Hi. My felt has a brand name on it and I would like to keep it. May I use some kind of glue to attach original felt to the lamp? What kind of glue would you recommend?
You should be able to use the original felt. I would try a white glue, like Elmer's Glue. Be sure and test using a tiny amount on the felt and the lamp to see how it reacts to both surfaces and if they stick together. If that doesn't work look for a multi surface glue that should work on the lamp and the felt. Again, be sure and test in a very small area. I hope you are able to repair your lamp.
Good solid tips. (pun intended) 😅 Ventilation, physically covering with fine sawdust and neutralizing as needed with powdered lime. But it’s hard to beat N Korea: filling bags with human waste and floating them away in balloons. 😂
See, I was always under the impression that if you do what you're talking about, that it would cause grass to grow. Thank you for clearing that up for me 🌞 And I hope it doesn't matter that 50% of my yard is different weeds.?
How to do it with a stronger clear glue like epoxy?Just which stronger glue? how & when to clean any excess ?so still definitely get the maximum strength bond while the stronger type glue sets
Not sure which other glues to use as I only used the super glue and it has held up well for over two years. If you try any different glues please let me know how they work out.
hi, I just purchased a stained glass wall hanging approximately 14 x 22“ and it has couple long cracks and one small crack but it was only $50 and well worth it so I was searching out videos for how to “repair” these cracks, which obviously is just a Band-Aid, but I want to at least make it more stable. So I did think of superglue, but I was wondering if clear epoxy would be better? Have you tried that?
I can't find the part number though I know the gas cap quality can vary widely. I have one locking gas cap that the entire locking mechanism comes out of the cap. It works fine though not well made.
Also, a face shield would be safer than just goggles and won’t fog up as much. Those blades are notorious for causing serious lacerations when they disintegrate while cutting.
Useful video. I'm surprised that it required so little water to reshape such a thick piece of particle board. I need to flatten the particle board ceiling sheets in an old mobile home because they've warped due to rain penetration, so it's nice to know I won't have to literally soak the sheets.
Mediocre at best but you get A+ for effort Reagan was at steakhouse house many years ago and the waiter came up to the table and asked what can I get you guys and when it was Reagan’s time to order the waiter asked what can I get you and Reagan said I’ll have the ribeye steak baked potato and a salad the waiter says what dressing on your salad blue cheese Reagan says and then he asked him what temperature on your steak and Reagan says well the waiter left and Reagan got a well done steak Reagan never ate well done meat he liked medium rare
I'm glad to hear that your gate works well. I put the top hinge on the way I did so that I can just lift the gate off the hinges. I like your idea of flipping the top hinge over so that the gate can not be stolen. Thanks for the comment and for watching.
I have a question… is there any harm in completely removing the entire drain stopper as shown here and just having the cap screwed on with no stopper? I’d much rather have a manual rubber plug I can take on and off on the bottom drain. Would I risk damaging anything if I completely took it out and left it just with the cap screwed on?
I have the Spyderco sharpening system and watching this video really helped me figure out how to sharpen my wire snips. Thank you for putting this video out.
Thanks for the video. What do you think I should do if I waited a little too long to repair the holes on the sleeve cuffs / same area, now the holes are bigger?
You are welcome and thank you for the comment and for watching. I would find some material to sew into the holes. I used old jeans to repair holes in one of my other jackets and it worked well. It is a pain to keep sewing the small holes though it pays to do it before they get big and are harder to repair.