Q: Putty, Play-doh, or modeling clay are all good options, as long as they are clean and new. Roll a small piece of your chosen material into a ball, and press the finger you wish to imitate into the putty. A hot, flattened piece of paraffin wax will leave a better impression, but only after five or ten minutes of pressing. This will keep the impression of the fingerprint as hard as possible while you work with it. Different materials and brands will react differently to cold, and may not be usable as putty afterward — but that's fine for this purpose. Boil a small pot of water, then add an equal amount of gelatin powder by volume. Stir constantly for several minutes, dissolving as much of the powder as you can. Let the mixture cool. Once the gelatin has cooled to a thick gel, melt it in the microwave, then let cool to a gel again. Microwave repeatedly until the gelatin has no bubbles, and when a drop acts thick and rubbery. Once the gelatin is rubbery and bubble-free, melt it one final time, then pour the hot, liquid gelatin into the fingerprint mold you made from putty. Put the putty and gelatin into the freezer. Within a few minutes, the gelatin should harden into a solid, rubbery substance. Peel the gelatin carefully off the putty. You now have a fake fingertip, with the impression of a real fingerprint marked on the surface.
A: Get a fingerprint mark on a putty-like material. Refrigerate or freeze the putty. Make extra-thick gelatin. Microwave the gelatin. Pour the gelatin onto the fingerprint mold. Freeze the putty.

Q: To cook your own pumpkin seeds, you must start with raw seeds, and the best place to get these is a fresh pumpkin. Cut open your pumpkin by cutting off the top and quartering it, or by cutting an angled hole around the stem. Remove the seeds with a spoon. Transfer the seeds to a colander and rinse them under running water. Pick through with your fingers to remove the stringy bits and orange flesh. Toss the seeds to remove excess water. The easiest way to toast pumpkin seeds is to cook them in a frying pan. Place a dry 10-inch skillet over medium heat and let it preheat for two to three minutes. A dry frying pan means there is no oil or other liquid in it. Add the pumpkin seeds to the hot frying pan and spread them out in a single layer to ensure even cooking. Cook the seeds for four to five minutes.  As the seeds cook, toss them around in the pan or stir them with a wooden spoon every minute. The seeds are ready when they become golden brown and puff up. Remove the pan from the heat and transfer the warm seeds to a bowl. Drizzle in the oil, add the spices, and toss to coat. You can season the seeds with a pinch of:  Salt Pepper Cinnamon Curry powder Herbs, such as rosemary or thyme
A: Collect and clean the seeds. Heat the frying pan. Toast the seeds. Season with oil and spices before serving.

Q: Continuing from step 10 from part 2, if you’ve decided to add this to your trip, there’s a button titled “Add to My Trip” right after the flight details. Tap on this, and you will be brought to another small window to proceed. If you want to add another flight to the trip, tap on the first button titled “Add another flight.” You will be brought to a search form. Populate the source, destination, and date fields accordingly, and initiate the search by tapping the blue “Search flight” button. The resulting flights that match your search parameters will be shown. Scroll up and down to select a flight you like.  The carriers’ logos would be displayed on the left part of the results for easy identification. The departure times, arrival times, total flight duration, number of stops, and connecting airports would be displayed per flight result When you’ve selected a flight, tap on it. More flight details will be displayed right under the selected flight. Details per flight leg would be displayed by groups. Aside from the data shown from step 9 (part 2), you will also be able to see the carriers, flight numbers, total flight distance, and aircraft models and types. If you’ve decided to add this to your trip, there’s a button titled “Add to My Trip” right after the flight details. Tap on this, and you will be brought to another small window to proceed. Go back to step 2 and repeat until step 5 for all the flights you’d like to add. If you’re done building your trip, tap “Save this trip” to save it. Enter a title or name for the trip and tap on “Save.” You will see the confirmation message “Your trip has been saved successfully.”
A: Add a flight to a trip. Add another flight to the trip. Select a flight. View flight details. Add the flight to the trip. Continue building your trip. Save the trip.

Q: Overreacting, panicking, screaming, yelling, or blaming someone else for what happened will become the true embarrassing moment. Whether someone spilled your secret or you accidentally walked into a wall right in front of your crush, keeping a level head will help you get out of the situation with as much grace and dignity as possible.  Taking a deep breath can go a long way in calming you down. Try to inhale for four seconds, then exhale for four seconds. As you are breathing, think about what you will say, instead of blurting out something defensive. So you just fell in front of the whole school at the pep rally. Get up, dust yourself off,and laugh. Say something like "Wow, that was embarrassing!" and keep going. If you're able to laugh at yourself, you'll take the tension out of the moment, and may even appear to be confident.   People are more likely to be forgiving of those who own up to their mistakes. If you acknowledge that you said or did something embarrassing, there might be a little teasing, but people will be more likely to let it go.  Even if you can't laugh about it in the moment, try making a joke out of it later. It will show you don't take yourself too seriously. You may be replaying an embarrassing moment over and over in your mind—the dumb joke you told in front of your crush that fell flat—but chances are you are the only one. People often aren't paying as close attention us as we may imagine and tend to judge others more on overall character than one embarrassing incident.  It's likely your crush didn't even notice the thing you're agonizing over. Or, if they did, it probably wasn't as bad as you think. Obsessing over a moment in the past can be destructive and does little other than make you feel sad and angry. If there's something to learn from the incident (like to pause and think before you speak), then take that lesson, and let the rest go. Remember that everyone gets embarrassed. Each and every person, from the president to your crush, has been embarrassed.
A:
Keep your cool. Own it and laugh it off. Don't dwell.