The "I have nothing Interesting to Say" Thread

Started by Lise, Feb 06 07 02:40

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P.C.

I am trying to finish my Marty pumpkin, but I've lost interest.  He is not turning out well, and I've botched so many cuts.

  I'm wondering if there is a power tool that might make this easier.  I'm cursing myself that I turfed the Dremel.
Sir Isaac Newton invented the swinging door....for the convenience of his cat.

Russ

 P.C. wrote:
[div style="font-style: italic;"]I am trying to finish my Marty pumpkin, but I've lost interest.  He is not turning out well, and I've botched so many cuts. [/div] [div style="font-style: italic;"] [/div] [div style="font-style: italic;"]I'm wondering if there is a power tool that might make this easier.  I'm cursing myself that I turfed the Dremel. [/div]
Dremel...

why would you turf one of the coolest tools out there? I admit I dont use it very often but when I do I almost marry it
 
Mercy to the Guilty is Torture to the Victims

P.C.

Hahaaha.  Actually, I've turfed two.  One that I don't know where it came from....and the second was my dads....with every attachment known to mankind.  I had a couple 'unco-operative' moments with a dremel...and that was IT.

   
Sir Isaac Newton invented the swinging door....for the convenience of his cat.

purelife



P.C.

Sir Isaac Newton invented the swinging door....for the convenience of his cat.


P.C.

I've refurbished a goodly amount of antiques....NO DREMEL.  
Sir Isaac Newton invented the swinging door....for the convenience of his cat.

purelife

I hope you didn't paint it black.  

Lil Me

Sings:
 I had a little Dremel, I made it out of clay...
   
"In the absence of clearly-defined goals, we become strangely loyal to performing daily trivia until ultimately we become enslaved by it."  Robert Heinlein



Lil Me

 Michel wrote:
Actually I used a Dremel only once, it was very useful for little areas my virile and muscular male fingers just couldn't reach.
 --
 Ack!  Too much information!
 (I hope you washed the Dremel afterwards)
   
 
"In the absence of clearly-defined goals, we become strangely loyal to performing daily trivia until ultimately we become enslaved by it."  Robert Heinlein



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