ink on the squeegee. if i had more hands you'd see a photo of the actual squeegeeing process.

In November 2022, I returned to physical studios for only the second time since Covid-19 and took part in two sets of courses/workshops (experimental screenprinting and monoprinting techniques).

 

Here I premixed colours with acrylic medium and applied the design onto the screen while the ink was still wet. The first print was precise - sometimes the second print, where the original ink had moved / blended because of the motion of the squeegee in the first print, provided an interesting image

 

For more of my art, please check out my website at <a href="http://www.carstentenbrink.com" rel="nofollow">www.carstentenbrink.com</a> or follow my Artist's page on Facebook at <a href="http://www.facebook.com/CarstentenBrinkWordsandImages" rel="nofollow">www.facebook.com/CarstentenBrinkWordsandImages</a>

Camera: Zorki 4k

Film Kodak ColorPlus, 24 exposure

 

4 August 2011

 

More 'funny stuff' afoot with the shadows here. I'm certain the scanner had a breakdown.

 

These kids were just hoping up and down on the spot in a line. Why? I don't know, but they were handing out flyers.

 

I'm lucky I have any images at all after the the film snapped at the end of the roll which then slackened the film meaning the teeth stopped pulling the film along.

 

Only thing to do now is get some new developer and invest in a good squeegee.

 

GreySkies | Photography Blog | Tumblr Blog | Abandoned Edinburgh Blog

 

Camera: Zorki 4k

Film Kodak ColorPlus, 24 exposure

 

4 August 2011

 

I'm lucky I have any images at all after the the film snapped at the end of the roll which then slackened the film meaning the teeth stopped pulling the film along.

 

Only thing to do now is get some new developer and invest in a good squeegee.

 

Photography Blog

Apply THIN layer of vulcanizing fluid, a little larger than the patch. Tip from Joe Breeze: use the crimped edge of the fluid tube as a squeegee to remove all but a film of the fluid. More fluid is not better. press all the air out of the fluid tube before you re-cap it so it won't dry out. no sniffing!

.The little girl was jumping around the roof of the car while the boy had squeegee'd the windsheild and dad checked the tires and pumped the gas. He did glance up a few times but he was cool with it i guess heh!?...oh yea, she came out through the sunroof :-0

This was taken in the screen printing room E212 in the Kansas Technology Center on PSU campus.

Just think about how much glass there is at ORD. Boggles the mind...

Squeegee artist performs on the exterior of Roy Thomson Hall

Taken in 2016.

 

We were at a theatrical adaptation of Singin' in the Rain at the North Shore Music Theatre in Beverly, a few miles north of Boston. The single intermission came just after the show's "Singin' in the Rain" number (made famous by Gene Kelly in the movie), whose sprayed "rain" left a wet and puddled stage surface. Several members of the crew came out to squeegee and towel it down before the second act began. Actors could slip on a wet stage -- as the actor doing the "Singin' in the Rain" number actually did. He slipped and fell and then bounced right up.

Installation video for Greenfilm's G-Cling Custom Pre-cut automotive window tint.

 

Before Application:

Be sure all windows are clean and free of dust/debris. You can clean the window with the solution and squeegee.

 

Step 1: Roll window down 3 inches. Place dry film onto the window. Spray generously to allow any dirt to drip off the film.

 

Step 2: Adjust film leaving 3/8 inch from the top of the film to the top of the window.

Tip: Lift edges of the film and apply the solution to adjust smoothly.

 

Step 3: Spray then squeegee from the center to the top, then from the center to all edges making sure all bubbles are removed.

Tip; If the film does not reach the edge of the window, you can gently stretch the film to fill the gap.

If any bubbles remain, you can spray and squeegee again.

Tip: Be sure to use the squeegee on wet film to prevent damage.

 

Step 4: Roll up the window. Spray the solution on and under the film.

 

Step 5: Squeegee the bottom half of the window.

Tip: Use the small yellow squeegee to gently insert the film into the side of the window.

 

Step 6: Use the gasket push stick with the squeegee to push the film into the window seal.

Then use the yellow squeegee to remove any remaining bubbles.

 

Step 7: Spray the film and squeegee again to ensure all edges are flat and all bubbles are removed.

Tip Use tip of the large squeegee to ensure the film is inserted into the edges of the window.

 

Installation is done! Do not roll windows down or use the suction cup for 48 hours.

 

For more information, please Visit Our Website: www.greenfilmusa.com/

 

Email Us:

info@greenfilmusa.com

 

Call Us:

(972) 247-1176

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