Please refer to the following link.
Add food colouring.
Blue gray red and green
To do this you need to have:1 thick twig and 2 or 3 thinWool/grass/string or any other things like this.Sellotape glue blue-tack etcFirst, use the thick twig as the base or middle of the paintbrush. Around it put the thinner twigs. Then, put sellotape around the twigs so that they stay together. Next, get a small big blob of blue tack and stick it at the point where the bristles will be. Get the grass or your choice of bristles and start sticking them to the end.Tip - when the bristles are done, It would be useful if you could maybe stick some sellotape or any other cover so that the bristles aren't likely to come off. It would also be good to stick the bristles as deep as you can into the blue-tack to prevent the likeliness if the m getting damaged.
Mixing blue and black will make a very dark blue.
srub it hard it has relly hard to taket of
it used to be white but its cheaper to make it blue
yes the Victorians did use blue tack from there bumhole
blue tack or just tack
To stick stuff up, yet I use it to make many models
Break a piece off and squeeze it continually between fingers until it softens.
Put it in the freezer
If you roll up a ball of blue tack and rub it against the blue tack on the wall it comes off easily. Or, if like me you don't have any fresh blue tack available, I used blue painters tape. I got as much off the wall as I could by hand, and then placed the blue painters tape over the spots and pressed it into the orange-peel texture as much as possible, then peeled off the tape with the remaining blue-tack stuck to the tape. Do this a couple of times over each spot until clean.
with blue tack :)
You get blue tack and stick it to the ceiling!!
That would be a Saddlery shop where the Saddlers make the tack.
Yes blue is a soft color.
The tinkerer attacked the tack with a simple whack. A horse's saddle is part of it's tack. To sail into the wind, it is necessary to tack.