![]() ![]() ![]() Maximum number of electronic items is unlimited (applies as a total of each type of usage). The number of copies allowed is unlimited for each designer/employee.Įlectronic Items for Resale/Distribution: this license includes the right to use the media in webtemplates that are sold to more customers, screensavers, e-cards, powerpoint presentations or as wallpapers on cell phones. The U-EL license is applied only for the staff of the organization that holds the account. It is an additional license to the usage included within the regular Royalty-Free / Editorial license that awards rights for a single person within the same company. (I did not try wet jobs in that time.This license extends our regular Royalty Free / Editorial license to an unlimited number of seats within the same organization. The fabric was allowed to go dirty, as a person of that time would have had it, as the 'wound' under it was well covered (and most of the time closed but not looking nice.) I noticed that when covered the sticky plaster would not come unstuck, at all, and not become dirty from outside dirt, whatever jobs I was doing. I have used this method to hide a sticky plaster when I was re-enacting a Viking time person and had damaged a fingernail. And petticoats (under skirts) are rare and will also not be boiled and ironed. These days clean hankies are just 'clean' and not near sterile. In the time of our grandparents (great grands if you are young) hankies and petticoats would be boiled in the wash and then ironed and folded, keeping the inside very close to sterile. For small wounds a strip from a hanky will do, or even the whole of the hanky so you can wash it and use it as a hanky again. Traditionally women would tear a strip of their petticoats in time of war, long and narrow and relatively clean but not really clean, just the best available in a hurry. But you do not want this to cover a small nick on your upper back, as you need a whole lot of covering to make that secure.įor the part of the bandage that comes in contact with the actual wound you need as clean a cloth as possible, for everything else, just 'clean' will do. With this method you can bandage a small wound on a finger as easily as you can bandage a much bigger wound on the upper reaches of a limb. If you can get the ends to meet, you can tie the start to the end, but if not, make sure the starting end is tucked under the next layer and at the finishing end, tear or cut the strip into two narrow strips and tie those around the body part or if that is inpossible, tuck one of the ends under one layer and tie the two strips around that layer.īy all means, be sure you do not tie to tight, it should not bother blood flow to where it is needed. If you want a more strong fixing of your cushion of fabric (or cottonwool, toilet paper or whatever) you can use a much longer strip of textile and wind it around the bodypart several or even many times, each next wrap covering part or all of the previous one. ![]() This is the proper use of the reef knot, also called Hercules knot, for it was known by medics long before sticky tape was invented. How big depends on the part of the body you need to bandage, but the least is 'once around and enough to tie a reef (square) knot in the ends'. When using fabric, best the most clean version you have available, you can wrap a long narrow piece over the cushion part of the fabric and use that to tie of wounds. Most of the answers here rely on the stickiness of some kind of tape. ![]()
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