WAYWT - The Hard Labour Edition aka "Working in your workwear".
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Dunno if you can call this hard labor, but continuing the stripping process of shellac from the stairs. Almost 1/2 way done….can see untouched on he left and stripped to the right. Thank God for acetone and MEK
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Here you can see the vast difference once stripped. Some spots are easy, some are caked on and cracked badly. This hoise was never kept up with much, if at all. That includes about 4 generations I believe…..
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Besides tons of sweating, the only time I'd say tough was last night. Hunched over the rail cleaning that area for about an hour to hour and half with my back screaming in pain. Going back at it later after installing a new window upstairs.
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Working in the garden in my IH-526Jod
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^ Thank you neph [emoji4]
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^ Lovely garden and my favourite IH jacket. Nice wellies too [emoji1]
My frikin wellies - thief
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Working in the garden as well in my ihsh-25 and 634sii
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Thank you!
This denim has aged marvelously for only ten months. They get better everyday…
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I'm looking forward to the day when my UHR become work jeans.
Mine became workwear sooner than I had planned. After the initial soak, I followed instruction, and gave them a machine wash. Unfortunately, I neglected to change the water level setting on my top loader. The agitator had its way with them. They were covered in slashes of missing indigo. I figured some time at work would help. It did. The marks are far less noticeable, now.
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As promised here are some photos of what I do. Unfortunately it was 90+ degrees, I wore Wranglers. I'll grab a selfie in one of the pairs I wore later and post it here.
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Seven days later
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What all this is, in the first photos are a boost pump, large filter, water softener, carbon tanks, which remove chlorine that the city puts in. Then the RO which removes 99.9% of everything else from water. From the RO, the water goes through a UV light into a storage tank, pumped through filters to remove dead bacteria, out to a loop that will feed Dialysis machines, then return and merge with the water that goes to the UV light. The process is a bit more complicated, this is the 99 cent version.
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Wow.. complicated stuff [emoji848]