Cut two sheets of firm plastic, 30.5 cm square.Ģ. If the layers touch each other, the circuit closes and the sound is triggered.ġ. It consists of two conductive layers that are connected to the sound module, with a spacer in between. Actually, the whole bottom IS the switch. The switch is positioned at the bottom of the block. Remove the hand-sewn thread, open the zipper and turn the cover outside-in. Close the zipper, re-position the presser foot and continue sewing.ġ2. Gently pull the cover towards you so you can reach the zipper tag. When you reach the pulling tag of the zipper, you cannot pass it with the machine because the tag is too wide. Tip: start sewing with the zipper half-opened. Open the zipper and align the other side to the walls of the cube. Check that you do not position it inside-out! (You can fasten it with one pin, turn outside-in and see how the zipper will end up.) If all is correct, pin it and sew loosely by hand. Align one side of the zipper along the bottom of the cube. Leave two sides open! Stitch two sides.ĩ. Take the last square and pin it to the bottom. Take another square and pin it to the top. You have approximately 1 cm margin for the seams.ħ. Make sure you alternate between a plain square and a square with a question mark. Pin four yellow squares together (right sides facing each other) to create the walls of the block. For added durability, sew around the question mark (optional). Put a piece of cotton or baking paper between the iron and the fleece so the interfacing will not stick to your iron.ĥ. Position the question marks and black strips on a yellow square and iron them on. Cut strips of black fleece to create the drop-shadows on the side of the question marks.Ĥ. Use the question mark template to transfer the drawing onto the white fleece. Make sure you leave the protection in place on the other side of the interfacing.Ģ. Iron the fusible interfacing to the backside of the white fleece. You pull it over the frame later on, so it gets it's final shape. It is a great channel to observe, react, check out, and watch for the amusing part.The yellow cover with the question marks is the eye-catcher of your Mario block. In the past to now SSJ videos it has charming dialogue to listen to. SSJ has videos that have interesting plots with some interesting titles as names to titles that has a ton of vocabulary I didn't know like "Cadre, Vigorous, Punny, Doltish, Fascinating, Coincidence, Questioned, Blackmailed, and Dilemma" but some pun-like titles such as Fast-inating, Egg-citing or Egg-speriment was okay titles to be labeled as puns. It's a astonishing Sonic Plush channel that is full of clever and entertaining videos that has jokes, moments, and comical videos itself that are by levels to amusing to funny to hilarious to hysterical etc (at times its hysterical with scenes and some videos are having the serious tone in plots but funny at times). "Got the Works! " Not a bad channel at all! It's an awesomely funny channel that goes for an action-adventure setting in many videos set with ideas that goes with the slapstick and comedy put in it's own original plush universe. While having great videos, entertaining shorts & adventures with original humor! It's a simple suggestion for watching one of the best Sonic Plush channels ever.īy facts with opinion(s), this has amazing videos, cool and awesome ideas, mindblowing and inspiring visuals, great special-effects, original characters, plots, humor and unbelievably, awe-inspiring and amazing cause & effects. People should to give him more attention than ever! It's not force or just fan praising, as some would assume. His style of humor and setting in his plush world/universe is more than smile worthy, its more than awesome, more than pleasant to the ears, its significant. His work is full of tolerance and fun, something you can't say about Logan Thirtycare's Mario content nowadays even when SSJ didn't existed yet.
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