I think you can just put it in a bowl and put the bowl in the microwave
Oh, dude, erasers smell like a mix of rubber and nostalgia. It's like a weirdly comforting scent that takes you back to your school days of making mistakes and erasing them. So, if you ever need a whiff of simpler times, just take a big ol' sniff of an eraser!
Unless it's a really big eraser, then yes.
you would use cm because mm are too small to measure a eraser with and dm are too big to measure a eraser
a sharpened pencil? or those huge erasers for big mistakes give me trust point? (:
take a big eraser and wipe it clean Fast and Simple!
It will just melt into the sun, not big enough to make it instantly go supernova.
For my ACT, I brought two calculators (make sure not a TI89 for they are not allowed), a water bottle, snacks, sharpened #2 pencils, a big eraser, and my brain.
The world's largest eraser is 19 feet long and 6 feet wide. It was created by the London-based artist Gavin Turk and unveiled in 2014.
It depends. For one, how bendy the ruler is. If it is really bendy then the eraser will not be propelled that far. If it is slightyly bendy it will go far. Second, the eraser's surface area and weight affects its flight through the air. Third, the force of the propulsion also accounts for distance. If the eraser is about 4"x2" with a moderately bendy ruler and gets an average thrust then the eraser will be propelled about 10 feet.
Take the top off and remove the eraser - most likely there are extra lead refills inside.
if our using only grey lead then simply draw them with a grey lead pencil but if your using colors try using white with a bit of grey or light blue Another option is to use a small, battery powered electric eraser. They come with small nibs that are well suited to "etching out" fine lines such as whiskers. It will take some practice, but you can etch pretty fine white lines out of a pencil drawing with these erasers and it is much more effective for the task than a kneaded eraser. If you need a super fine line, just cut the top of the eraser with a razor so that it is completely flat, giving you a nice hard edge. Be sure and get one of the small battery powered ones. They sell them everywhere online at all the art supply stores and some office stores. These rotate faster and have finer tips than the big corded electric erasers, making them more well suited to fine detail work.
a drum