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It's pretty straightforward if there are 2 of you, one person holds the cat and then all the person applying has to do its make a parting in the hair at the scruff so you have a straight line of skin a couple of cm's long exposed then apply the treatment directly to the skin. You're going to get alot on the fur no matter what you do but make a few different partings around the scruff so you can apply as much directly to the skin as possible.
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So, tumble dryers. The one we have was left by the previous owners when we bought our house, it's a white Knight works well but is noisey as hell! Does anyone have any recommendations for a quiet one, I'm happy to throw money at this as I really want quiet as possible, everything online seems to say miele but what say you?
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It's pretty painless tbh, the level to which you can customise your workspace and keyboard layout is probably the best thing about premiere, I was thrown on a job about 4 years ago without ever using it before, I just spent an hour mirroring my Avid set up and was cutting without problem. I work in short form (50/50 TVC's and web only ads) and most agencies I work with use adobe CC. If you work on longer form which requires multi editor and shared project environments I wouldn't worry about having to use premiere anytime soon as it's complete dog shit for that.
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The 12 is definitely dominated by the spirit rather than the cask. Imo it benefits from a teaspoon of water and a good 10 minutes in the glass, the 15 is finished in different bourbon barrels to the 12 and I think the balance is just right, had the 18 year old as well and while it's very well made, all the vanilla and toffee flavours were turned up to 11, too sweet for my tastes.
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Visited the Deanston distillery today, really lovely. I'm a fan of the 12 year old but haven't tried much more of their range. Tried a number today in the tasting tour but the 15 year organic was superb, excellent balance and a must try if you like the slightly sweeter side of scotch. I'd recommend it for bourbon fans too.
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What you're describing is bad editing, J and L cuts are used constantly when editing and more often than not you wouldn't even notice. You would find it much more distracting if everything had a straight cut, but bad technique is bad technique. It's very common for bad editors to use long audio cross fades on j-cuts to make lazy edits. And don't get me started on cross dissolves!
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That's a great price and and if you're big into vanilla and toffee flavours I'd go for it, I found it a bit too sweet and dessert like for my tastes but it's very well made like all of the Deanston range.