INPUT ARTICLE: Article: You may need to pin the fabric for it to stay folded. Make sure to pin near the crease of the fabric, because you do not want to put the pins in places that you will be sewing. Your fabric should be folded so that the wrong sides face outward and right sides, or sides you want to show, are facing each other.  You want the wrong sides facing out because you will soon be turning the strap right side out. Use a sewing machine or hand stitch to Sew down the length of the fabric ¼ inch from the edges of the fabric using a running stitch. Then trim the edges of the fabric to make the allowance slightly smaller. Make sure to use a thread that matches the colour of the strap. Do this for both straps. Both of your straps should now look like tubes, with a little excess fabric after the seams. Take a set of small scissors and cut a small slit into the tube, about ½ inch from the end of each strap. Take a bobby pin and insert it so that one prong of the pin is inside the tube and one prong is outside. Push the bobby pin down the slit, still with one prong inside the tube and one outside.  You can also use a safety pin, but  be careful not to prick yourself when using one. The easiest way to do this is to scrunch the fabric of the strap around the bobby pin.   Hold the bobby pin vertically with the base of the pin facing downwards and the prongs facing upwards. Pull the fabric down by scrunching it until you see prongs of the bobby pin emerge out of the other end. Grab portion of fabric with the slit near the base of the pin. Pull up. This will turn the tube right side out, so that the excess fabric is hidden inside the tube. Now that the straps are made, iron them to make them flat. If you are having trouble getting the straps to lay flat before you iron them, safety pin the straps. Leave them this way for an hour or so and then come back and iron.

SUMMARY: Fold the fabric in half. Sew a ¼ inch allowance. Cut a small slit on one end of each strap. Insert a bobby pin into the strap. Work the pin out through the other side of the tube. Turn the tube inside-out. Iron the straps.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: If this is the first time you have used Windows Media Center, you will need to wait a few moments while the program creates your library from the files you have stored on your machine.    The song will immediately begin playing. You can click the Pause key if you'd rather wait until your playlist is complete.  Repeat until you have selected all of the songs you want in your playlist. " " "
Summary: Launch Windows Media Center. Use the scroll button on your mouse to move up or down until the Music option is highlighted and click on Music Library. Click on Albums, Artists, Genres, or one of the other options for sorting through your music files. Select the first song you want in your Media Player playlist by clicking it. Click "Add to Queue" in the list of options. Use the back arrow in the upper left corner of the window to return to your library. Click the next song for your Media Player playlist and add it to the queue. Use the back arrow to return to the main screen of Windows Media Center and click on "Now Playing + Queue. Click "View Queue," then click "Save as Playlist. Enter a descriptive name for your Media Center playlist and click "Save.

While you can use basic colors (e.g., "red") to color your text, you'll need to use an HTML color generator for more nuanced shades:  Go to https://www.w3schools.com/colors/colors_picker.asp in your computer's web browser. Select the base color you want to use in the hexagon at the top of the page. Scroll to the shade you want to use on the right side of the page. Note the six-character code to the right of the shade. This should be the document for which you want to change the font color. If you don't yet have an HTML document, create one before proceeding. Scroll through your document until you find the paragraph, header, or other form of text that you want to color. For example, if the text is a header, you'll see "<h1>" in front of it. You'll do this by typing <head> below the "<html>" tag, pressing ↵ Enter, typing <style> below the "<head>" tag, pressing ↵ Enter twice, and typing in the closing tags for both. Your end result should look like this:  <!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <style>  </style> </head>  <body> Click the space between the "<style></style>" tags, then enter the following code (making sure to replace red with your color code and "<h1>" with the tag for the text you want to color):  <h1> {        color: red; } Your page header should look something like this:  <!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <style> <h1> {        color: red; } </style> </head> <body> If you want to make all of your document's body text the same color, enter the following code with your preferred color substituted for black:  body {        color: black; }
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One-sentence summary -- Pick a color for your text. Open your HTML document. Find the text you want to color. Note the text's tags. Add the "head" and "style" sections to the top of the document. Enter the "color" style tag. Review your document. Unify the body text color.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: A love story can be your main focus or it can be part of a larger tale. Decide whether you want your love story to be the main focus of your writing, or if you want it to enhance your main story.  Framing a love story as part of a larger story can create a more realistic, relatable feeling to your writing. Focusing primarily on romance can be sweeping, epic, and more escapist. Neither is inherently better or worse, they’re just different styles. For example, Love in the Time of Cholera is driven by its love story, but it also deals with themes of social strife, warfare, disease, aging, and death. It's also defined not just by its love story but by its magical realism, making it part of a strong Latino literary tradition. Love stories don’t have to be romance novels. They play out across the daily lives of your characters and can work in any type of genre. Decide whether you want to write a more traditional romance or if you want to frame your story in another genre.  To get an idea of how love stories are framed across genres, read books and short stories from the genres in which you’re interested. Noir, sci-fi, fantasy, historical fiction, and comedic writing are some good genres to explore. Pay attention to how different authors in these genres develop different conventions of a love story. Do you want your characters to get their happily-ever-after? Will they learn that love isn’t enough? Do you want something vague and open-ended? Deciding what kind of emotional resolution you want at the end of your story helps sculpt your plot and narrative. You can change this as you progress with your story if find that a different ending fits how your plot and characters develop. This should be a guide, but it doesn’t need to be a rule. A love story for the sake of a love story can be a beautiful thing if that’s what you want to write. However, many modern romance authors are considering the social contexts of what they are putting out, such as race, gender, and class. Think about whether you want your story to have a larger message.  There is no right or wrong answer to this, but it is important to consider the message you’re putting out. Love stories commonly deal with topics like social inequity, body image, gender equality, sexual orientation, class difference, and ethnic identity.

SUMMARY:
Figure out if your love story will be your main story. Pick the genre in which you want to set your story. Decide what kind of emotional ending you want for your story. Consider whether you want your story to have a larger message.