It's pink of course, sometimes it's whit and sometimes with a picture on it
in 1770 the eraser was made
eraser was not invented but discovered by an unknown person
Natural rubber was used as an eraser at least as early as 1770, but it was perishable and 'went bad' after a short time. Charles Goodyear developed the vulcanization process which made the kneaded eraser practical in 1839.
because
It's been more than 150 years since the eraserattached itself to the pencil. We can only assume that hymen-lipmanwas a man who made his fair share of mistakes, but they may have inspired him to stick the eraser on the end of the pencil, making it more convenient to erase the written errors. He got a patent for the development on this date in 1858. Lipman's early version was a pencil with a groove at the top, into which he glued an eraser. He sold his patent in 1862; the US Supreme Court later invalidated it, saying that since combining a pencil with an eraser did not change the function of either item, the pencil-with-eraser could not be patented.
Pink, of course.
Unfortunately, you cannot change the color of the eraser tool. If you want to avoid the checkerboard pattern, I suggest using the brush tool set to match the background color and paint over the line you wish to get rid of.
That's just what color they make it.
Well if your wondering how to make an eraser its really easy.First some people buy clay or eraser clay and or doh ,you would make the form you want then heat it up in hot water or put in oven.Theres an other way you can do by using things in ur kitchen and buying clay just do the same steps hopefully this helped.
At best, you will be able to lighten the mistake enough that you can color over it, the colored pencil marks, and then use the electric eraser over the area.
pencils, eraser, papers, color pencils, crayons, markers, paint, brushes
The eraser poem the eraser poe the eraser po the eraser p the eraser the erase the eras the era the er the e the th t .
if you have a good eraser yes. a good eraser will erase a lot of the colored pencil, but it will erase all of the normal pencil. it also depends on how dark the mark is.
erase something and get the shavings from the eraser and melt them together and you are done
No. Pushing on the skin will force the blood out temporarily but not remove the pigment, which is several layers thick.
That area won't tan well, and the color difference may be noticable for months.
I used a magic eraser on my daughter's uggs and it looks like it took some of the color out, they are lighter in spots now. Also they don't seem as furry like it matted down the suede or something.