Archive for July, 2009
What kind of jewelry should I wear with a halter dress, off white with gold sash?
Posted by: | Comments
This dress will have a pale gold sash instead of one shown. I thinking of wearing gold long earings with some sort of crystal and a bracelet to match. I am wearing my hair half up half down and am planning on putting little rhinestone flowers in it. Should I add a necklace? Would pearls be better?
Stick with the earrings and a single fine (thin) bracelet, and you can get away with the same fine necklace.
Whats the best way to organize costume jewelry?
Posted by: | Comments
I have tons of jewelry from places like forever 21 and I just have no idea how to organize it! Like I have tons bracelets, bangles, necklaces, rings, earrings and tons of other accessories and I need a good way to organize them that will also like nice and not cluttery any good ideas?
Over your desk or on the inside wall of you closet, get either drill-in hooks or the decorative ones that you can stick up there, and hang all of your long necklaces off of them. Rings and earrings put in a jewlery box or in an earring tree. Bangles put around a skinny vase
Really, it boils down to the size, shape, and layout of the teeth on the saw. For instance, if you have a saw that has its teeth all aligned (like a V if you look at it head on) and a saw that has its teeth offset slightly (more like a W if you look at it head on), one will cut across the grain of wood better and one will cut along the grain of wood better. There’s an excellent (and illustrated!) explanation of saw tooth engineering here: http://www.rockler.com/articles/display_article.cfm?story_id=72&cookietest=1. The blades there are mostly wood blades. For blades designed to cut through harder materials, there’s good illustrations here: http://www.tyrolit.com/page.cfm?vpath=divisions/construction/drycutting. Note that there aren’t "teeth" so much as gaps in the edge to allow for cooling.
And all this is because, as said in the previous answer, cutting through stone or metal is done by grinding - essentially, by rubbing away a cut with something like sandpaper - while cutting through wood is done by shearing.