The old bulbs did not have the glass shield across the face and I could grip the inside surface. Now the bulbs have the face plate and I can't grip even with the black suction cup that I have for it.
I do this all the time: cut your old shirtsif youre simply not skilled like me :-) then don't even try..or you will end up embarassing yourself.
Sketch them on paper and then give them to people that make clothes.So if they like the designs then they might make some..
Other things you should do: 1. When the inspector arrives, ask for their credentials and call their office to confirm they are suppose to be there. Make copies if they allow. 2. Ask for the written list of what they are there to inspect. Do not allow them to see things or address things not on the list. If they are there say to look at unsafe ladders, that is all you allow. 3. If you have a safety committee, include the employee rep if possible (or union rep), unless confidentiality gets in the way. 4. If they take a picture, you take two pictures of the same thing. 5. Ask for a close out meeting (definitely) and a written summary of findings if they will. You will find each inspector has specialties if they do a wall-to-wall. Some will look at ladders, some will not. Few will look at MSDSs since most are not trained, but some are. Some will talk with employees, some will not.
just a possible suggestion my best friends daughter (who's 13) gets old clothes (from her mother, her mother's friends, her friends, consignment shops- then she cuts what she wants (logos, pictures, cloth patterns) and safety pins them onto other clothes or sews simple big X stitches on the corners and ta da.. different designs made uniquely by her.
if its just t-shirt, you can get that done somewhere where they will print designs on shirts. IDK sbout anything else.