HANDLE WITH CARE No more spills or burns! Slip the plastic-coated Handisleeve/Dandisleeve by Umbra ($5; containerstore.com) over your to-go coffee to get a better grip.
Simple step by step instructions with pictures help guide decorators while they will undoubtedly save hundreds of dollars or more, on just one cornice. Making ones own upholstered wooden cornice is easily accessed at http://www.easycornice.com where these mentioned step by step instructions can be instantly downloaded with an e-book that allows each decorator to immediately get started on building their own wooden window cornice. If decorators are hesitant about purchasing the entire e-book right away, they have the option of receiving an introductory chapter, complete with pictures, allowing them a sneak peak into the wooden window cornice making process.SKINNY SIP Create your own low-cal flavored water with the Takeya Fruit Infusion jug ($25; takeyausa.com), which has a built-in strainer to remove the fruit and seeds.Several years ago, the creator of Easy Cornice decided to research the craft of making wooden window cornices. Reflecting back on how her story first got started, the creator, Jo, remembers how she would frequent home stores. She would go to stores where she took very specific notes as to how a wooden window cornice was assembled.Step by step instructions are now available online for people wishing to create a wooden cornice, while saving hundreds of dollars by doing it themselves.Appendix SAI: Author Matrix.ECO-CHIC SACK Tote groceries or run errands in style with a vibrantly patterned reusable bag from Envirosax Bloom ($40 for 5; envirosax.com).Prior to coming up with the idea of creating an e-book where folks could download the step by step instructions which would allow them to be able to create their own cornice, the creator of Easy Cornice had always admired professionally made wooden window cornices and wanted to learn how to make them for herself, comments Jo.We also want to note that Fisher and Skinner's graph of spending versus outcome (figure 1 in Fisher and Skinner 2010) is hypothetical and intended to make a point that reflects their beliefs. This figure, and much of the comment by Fisher and Skinner, has little direct bearing on our study. As for the cost-effectiveness analysis discussed by Barnato, we would point out that it is based on a mistaken premise that a U.S.$10,000 increase in Dartmouth Atlas end-of-life spending is the actual change in resource use (i.e., spending) that was associated with the improvement in surgical outcomes we observed. This is not the case. The Dartmouth Atlas measure of end-of-life spending is correlated with actual spending on surgical patients, but it is not a one-to-one mapping, so it is difficult to comment on this calculation.
WIN IT! Happy holidays to you! We're giving away five of every item you see here. Go to shape.com/giftsforyou for the chance to score your faves.
Author: Sharon Liao
No comments:
Post a Comment