njefferson
njefferson
njefferson

The carving tools and the material to carve is sold at hobby stores, but the erasers mentioned originally work great, too.

There are several better tutorials out there if you want to get serious. Instead of a hobby knife, there are stamp carving tools (see the stamp carving step in the link I've included). Also, instead of drawing on the stamp, you can trace another image with pencil and then press your tracing against the eraser - the

I made this one for geocaching and letterboxing.

I think my kids had them when they were either 5 and 6, or 6 and 7. We started as soon as one could climb the ladder to get up without assistance and when they weren't scared to be on the top (those were the real decision points). We installed a rail on the side so they couldn't roll out of it. As long as they were

Oh yeah - I hope they serve you as well as they've served us :)

I bought some flashlights from Costco last year that turn on when the power goes out, making it easy for us to get to the kids, and vice versa. The flashlights can then be pulled out of their slot and used for quite a while to pack to leave or do whatever you might need to do. The ones I got have a base that acts as

I consider this animation instead of an optical illusion (one sheet limits the other to a single frame at a time by being dragged across it), but I still think it's awesome.

Glad to know it isn't just me :)

Too funny :)

Thank you very much :)

The top image made me immediately think of this (more convincing when it's a thumbnail on Facebook)

kills...or creates them... :)

One of my favorite games is the relatively short Dear Esther. It comes to my mind whenever I think of memorable games, and even though I didn't do much in the game, some of the views have stayed with me. I've heard that parts of it change when you play through again, but it's just never "the first time" again.

Cash for Chunkers is already real - it's called Gym Pact and works sort of like you said. You pay when you miss the gym, and your payment is spread to the others who worked out.

Found the solution. I had to go back and update my iPhone's default calendar to gmail again, instead of my school's. I don't know if that was the original problem, but when I deleted gmails calendar it defaulted to another calendar on my phone, so re-adding gmail would not sync new events since they were going to

Found the solution. I had to go back and update my iPhone's default calendar to gmail again, instead of my school's. I don't know if that was the original problem, but when I deleted gmails calendar it defaulted to another calendar on my phone, so re-adding gmail would not sync new events since they were going to

Found the solution. I had to go back and update my iPhone's default calendar to gmail again, instead of my school's. I don't know if that was the original problem, but when I deleted gmails calendar it defaulted to another calendar on my phone, so re-adding gmail would not sync new events since they were going to

Right, I did create application specific passwords, and it worked for the mail portion. One log in opens toggles to sync mail and calendars on the iPhone. The mail worked, but the calendar didn't seem to do so, unfortunately.

Right, I did create application specific passwords, and it worked for the mail portion. One log in opens toggles to sync mail and calendars on the iPhone. The mail worked, but the calendar didn't seem to do so, unfortunately.