My cat has intestinal issues and sensitive tummy since she hit 12yrs old, she has constant diarrheaThe vet said to put her on a very high fiber food and she take a steroid pill pretazone every other day.Suggestions on what food to feed her to help her little butt and tummy that wont cost tons? I am on tight budget due to being single parent and in school full time.
The highest fiber foods would be hills RD or hills WD
This method is simple but does require a few tires to get it rightI use it make small Circuit boardsStart with the metalUse a green scurby with a cleanser like commentScrub the metal with even strokes in one direction then again a 90 degree angle to the firstThe idea is make little X(s)in the metal as you polish itYou should wear gloves as the oil from your hands will not helpRinse well and scrub again with just water and dry the metal so no water film can formUsing a Laser printer and photo paper print your imageYou may want to mirror the image before you print as the finial product will be a mirror of the printUse basic staples brand paper, the cheap stuff works best (red boxI'll add a link)use a household iron set around 225-250 degreesPlace the print, image side down against the metalYou'll want to a have a hard flat surface that can take a lot of heat and a lot of pressureLike a workbenchNEVER SLIDE THE IRON.NEVER LET THE IMAGE MOVEStart at one of the corners to seal the image inplaceWork the whole area by lifting and pressingHow much force to use is hard to sayWhat needs to happen is that the plastic on the photo paper needs to melt while you press down and plastic sticks to the metal leaving the ink Sandwiched betweenLET THE METAL COOL Soak the the whole thing in hot (maybe 150) water for well you'll see after some time the paper will begin to come free from the plasticSome SOFT rubbing will helpA soft toothbrush helps in tiny areasIron on transfer paper doesn't work as well as the cheap staples paperGood Luck!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.
With all due respect answer one has a valid point and a well known suggestion, that will work, given the right circumstancesDetails would be importantI use an overhead often to enlarge images in line for transfer to panels for set construction, as well as onto walls for faux finishing after If that's your intent, just to have an Image to work, after a transfer, then it may be suitable? Long ago I also used to use a PONCE pouch methodThere would be a sheet of paper, a tool with a wheel at its end, with pins on the wheelI'd roll the wheel over pre-drawn lines, take the paper to the object I wanted the image on, then with the Ponce pouch (filled with a chalk) pat the pouch onto the lines, creating a sort of stencil on the material I wanted to work Certainly there is always free hand using a pencil, etc There are far more expensive ways as well, such as the use of a computer, a Power Point program, and a rear projector as is used in theaterSteven Wolf