Thursday 31 March 2011

Head Phones in Bicycle Helmet

I enjoy biking, but sometimes I want to listen to Music while riding, and ear buds always fall out, so what do you do? install headphones into your helmet! Materials You Will Need: -Old Head Phones -Helmet -Drill Bit -Hot Glue Prepping the Head Phones -Take the Head Phone assembly apar...
By: tbone121

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/Head-Phones-in-Bicycle-Helmet/

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SupermarketHQ: Buy Design Straight from Designers

Everybody knows Etsy is the giant when it comes to buying handmade goods, and it's not hard to find a wealth of good stuff there with which to decorate your home. But sometimes it's hard to filter out the regretsy from the good stuff. This week I stumbled upon Supermarket, which is a marketplace for great design, direct from the designers. Read on to see some of the good stuff I found with very little effort:

Tetrad Flat Shelving
This bookshelf isn't cheap (at $2,600), but it's pretty inspirational. Maybe you could approximate something similar on your own?

Graffiti Lamps

These grungy graffiti-print lamps are cool, and the designer offers some more subtle prints too if the spray paint look doesn't quite fit your style.

Heavy Guy Chandelier XL

The simple, clean lines in this chandelier would make it the centerpoint of any room.

Curved Wall Mounted Pet Bed

Everybody knows products with cats in their promo picture sell more than those without. This is no exception; I want these, and I DON"T EVEN HAVE CATS! (I'm allergic).

Spend a few minutes browsing around Supermarket and let me know if you find any more cool stuff (comments, please!). I know there are other online marketplaces like this out there, so if you know of another that's really good, please chime in. And of course, don't forget the old standby, Etsy!

 

Source: http://curbly.com/bruno/posts/10095-supermarkethq-buy-design-straight-from-designers

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Home Putting Greens: How to Install One Today

If you are an avid golfer, you may want to install one or more home putting greens onto your backyard or outdoor area.

Source: http://www.doityourself.com/stry/home-putting-greens-how-to-install-one-today

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Etched Glass Interior Doors Increase Light in Your Home

Wood interior doors are pretty common, but they don't do a good job (or any kind of job at all) at letting light flow through when the door is shut. For interior rooms without a lot of windows, or homes...

Source: http://www.luxuryhousingtrends.com/archives/2009/01/etched_glass_in.php

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Lace Lighting Inspired by Origami Tulip


By: mericc

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/Lace-Lighting-Inspired-by-Origami-Tulip/

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$1 Op-Amp ECG

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Sometimes you just want to do a little heart monitoring without going into debt for the rest of your life (yes, that's a not-so-subtle jab at our wonderful healthcare system). When you can't afford the real thing, this $1 home made electrocardiogram will allow you to monitor your heart as you go into cardiac arrest while opening bills from your previous hospital adventures. This is much simpler than our previously covered homemade ecg, and probably about as accurate (read: not very). [via]

Notice: This ECG cost less to make than an artery clogging burger from your local BK. Therefore, we do not recommend making medical decisions based off of the data received from it.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Diyhappy/~3/6Vdb6runI4U/1-op-amp-ecg

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Wood & Glass Greenhouse Kits Offer Attractive Gardening Solution

With the prices of food heading north, gardening is becoming increasingly popular for folks with enough space to grow some fruits and veggies. Even if you have a short growing season (of if your favorite vegetables usually grow in warmer...

Source: http://www.luxuryhousingtrends.com/archives/2009/01/wood_glass_gree.php

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Oh noes, a Death Star!

SUPPLIES AND A TOOL: YOU WILL NEED: 1 hardboiled egg 1 klutz.  Oh yays! A delicious Egg! Warning.  A klutz approaches.  I'm already bored.  Let's see what's out the window... OOPS! OH NOES!! Picture says it all, really...fool. A DEATH STAR! *Yawn* humble hardboiled egg ...
By: Dimensionz

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/Oh-noes-a-Death-Star/

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Wednesday 30 March 2011

Kidde Carbon Monoxide Detector with Front-Loading Batteries

I'm not sure who decided carbon monoxide detectors and smoke alarms should need to be taken off the wall so you could load the batteries in the back, but it's an annoying trend that has been accepted as standard for...

Source: http://www.luxuryhousingtrends.com/archives/2009/01/kidde_carbon_mo.php

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Simon Game


By: TheSmartLemon

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/Simon-Game/

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Oh noes, a Death Star!

SUPPLIES AND A TOOL: YOU WILL NEED: 1 hardboiled egg 1 klutz.  Oh yays! A delicious Egg! Warning.  A klutz approaches.  I'm already bored.  Let's see what's out the window... OOPS! OH NOES!! Picture says it all, really...fool.  I'm still bored, by the way. A DEATH STAR! ...
By: Dimensionz

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/Oh-noes-a-Death-Star/

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How to Join Two Pieces of Crown Molding Trim

Crown molding trim enlivens a room and adds a measure of elegance by covering up the plain intersection of walls and ceiling.

Source: http://www.doityourself.com/stry/how-to-join-two-pieces-of-crown-molding-trim

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How to make potpourri

Hey guys! Here's a short tutorial on how to make potpourri, hope you like it!
By: Ase0esA

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-make-potpourri/

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quilted stacking boxes

My nephew had  set of painted carboard boxes that could be stacked and knocked down. He used to play with them all the time. Now that he has a baby brother on the way i thought it might be fun to make a set myself. Not only did i want them to stack and sit inside eachother I wanted them t...
By: jorgegunn

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/quilted-stacking-boxes/

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Dingle Bed

Dingle Bed

A dingle is a piece of colored fired clay that ornament Etsy seller deliafurniture's Dingle Bed. The effect--coupled with the steel bed's whimsical construction--is nothing less than delightful. The dingles themselves are attached by the purchaser, so they can choose which color goes where. The cost of a handmade, queen-size Dingle Bed is $800. For more info and to buy, visit deliafurniture's Etsy shop. (You'll also want to see their other very cool bed creations.)

Dingles, up close:

Dingle Bed

Source: http://curbly.com/diy-maven/posts/10076-dingle-bed

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Tuesday 29 March 2011

Frozen Pipes

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A fresh air intake directly next to water pipes can cause a frozen water pipe. The fresh air is required for today's HVAC systems. By redirecting the make-up air inlet down to the floor, you can provide some pipe freezing protection.

Source: http://www.askthebuilder.com/864_Frozen_Pipes.shtml

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Marriage Advice for Remodelers

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You know overhauling your home can take a toll on your wallet and your patience. But it also can affect your marriage, if you let it. Our writer explains how to avoid the traps.

marriage adviceThe writer and his wife, hard at work. Photo: Charles & Hudson.


Home improvements -- even small repairs -- can provide us with a sense of achievement, pride, and the beauty or peace of a job well done.

That's the upside. Yes, there's seperate marriage advice for those going through a remodel. Here's how your marriage can survive the overhaul.

But they can also become high-pressure stress machines, especially for spouses working together.

And the higher the stakes (think full kitchen renovation versus a wallpaper border) the higher the fallout when things go wrong. Note: Things always go wrong.

Budgets get blown, timelines tank and communication is chaotic. Sometimes problems escalate into "I'm sleeping on couch" disagreements. That's why Mike Holmes of Holmes on Homes and Holmes Inspection calls the marital fallout from projects "Divorce Dust."

For example: When Ken and Melly from Tyngsboro, MA decided to re-do their bathroom, both were excited. The idea was to start by taking apart the linen closet.

Ken, who's handy, got to work on his day off while Melly headed to the office, both unaware of the problem they'd just created.

Melly figured that Ken should remove the shelves and trim. Ken (knowing the bathroom was a full gut) thought they had agreed on deleting every shred of the closet en route to the demolition eventually required. Once he got into it, he realized two things: Once you take the skin off the walls, all the bones are connected. Also, that there was no clean stopping point. And that's how the entire linen closet wound up in trash bags in the driveway.

Imagine Melly's surprise when she got home.

Though trying, projects can also be an opportunity to learn more about each other and explore new ways to get along. My wife Theresa and I have found ways within our own marriage -- and the complete remodel of hundred year old house -- to short circuit these challenges. Call it the guide to avoiding divorce dust, call it marriage advice for remodelers -- either way, I hope it helps.

1. Slow Down, Look, Listen
Both of you will approach your projects from different perspectives. Call it Mars-Venus, different life experiences, whatever. The point is slow down --both of you-- and listen to one another. And make lots of eye contact when talking. Even when you don't want to.

2. Manage Expectations
Things go wrong in projects. It's not always someone's fault either. A house is a complicated system and having respect for that going in will serve you as you roadblocks arise.

3. Plan First
Many people suffering from home improvement headaches are in trouble because they got ahead of themselves. They tear down the deck without a detailed plan for the new one. Write an outline of the steps involved. How long you think they'll take and when you'll do them. Make materials lists. (Builders call this a "critical path.") Also plan to be wrong and to improvise.

And for jobs that require them, pull permits. This is so worth it, for a zillion reasons.

4. Budget
Money is a hot-button issue and lots of couples find themselves starting angry sentences with "But you said it would cost...."

What happened is that a realistic budget wasn't written (you didn't include the $800 in tools you'd need along with the materials) or there was an unknown (rotten roof decking under the garage shingles, for example). Or both.

Or, you over-estimated your abilities thinking you could frame a wall/run wire to code. Once you realized it was harder in real life than on TV, the walls started closing in (figuratively, I hope) and you needed to hire a professional.

All this boils down to this: Make a realistic budget. Include everything you can think of, then add 10%. Then, make sure you have some cash reserves beyond that because you'll probably use that 10%. Finally, try really hard to stay on budget.

5. Establish Leadership "Islands"
Theresa and I learned that working in parallel is only effective to a point. She's better at some things, I'm better at others. We call those things our "islands" and we're captains of them. For example, if she designs something, I work out if it can be built within the constraints we have (time, budget, etc.) It's not that we don't visit each other's islands sometimes, but due deference is paid when we're visiting.


6. Get Ready for Dust, Dirt and Inconvenience
The bigger the project, the worse it'll be. Different people have different tolerances for this. Everything from doing dishes in the bathtub to piles of tools in the corner on Christmas Day to dust in a room not being worked on. It gets to you eventually. Our favorite solution to this is to put hiring a maid into the budget. Which brings us to...

7. Schedule Changes
I can't tell you how many DIYers we've seen -- both on TV and in real life -- who don't alter their daily activities to meet the demands of their project. Seriously, their houses are blown apart, they're hemorrhaging money, both parties are furious, and still they take the dog out for a leisurely stroll, start working at 10:30 in the morning, chat with neighbors, or otherwise seem completely unaware that they're burning time. And they wonder why they can't finish?

If there's one bit of advice to take above all others, it's this: You need long swaths of uninterrupted time working to get hands-on projects done. You can't hang crown molding and talk on the phone. Follow this rule and others will fall more easily into place.

Ed Sanders of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition can attest. This woodworker is building the interior doors for his home where he lives with wife and four children. He's milling hardwood using a machine called a shaper, cutting the rails, styles and raised panels. And only after all that can he hang them in the opening. When we talked with him last year, he had the first doors done and was excited to finish. Then he got busy. A year later when we asked how the project turned out he, well, answered: "Oh...yeah...those doors..."

He graciously and hysterically told the whole story about what it's like living without interior doors ("It's amazing what you can do with sheets!"). And his tale is emblematic of what home improvement is and what it really means.

See, once you start, you've begun a journey. One way or the other, whether you come to the end of it or not, you're on it. And the best way to enjoy it -- and improve your home and feel that pride and peace -- is to get along with each other. Let carpentry problems stay carpentry problems; money problems stay money problems (at least try your best to). Journeying the home improvement path together might change some things, but it doesn't change who you are.

So trust each other -- a lot. Give each other reasons to deserve the trust. And work together. It's what marriage -- and home improvement -- is all about.

Still have remodeling issues on the brain? Read about another marriage-meets-DIY situation in New Wife, New Kitchen.

 

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Source: http://www.diylife.com/2011/03/25/marriage-advice/

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Condensation Problems

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Condensation problems in the garage could be from melted snow, a propane heater or a vapor barrier in the wrong place. Moisture problems are caused by too much humidity. A ceiling vapor barrier can trap moisture and create condensation.

Source: http://www.askthebuilder.com/867_Condensation_Problems.shtml

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Counter Depth Refrigerator

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Undercounter appliances, such as a refrigerator or freezers, can installed in your kitchen. A counter depth refrigerator can match your kitchen cabinets. No one will know that what looks like drawers are actually an undercounter refrigerator or an under counter freezer.

Source: http://www.askthebuilder.com/874_Counter_Depth_Refrigerator.shtml

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Space Shuttle & Astronaut Cabinet Knobs

If you have children who dream of going to space camp, then you can inspire their astronautic aspirations with the appropriate cabinet knobs on their dresser or perhaps on the cabinets and drawers in the kids' bathroom. This space shuttle...

Source: http://www.luxuryhousingtrends.com/archives/2009/01/space_shuttle_a.php

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Real Fairy Tale Cottages

I realize photography (or rather LR et al) might have had something to do with making these very real cottages look like they came out of a fairy tale, but be that as it may, they're still Grimm territory.   

To see more dreamy cottages, follow this jump.

Source: http://curbly.com/diy-maven/posts/10082-real-fairy-tale-cottages

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Marriage Advice for Remodelers

Filed under: , , ,

You know overhauling your home can take a toll on your wallet and your patience. But it also can affect your marriage, if you let it. Our writer explains how to avoid the traps.

marriage adviceThe writer and his wife, hard at work. Photo: Charles & Hudson.


Home improvements -- even small repairs -- can provide us with a sense of achievement, pride, and the beauty or peace of a job well done.

That's the upside. Yes, there's seperate marriage advice for those going through a remodel. Here's how your marriage can survive the overhaul.

But they can also become high-pressure stress machines, especially for spouses working together.

And the higher the stakes (think full kitchen renovation versus a wallpaper border) the higher the fallout when things go wrong. Note: Things always go wrong.

Budgets get blown, timelines tank and communication is chaotic. Sometimes problems escalate into "I'm sleeping on couch" disagreements. That's why Mike Holmes of Holmes on Homes and Holmes Inspection calls the marital fallout from projects "Divorce Dust."

For example: When Ken and Melly from Tyngsboro, MA decided to re-do their bathroom, both were excited. The idea was to start by taking apart the linen closet.

Ken, who's handy, got to work on his day off while Melly headed to the office, both unaware of the problem they'd just created.

Melly figured that Ken should remove the shelves and trim. Ken (knowing the bathroom was a full gut) thought they had agreed on deleting every shred of the closet en route to the demolition eventually required. Once he got into it, he realized two things: Once you take the skin off the walls, all the bones are connected. Also, that there was no clean stopping point. And that's how the entire linen closet wound up in trash bags in the driveway.

Imagine Melly's surprise when she got home.

Though trying, projects can also be an opportunity to learn more about each other and explore new ways to get along. My wife Theresa and I have found ways within our own marriage -- and the complete remodel of hundred year old house -- to short circuit these challenges. Call it the guide to avoiding divorce dust, call it marriage advice for remodelers -- either way, I hope it helps.

1. Slow Down, Look, Listen
Both of you will approach your projects from different perspectives. Call it Mars-Venus, different life experiences, whatever. The point is slow down --both of you-- and listen to one another. And make lots of eye contact when talking. Even when you don't want to.

2. Manage Expectations
Things go wrong in projects. It's not always someone's fault either. A house is a complicated system and having respect for that going in will serve you as you roadblocks arise.

3. Plan First
Many people suffering from home improvement headaches are in trouble because they got ahead of themselves. They tear down the deck without a detailed plan for the new one. Write an outline of the steps involved. How long you think they'll take and when you'll do them. Make materials lists. (Builders call this a "critical path.") Also plan to be wrong and to improvise.

And for jobs that require them, pull permits. This is so worth it, for a zillion reasons.

4. Budget
Money is a hot-button issue and lots of couples find themselves starting angry sentences with "But you said it would cost...."

What happened is that a realistic budget wasn't written (you didn't include the $800 in tools you'd need along with the materials) or there was an unknown (rotten roof decking under the garage shingles, for example). Or both.

Or, you over-estimated your abilities thinking you could frame a wall/run wire to code. Once you realized it was harder in real life than on TV, the walls started closing in (figuratively, I hope) and you needed to hire a professional.

All this boils down to this: Make a realistic budget. Include everything you can think of, then add 10%. Then, make sure you have some cash reserves beyond that because you'll probably use that 10%. Finally, try really hard to stay on budget.

5. Establish Leadership "Islands"
Theresa and I learned that working in parallel is only effective to a point. She's better at some things, I'm better at others. We call those things our "islands" and we're captains of them. For example, if she designs something, I work out if it can be built within the constraints we have (time, budget, etc.) It's not that we don't visit each other's islands sometimes, but due deference is paid when we're visiting.


6. Get Ready for Dust, Dirt and Inconvenience
The bigger the project, the worse it'll be. Different people have different tolerances for this. Everything from doing dishes in the bathtub to piles of tools in the corner on Christmas Day to dust in a room not being worked on. It gets to you eventually. Our favorite solution to this is to put hiring a maid into the budget. Which brings us to...

7. Schedule Changes
I can't tell you how many DIYers we've seen -- both on TV and in real life -- who don't alter their daily activities to meet the demands of their project. Seriously, their houses are blown apart, they're hemorrhaging money, both parties are furious, and still they take the dog out for a leisurely stroll, start working at 10:30 in the morning, chat with neighbors, or otherwise seem completely unaware that they're burning time. And they wonder why they can't finish?

If there's one bit of advice to take above all others, it's this: You need long swaths of uninterrupted time working to get hands-on projects done. You can't hang crown molding and talk on the phone. Follow this rule and others will fall more easily into place.

Ed Sanders of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition can attest. This woodworker is building the interior doors for his home where he lives with wife and four children. He's milling hardwood using a machine called a shaper, cutting the rails, styles and raised panels. And only after all that can he hang them in the opening. When we talked with him last year, he had the first doors done and was excited to finish. Then he got busy. A year later when we asked how the project turned out he, well, answered: "Oh...yeah...those doors..."

He graciously and hysterically told the whole story about what it's like living without interior doors ("It's amazing what you can do with sheets!"). And his tale is emblematic of what home improvement is and what it really means.

See, once you start, you've begun a journey. One way or the other, whether you come to the end of it or not, you're on it. And the best way to enjoy it -- and improve your home and feel that pride and peace -- is to get along with each other. Let carpentry problems stay carpentry problems; money problems stay money problems (at least try your best to). Journeying the home improvement path together might change some things, but it doesn't change who you are.

So trust each other -- a lot. Give each other reasons to deserve the trust. And work together. It's what marriage -- and home improvement -- is all about.

Still have remodeling issues on the brain? Read about another marriage-meets-DIY situation in New Wife, New Kitchen.

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Source: http://www.diylife.com/2011/03/25/marriage-advice/

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Oxo Good Grips Jar Opener Review

I got my parents an Oxo Good Grips Jar Opener for Christmas, and it's surprising how delighted my mom in particular has been about it. Who knew you could win big with a $12 gift? She has trouble with her...

Source: http://www.luxuryhousingtrends.com/archives/2009/01/oxo_good_grips.php

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Monday 28 March 2011

Flower Hair Clips

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The beautiful and talented Julie Gillrie shows you how to become the coolest girl on the block with this simple fabric flower tutorial. With just a little bit of felt and thread, you too can enjoy the admiration of your peers and the satisfaction of knowing your flowers will never wilt like the crappy real kind.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Diyhappy/~3/GEOkLKiINzA/flower-hair-clips

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How to Stop Wood Steps or Flooring from Squeaking

How to Stop Wood Steps or Flooring from Squeaking
Robert asks, ?I have an older home with wood steps that are squeaking. I?ve tried everything from brackets to screws to shims and nothing works. Can you help??

If shims and screws haven?t worked, it may be time to try something new. Read on to find out more.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/danny-lipford/~3/d9aqKaJuY7A/

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Creating a papier mache head of Felix Morton

I was invited to a fancy dress party last weekend and wanted to do something a bit different. I absolutely love the point and click adventure game The Dream Machine by Swedish indie developers Cockroach Inc. If you haven't played it, I highly recommend you give it a try (the first episode is compl...
By: straydogstrut

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/Creating-a-papier-mache-head-of-Felix-Morton/

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Kitchen Remodeling Ideas

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There are many kitchen remodeling ideas that can save you money. Painting kitchen cabinets will save a bundle compared to replacing cabinets. Watching for sales will help lower the kitchen remodeling price.

Source: http://www.askthebuilder.com/872_Kitchen_Remodeling_Ideas.shtml

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Walkie Talkie Camera Trigger

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Here's a great MacGyver tip on how to make a remote (very remote) camera trigger using a couple of walkie talkies. This idea came from the desire to take nature photography from a remote location and a unique viewpoint (although we're pretty sure by "nature" the inventor means "women's locker room").

Anyway - a very cool project. Putting together some simple electronics is required. Go find out how to make your own walkie-talkie camera trigger. [via]


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Diyhappy/~3/iSTGsC_Ce6E/walkie-talkie-camera-trigger

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Beer Stains Be Gone - Reader Tip

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We're not saying that St. Patrick's Day is the only day of the year you might spill beer on upholstery...but we figured it was a good time for a primer.

beer stainsIt looks safe enough...but what about when it spills on the sofa? Photo: PhotoMargarita

It happened. You were enjoying that great St. Patrick's Day party when suddenly... you spilled beer on the couch. Avoid the embarrassment (and ire from your host) by knowing immediately how to treat that stain. First, blot up as much of the spilled beer as you can with a clean, dry dish cloth. Next, mix one teaspoon dish soap with one cup of hot water. Dab the spot using the solution and a new, clean dish towel. Then, use a third dish towel dampened with water to rinse the cleaner away. Keep blotting at the stain until it begins to lift and dry.

If the beer brew was darker, a heartier solution might be needed. Mix one part white vinegar with three parts rubbing alcohol. Dab the solution onto the upholstery with a paper towel. Continue to rinse and dry the upholstery as previously mentioned.

Want more? Check out this video on how to get beer stains out of clothes:

 

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Source: http://www.diylife.com/2011/03/17/beer-stains/

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How To Lolcat

Step 1. The Eyes. It is important to capture the detailed characteristics of the eyes. An eye can tell alot from eye wideness, tilt, etc. Where the cat is also looking can determine where the lolcat photo is focussed. In the case of a GIF or video file, take note of the positioning of the camer...
By: Ramirez! Flashbang!

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Source: http://www.instructables.com/id/How-To-Lolcat/

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