^ most of your clothes are made of plastic material too look at your tags nylon, elastine etc. Thats y u can't put then on hot settings on and iron because they melt.
I haven't driven a Honda in years. :/ Does my honda lawn mower and whipper snipper count?
"Yo mama's so ghetto, when she breast feeds COOL AID COMES OUT!"
HAHAHAHAA
Justin wait till the weekend and ill give you a hand bro
SPAMMAPS
Carburettor|Nation
that mikey G guy is the biggest shit talker ive ever met..
in the space of 15minutes he sold two sets of wheels. claims a guy under the username DNT-CRY bought them!
^ most of your clothes are made of plastic material too look at your tags nylon, elastine etc. Thats y u can't put then on hot settings on and iron because they melt.
True but you need special dyes for plastics.
Basically you need to heat the clothing/carpet then apply an acid dye or disperse dye.
Nylon, a synthetic fiber also sometimes labeled as polyamide, can be dyed with either of two completely different dye classes, acid dyes and disperse dyes. Both of these types of dye require the application of heat to fix the dye to the nylon, so be sure the item you are dyeing can withstand the heat called for in the recipe you choose. (This is a problem for nylon/Lycra blends, as the spandex fiber is heat-sensitive, made from polyurethane fiber. Use acid dyes on these blends, and carefully avoid stressing the fabric while it is hot, such as by twisting or stretching; temperatures above that indicated on the garment's care label (usually 105°F) may deform the shape of the garment.)
Some surface fabric treatments may prevent nylon from 'taking' dye. Dye only fabrics that are free of treatments that provide stain resistance or water repellence, such as Teflon coating.
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