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Using A Small Brush: Brushes that are well cared for improve with use. Loose bristles are shed and the tips become nicely rounded. Start a brush on primer and undercoat, then use it for fine finishing as it ages.
Useful brush sizes include an angled %in (1.8cm) cutting-in brush and 'An, 1 in, 2in, and 4in or Sin (1.2cm, 2.5cm, 5cm, and 1 Ocm or 1 2.5cm) brushes. Radiator brush A brush with an elong¬ated metal handle that can be bent to allow you to paint behind radiators.
To paint a flush door, divide the surface area up into small sections (see diagram below). Try to work quickly to avoid tide marks or visible seams. Use a Sin (7.5cm) wide brush and begin at the top left-hand corner, covering to about half the width of the door (I). First, work Using a small brush vertical brush strokes and then brush across these with light upward strokes. Complete the other sections (2-6) in the same way. It is important to work the brush strokes consistently so that the finish of the door will be even.See Also Clusters Of Small Flowers:There are many scented climbers to choose from, perfect for warm alfresco evenings. Wisterias (z4—10) have beautiful perfumed, pale mauve or white flowers in long, hanging panicles in early summer, and the jasmine Jasminum officinale (z9-10) produces clusters of very fragrant, pink-tinged white flowers from summer to fall. Another favorite, honeysuckle, Lonicera (z4-10), produces delicately scented clusters of flowers. These range in color from yellow and orange through to white and pink.
The hardy common grape hyacinth often escapes from cultivation and may be found grow¬ing wild in the United States. It bears a few narrow ground-level leaves and dense hyacinth-like clusters of small flowers. The flowers, pro-BROKEN-LINE GRAPH
1900 75,994,5753RAPH, a pictorial presentation of numerical lata.
On The Other Hand See Mother ¬hood:mother ¬hood¬hood not only gives satisfactions; it also demands sacrifices—considerable drudgery is often involved. The mother ¬hood cannot expect to have the freedom she knew before she had a baby to care for. Yet she should not go to the extreme of devoting herself exclusively to the baby. It is better for the expectant mother ¬hood to take a realistic view in advance than to be completely disillusioned after the baby is born.
RED RIDING HOOD, Little, a popular nursery tale common to several oral traditions in Europe which appeared as Le petit chaperon rouge in Charles Perrault's Histoircs ou conies du temps passe avec des moralites (c.1697), which also bore the title Cantes de ma mere I'oye (Tales of mother ¬hood Goose}. It is the story of a girl in a red cloak who meets a wolf while on her way to her grandmother ¬hood's house. Forgetting her mother ¬hood's warning to speak to no one on the way, she tells the wolf her destination. The wolf then hurries on ahead, devours her grandmother ¬hood, and, on Red Riding Hood's arrival, eats her also. In the German version of the story published by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm in their Kinder- mid Hausmdrchen (Grimm's Fairy Tales), a hunter arrives in time to rip open the wolf and restore both Red Riding Hood and her grandmother ¬hood to life. |
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