"I love using my slip silk sleep mask as the final step in my wind down ritual.
The beautifully-soft silk reduces the friction and stretching of my facial skin throughout the night, ultimately helping to avoid facial creasing."
"I love using my slip silk sleep mask as the final step in my wind down ritual.
The beautifully-soft silk reduces the friction and stretching of my facial skin throughout the night, ultimately helping to avoid facial creasing."
Note: The Court works to ensure the timeliness and accuracy of this information. However, researchers should independently verify the status of the opinions as well as their precedential value and note that the slip opinions filed on the Court's CM/ECF system are the official court documents of record.
The last version of FreeBSD to include "slattach" (a command for connecting to slip) in the manual database is FreeBSD 7.4, released 2011. The manual claims that auto-negotiation exists for CSLIP. The FreeBSD version is inherited from 4.3BSD.[7]
Intersections should be designed to accommodate safe pedestrian crossings using tight curb radii, shorter crossing distances, and other tools as described in this document. While right-turn slip lanes are generally a negative facility from the pedestrian perspective due to the emphasis on easy and fast vehicle travel, they can be designed to be less problematic. At many arterial street intersections, pedestrians have difficulty crossing due to right turn movements and wide crossing distances. Well designed right-turn slip lanes provide pedestrian crossing islands within the intersection and a right-turn lane that is designed to optimize the right turning motorist's view of the pedestrian and of vehicles to their left. Pedestrians are able to cross the right-turn lane and wait on the refuge island for their walk signal.
The problem for pedestrians is that many slip lanes are designed for unimpeded vehicular movement. Islands for the right-turn slip lanes should be designed instead to discourage high-speed turns, while accommodating large trucks and buses. The triangular "pork chop" island that results should have the "tail" pointing to approaching traffic. Since the traffic signal is timed based on a shorter crossing, the pedestrian crossing time has much smaller influence on the timing of the signal. This design has an additional advantage for the pedestrian; the crosswalk is located in an area where the driver is still looking ahead. Older designs place the crosswalk too far down, where the driver is already looking left for a break in the traffic.
A slip is a woman's undergarment worn beneath a dress or skirt. A full slip hangs from the shoulders, usually by means of narrow straps, and extends from the breast to the fashionable skirt length. A half slip (or waist slip) hangs from the waist. The word petticoat may also be used for half slips.
Slips serve various purposes. They help a dress or skirt hang properly, especially when static cling might otherwise cause the dress to wrap around the wearer's legs.[1] They protect the skin from chafing against coarse fabrics such as wool; conversely, if the outer garment is made of fine fabric, a slip protects it from perspiration. A slip may be worn for warmth, especially if the dress or skirt is lightweight and thin, whereas in very warm or humid climates, a slip made entirely from cotton may be desired. Slips are often worn to prevent the show-through of intimate undergarments such as panties or a brassiere. A slip may also be used to prevent a silhouette of the legs showing through clothing when standing in front of a bright light source.
Slips fall into two major categories. A full slip hangs from the shoulders by straps that extend down to the top of the breast area, with a skirt below the bust. Full slips come in a variety of lengths; some extend down to the upper thigh, some to just above the knees, or just below the knees, while others go down to just above the ankles.
A waist slip, "half slip", or "underskirt", is held on to the body around the waist by means of an elastic waistband. The waist slip is also available in the same lengths as the aforementioned full slip. Waist slips that extend down to just above the ankle are often called formal slips, or maxi slips. Mini slips are yet another size option for waist slips. They were first introduced in the 1960s to wear under a mini skirt. American Maid manufactured waist slips that had vents and a rear zipper in addition to the elastic waistband. These slips were made of half nylon and half dacron polyester. As an alternative to the full slip, a waist slip with a matching camisole can be worn to provide full coverage.
There is also similar garment designed to be worn under thin or light-colored slacks, called trouserslips or pettipants. In addition to pants, a pettipant may also be worn under a dress or skirt, and like slips, they are mainly made of nylon or as a layer of luxury, in silk.
Many slips have floral lace at the hem, vents or sideslits. Some of the older slips have decorations, such as a butterfly or flowers sewn into the fabric of the slip, and a pillowtab was also added to the waistband of a waist slip.
The vast majority of modern slips are made entirely of nylon, while others are made from polyester, rayon, acetate, silk or in some cases cotton. Still, there are others made of blends, and the label of the garment might read, for example, "40% nylon, 35% rayon, 25% polyester". Nylon slips are often shiny in appearance, and are very smooth to the touch, while polyester slips can even be more shiny with a real slippery feel, especially charmeuse or "satin" slips. Although charmeuse slips have very attractive eye appeal, they are not as durable as nylon slips, and often tear very easily, especially when wet.
Slips made in the 1940s were mainly made entirely of rayon due to the war effort. In the late 1940s, some nylon slips began to appear on the market, and the vast majority of slips made in the 1950s were nylon. In the 1960s, slips were offered in a much greater variety of colours, including multi-coloured slips. Slips with a floral print design were also made available. Some of the most well known slip brand names of the past are: Lorraine, Dior, Velrose, Shadowline, Wondermaid, Warner's, Kayser, Maidenform and Van Raalte. There are well established slip/lingerie manufacturers still in operation today such as Vanity Fair, Vassarette and Sliperfection.
The word "slip" has come to refer to a number of other undergarments. In German, French, and Italian the word slip is commonly used for panties. (This is a false friend, as is the use of "le smoking" to describe a tuxedo jacket.) "Slip" is also sometimes used for the brief style of men's underwear.[2] In the incontinence product market, the word "slip" is often used as a euphemism for an adult diaper or nappy, typically the "all-in-one" style that is worn by fastening on with adhesive tapes, similar to a larger version of the disposable ones worn by babies.[3]
We were tired of seeing sub-par outsoles that called themselves "slip resistant." So, we rolled up our sleeves and created our own, an outsole that we'd want to wear in a slippery restaurant kitchen or manufacturing facility. We call it MaxTRAX, and it kills it in independent testing.
I just spent at least a half hour trying to print packing slips for two orders. My "mistake" was that I chose to print the shipping labels before I chose to print the receipt/order information. I came to this thread and found the solution, but I still kept missing what I was supposed to click on. Etsy really needs to fix this problem. I don't think it has anything to do with not being intuitive; it needs to be made straightforward.
If you have an iOS device running the retail Square app or the Square point of sale app, packing slips can now be printed by going to an orders detail page, and if it is a shipping order, there should be a print packing slips button in the overflow actions.
Do we have to have the return policy on the packing slip? when i tried deleting it and then printed the packing slip it still said return policy but then was blank after it. also is there any way i can change how the packing slip looks? add a banner/logo? change how the prices show since no prices show in it? change layout of it? I think it looks super cheap and I would rather create a packing slip outside of square than use the one that is provided with how it looks now.
I can totally see the need for a feature like this and how beneficial it could be for customers. At this time Square does not offer packing slip customization. I'll be happy to move this over to a feature request board so that our engineers have visibility of your suggestion. We appreciate you sharing your request. While there is no time frame for when it will be implemented, i'm happy to make sure our engineers have eyes on your request.
No. Based on the responses, in order to print a packing slip -- which tells the sender what is in the box, you will also need to utilize their shipping function. WORK AROUND - From the transactions queue, you can click on the receipt link, open it and print from your browser. Good for a fast fix but NOT convenient if you have dozens of orders.
From the list of sales click the sale then click "Manage on Square Online" (because *THAT* is an obvious choice) from the drop-down menu. That will bring up a printable page. It's actually more a receipt than a packing slip but it served my purpose.
I have a bunch of clips taken from the same source footage lined up on the timeline. I got the cuts where I wanted them, but then I decided to replace the footage with higher quality. The trouble is that the new footage has a different starting point, so my clips are all now from about 13 seconds forward in the source from where I want them. How can I slip each clip back to where I need it? There's no way I'm doing it individually, and if I select multiple clips, it slips the whole mass of clips like it's one big clip, shifting the cuts along the timeline, which I don't want.
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