well tom here is the site details,ring them if you need them in a hurry ,say gazza put you on
4:43 am on 9/5/2012
Pruthi
The spice rack looks excellent. I higlhy recommend it if you’re going with a wall hanging rack. I put it up and it looks great and at much lower cost than a lot of other racks. This rack is deep enough to fit large spice containers or even condiment bottles. A quick note on installation: The rack didn’t come with any hanging instructions. It comes with 4 long screws which are likely best if you’re hanging the rack on a substance such as solid wood. It also comes with 4 anchors and 4 shorter screws for use in walls made of soft substances such as drywall. It, however, doesn’t have instructions for what size hole to drill for the anchors. I started small and moved up until I found the right size, so here are some instructions for future buyers who choose to use the anchors. 1. place the rack on the wall where you would like it. If you have one, use a level to make sure it is level. Use a pencil to mark the holes or something hard to put a small divot at the center of each of the four holes. Remove the rack from the wall. 2. Use a power drill and a 1/4 bit to drill 4 holes at each of the places you marked. drill deep enough to fit in the entire plastic anchor. Most likely, you’ll drill through 1/4 to 1/2 inch of drywall and then hit empty space on the other side. 3. Push the anchors in as far as you can. Use a hammer to hammer them in the rest of the way. 4. Put the rack back over the anchors and use a #2 phillips screw driver to hand drive the 4 screws into place. Put them each in loose at first. Then tighten each. You shouldn’t need to crank them down too hard. 5. Put your spices in your new beautiful wall rack.
I've never been a big fan of dressing up on Halloween because of the pressures to uphold a common female tradition of skimping out on clothing. Props to stores like Trashy Lingerie for their incredible attention to detail and ability to flatter th... Read more »
I've never been a big fan of dressing up on Halloween because of the pressures to uphold a common female tradition of skimping out on clothing. Props to stores like Trashy Lingerie for their incredible attention to detail and ability to flatter the female form, but it just ain't my bag.
Fortunately, this year, with the generous efforts of my good friend and head designer at Chrome Hearts, Jessie Jo Stark and her brilliant design team, my anxiety was quickly eased. She had decided to be a punk rock Madeline from the children's cartoon, so keeping in the theme, we chose to create a punk rock Bam Bam costume from The Flintstones for me. They whipped it up quickly and did a damn fine job! We make a great underage, cartoon couple if I do say so myself… Thoughts?
Thanks to Josh and Dave at Chrome Hearts!!
xx
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well tom here is the site details,ring them if you need them in a hurry ,say gazza put you on
The spice rack looks excellent. I higlhy recommend it if you’re going with a wall hanging rack. I put it up and it looks great and at much lower cost than a lot of other racks. This rack is deep enough to fit large spice containers or even condiment bottles. A quick note on installation: The rack didn’t come with any hanging instructions. It comes with 4 long screws which are likely best if you’re hanging the rack on a substance such as solid wood. It also comes with 4 anchors and 4 shorter screws for use in walls made of soft substances such as drywall. It, however, doesn’t have instructions for what size hole to drill for the anchors. I started small and moved up until I found the right size, so here are some instructions for future buyers who choose to use the anchors. 1. place the rack on the wall where you would like it. If you have one, use a level to make sure it is level. Use a pencil to mark the holes or something hard to put a small divot at the center of each of the four holes. Remove the rack from the wall. 2. Use a power drill and a 1/4 bit to drill 4 holes at each of the places you marked. drill deep enough to fit in the entire plastic anchor. Most likely, you’ll drill through 1/4 to 1/2 inch of drywall and then hit empty space on the other side. 3. Push the anchors in as far as you can. Use a hammer to hammer them in the rest of the way. 4. Put the rack back over the anchors and use a #2 phillips screw driver to hand drive the 4 screws into place. Put them each in loose at first. Then tighten each. You shouldn’t need to crank them down too hard. 5. Put your spices in your new beautiful wall rack.