They were from Muji. Cotton slippers. The ones made from some kind of reed are gone.
They were from Muji. Cotton slippers. The ones made from some kind of reed are gone.
Good point. But I don’t know how it’d off-gas or if it’d leak onto stuff.
I’m a fan of using 3-in-1 oil for most things. Should be good for metal tracks.
Not food safe though. Not sure what to use on kitchen drawers.
WD-40 is a rather poor lubricant. Maybe OP is also talking about wooden drawers or somewhere food is stored? In those cases I’d not use WD-40 either.
Probably as effective as any other carbon capture and storage scam.
And also the year of the Linux desktop!
No mention at all of having fewer kids? That alone has a huge impact.
What about two year dust?
My wrists are too old for hand grinders!
When I worked slinging coffees, we used a specific coffee machine cleaning substance. You poured in these pill shaped bits and they’d absorb excess oil as they ground through the machine.
Disassemble as best you can, brush out all the bits with a clean paintbrush, damp cloth to wipe everything. It’s not factory clean but it’s better.
Oxo conical burr grinder. Fairly common, works well enough.
I have the Ploopy Classic trackball and the Trackpad. Both are top notch products. 3D prints are excellent.
The firmware is open-source so I was able to flash my own layout for my own workflow. It’s QMK, used in mechanical keyboards. You don’t need to touch the firmware if you don’t have the inclination, it works out of the box.
There’s a small community of modders that have done wild things to the hardware too.
Removed by mod
Locally grown is not always the best for the environment. Eating California rice in California is worse for CO2 than Thai rice, because California rice needs more inputs. Same with growing tomatoes in a natural-gas heated greenhouse in cold climates vs. trucked in from where they grow in the field. Transportation is a very small part of the CO2 footprint of food.
Yes, it’s used to make oilcloth but as far as I know, you’d have to leave the garment to dry somewhere with ventilation for a week or more. However I’ve not done it so if that isn’t the case please correct me.
A cheap solution is to wax some thrift store or old trousers. Beeswax and paraffin, there are different ratios to experiment with, and premade bars you can buy. You rub some on and heat with a hair dryer or clothes iron (with parchment paper so the iron doesn’t get wax on it). It’ll darken the cloth. The more you put on the more waterproof and wind-resistant it’ll get. For bike pants you could focus on the front of the upper thigh and coat the rest less, leaving some breathability on the back.
Meanwhile in Trudeau’s socialist nightmare, where eggs are under kolkhoz supply management, I pay $5.25 USD… for 18 eggs.
That’s all you can do yourself. Forget about the cultists, find those who you can get along with and help each other out. It’s gonna be a long time to get through this for any non-fascist Americans.
FULL