A Small Practical Question
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- Posts: 3357
- Joined: Sun Mar 22, 2020 10:06 am
- Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
A Small Practical Question
Is there any way to make cover glasses more visible. I was my slides and cover glasses and put them on a soft cloth to dry. I often can't see the cover glasses--they are all but invisible. I even tried coating the edges with red nail polish but ended up ruining the cover glass. Does anyone have this problem?
Re: A Small Practical Question
Yes! but not an entire solution.
The best I have come up with to date is to prop them up at a 45deg angle approx against something (plastic lid or similar) on top of the cloth (kitchen tissue) and mark the cloth with a black cross just in front of the regiment of cover glasses, to remind me that something invisible lurks nearby.
It is advisable to alert the domestic authority /kitchen staff/ and remove as soon as they are dry to a safe container
Watching with interest for other ideas.
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- Posts: 3357
- Joined: Sun Mar 22, 2020 10:06 am
- Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Re: A Small Practical Question
That's a thoughtful suggestion. Thanks.
Re: A Small Practical Question
I use that plastic strip with sharp points along it. It's meant for the tops of walls, fences etc to deter climbing-over by placing sharp points along the top. I use strips of one of the smaller sizes, placing clean coverslips propped-up against the spikes in rows ready to hand during my slide-making sessions....
This is the sort I use - strips about 6 inches long and about 3 inches wide - simple and useful. They're also handy to similarly hold cleaned slides. They also make good drying-racks as they fit in my air-dryer with coverslips and/or slides on-board.
Here's an image of some coverslip-mounted sections standing in one length of spikes as above..... If you have trouble seeing them just put the strip on or in front-of a piece of black card or similar - I can always see them easily with or without anything on them...
This is the sort I use - strips about 6 inches long and about 3 inches wide - simple and useful. They're also handy to similarly hold cleaned slides. They also make good drying-racks as they fit in my air-dryer with coverslips and/or slides on-board.
Here's an image of some coverslip-mounted sections standing in one length of spikes as above..... If you have trouble seeing them just put the strip on or in front-of a piece of black card or similar - I can always see them easily with or without anything on them...
John B
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- Posts: 3357
- Joined: Sun Mar 22, 2020 10:06 am
- Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Re: A Small Practical Question
Now that's an idea. I wonder if I could use muffin tins.
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- Posts: 3357
- Joined: Sun Mar 22, 2020 10:06 am
- Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Re: A Small Practical Question
I'm using a paper egg carton. Thanks for the idea.