No, You do not wet your hair first b4 dying it. You are suppose to apply the dye 1st then let it sit 4 the time givin then rinse it out
no
Those fabric finishing processes which carried out using wet media, especially Desizing, Scouring, Bleaching ,Dying, Printing and Finishing etc. are called textile wet processing.
Getting wet, screen damage, and batterie dying!
If it is a colour that you bought in a box in the store then you should read the instructions as to whether you wet your hair or not because some of them do call for it. If you have bought in the a hairdressers supplier in a tube and have bought the peroxide too then you don't wet the hair.
Yes, dying wet clothes is considered a physical change. The process involves adding dye to the fabric, which alters its color but does not change the chemical composition of the materials. Once the dyeing process is complete and the clothes are dried, they can return to their original state without any chemical transformation occurring.
Because they need to keep their skin moist
the shell keeps the egg from drying out by that I mean it keeps it moist or by leaving it it a wet dry area
it will die just like 99% of all other hamsters do when they get wet-tail and no VET treatment (Dri-tail and other pet store crap doesn't work)
If a plant got to much water, it would end up getting all soggy and dying!
No she is not dying. No she is not dying.
Usually this is a cultivation problem. Is it too dry? Is it too wet? The symptoms are the same. It is unlikely to be a disease.