 
 Tips of the Week is our weekly peek at some of the best making tips, tricks, and recommendations we’ve discovered in our travels. Check in every Friday to see what we’ve discovered. And we want to hear from you. Please share your tips, shortcuts, best practices, and tall shop tales in the comments below and we might use your tip in a future column.
Work Toward the Key Corners

Spatter-Spray Objects for Better Scanning

Cheap Decals from Paper
 Here is a quick and dirty way of creating decal transfers for your projects.  Gaslands, the post-apocalyptic car combat game that uses battle-modded Matchbox/Hotwheels cars, is all the rage in the tabletop gaming world these days. This would be a great way to add decals and visual textures to your car conversions. All you need is inkjet-printed images, gloss clear coat varnish, and a hair dryer/heat gun. You varnish the image, apply it to your surface, heat it to transfer the image, and then soak/rub away the paper. As the video points out, this is a funky method, not meant to replace water-slide transfers. But for things like post-apocalyptic car decals, signage, billboards, and the like, this looks like just the ticket.
Here is a quick and dirty way of creating decal transfers for your projects.  Gaslands, the post-apocalyptic car combat game that uses battle-modded Matchbox/Hotwheels cars, is all the rage in the tabletop gaming world these days. This would be a great way to add decals and visual textures to your car conversions. All you need is inkjet-printed images, gloss clear coat varnish, and a hair dryer/heat gun. You varnish the image, apply it to your surface, heat it to transfer the image, and then soak/rub away the paper. As the video points out, this is a funky method, not meant to replace water-slide transfers. But for things like post-apocalyptic car decals, signage, billboards, and the like, this looks like just the ticket.
Learning Epoxy Basics

Easy on the “Roller Coaster” Vocal Delivery
In our continuing theme of tips related to audio/video production for makers, to “Don’t Overdrive Your Voice,” Getting in and Getting Out, Steering Into Your Weirdness, we can add this tip. If you listen to a “typical” radio or TV newscasters voice, you are familiar with what I call roller coaster delivery. It’s when the narrator’s voices rises, rather quickly and enthusiastically to the peak point of a sentence and then more slowly slides down the backside of the sentence. There is often even a little pause at the peak and the final words are delivered as if each one had a period after it. Here is a goofy example of this vocal rhythm I just recorded to demonstrate the concept.
There is a reason this is an extremely common form of narration. The rhythm is pleasing and has a kind of built-in sense of drama and excitement to it. But it is all too frequently overdone, especially by amateurs. Combine too much of this with overdriving your voice and it sticks out like a sore thumb. Like a poorly delivered accent in a movie, you don’t want people focused on your vocal deliver, but rather, on what you are saying.
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