h a l f b a k e r yIf ever there was a time we needed a bowlologist, it's now.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Instead of rubbing out mistakes, which leaves smudges and
sometimes tears the pages in my writing books, I have come up
with the idea of sticky back lines attached to a pice of card
so when you have made a mistake peel off the line and stick a
new one on.
[link]
|
|
Tippex, the company that makes the white quick-drying paint that you can cover up mistakes with, already has a product that appears to be rolls of white tape that you can place over mistakes. |
|
|
If I paint out all my letters with the Tippex it also paints
out the line I'm supposed to be writing on, causing
wobbly, not in a straight line writing. The sticky line
would overcome this problem. |
|
|
People still write on paper? |
|
|
can't believe a smart boy like you makes mistakes!
could you not amend the mistake so that it is right e.g. Henry VIII had five wives.... and one that died. |
|
|
Baked. Avery Denison makes something like this. You can get it in varying widths. It comes in a tape dispenser package. |
|
|
Or at least it did. I used to use it by the case, fifteen years ago when I worked for company that was doing a lot of microfilming. It may have disappeared with the typewriter. |
|
|
Note, the noun "rubber" generally means something different in the USA. |
|
|
Correction fluid or tape would cover the rule line on the paper or incompletely over the writing. I believe the idea is for correciton tape that has a rule line printed on it. Neither [PeterSealy]'s nor [UnaBubba]'s link point to such a product. |
|
|
The Pelikan site [UnaBubba] linked to has a product which eliminates "Royal Blue" ink, but I assume that means there's a chemical reaction with a particular ink product. |
|
|
Erasable ink pens are baked and would probably be the best solution to this problem. |
|
|
[po] I thought that all 6 of Henry VIII's wives died. |
|
|
Relative to Henry VIII, they lived or died as follows: Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived. |
|
|
lewisgirl shouldn't that be...
died, died horribly, died, died, died horribly, died? |
|
|
The third one died pretty horribly, too.
Horrible deaths was something of a speciality in the sixteenth century. |
|
| |