Please elaborate? I just Googled it having no prior knowledge. Concerns about breathing in toxins? From looking at 1 website that doesn’t seem terribly concerning for a building that, even with the art studio, I don’t foresee more than averaging 30 minutes in per day. We’ll be drywalling over it and there’s ventilation in addition to the 2 windows and doors.
I see that they can vent dangerous gas for quite a while post-application even though they should be set within 3 days. But this has probably been a couple weeks+ and we’ve yet to fill it with things.
make sure the desk has items that are easily cleaned up after you use your full arm to “swipe it all clean” for the . . . office sex . . . that is very likely to ensue.
I’m jelly. I have a 10X10 decent shed, and a second 11X16 tin shed that I hate. And they’re both packed full, I don’t have enough room. Hoping if money goes well next year I’m going to knock both down and have my son in law build me one single shed. With blackjacks and hookers. or at least power/lights, cement floor, insulated and heated, and a door I can drive my ATV in. But that’s gonna be a lot of dinero’s so not this year.
I bought a luxury wool red hood for a little red riding hood costume. My husband bought a funny cheap wolf costume in a granny nightgown. Should be a fun Halloween!
So the real ring doesn’t get messed up, but we like to wear something on our married ring fingers. In my previous relationship, I just didn’t wear it at home. Now that I’ve significantly upgraded my Jaspess, it has meaning to wear something even at home.
Gold or silver will scratch and wear over time. It’s more a concern with women’s rings, with the prongs holding stones. (Of course men can have stones but don’t as commonly).
Something like tungsten needn’t be removed unless you worry you may smash it somehow. Scratches don’t happen to tungsten. Shattering does.
It’s especially bad to be, say, putting on rubber washing gloves with a solitaire diamond, which tugs on the stones and gradually loosens them. Thus why many nurses use silicone bands because they put on latex gloves dozens of times a day.
I understand removing a ring in certain situations to prevent possible damage, to the ring or the finger/hand. That isn’t confusing. I don’t understand the desire/need to have something temporarily replace it. Particularly when the activity is 100% at home and it is possible to put the real ring back on prior to being in public. I’m not trying to denigrate the choice, but it is honestly not something I understand. I guess the ring itself has a significantly stronger personal representation of the marriage (than it does to me), but again, not something that really resonates with me.